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Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms

You're reading from   Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms A step-by-step guide to data structures and algorithms

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785889349
Length 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Debasish Ray Chawdhuri Debasish Ray Chawdhuri
Author Profile Icon Debasish Ray Chawdhuri
Debasish Ray Chawdhuri
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Why Bother? – Basic FREE CHAPTER 2. Cogs and Pulleys – Building Blocks 3. Protocols – Abstract Data Types 4. Detour – Functional Programming 5. Efficient Searching – Binary Search and Sorting 6. Efficient Sorting – quicksort and mergesort 7. Concepts of Tree 8. More About Search – Search Trees and Hash Tables 9. Advanced General Purpose Data Structures 10. Concepts of Graph 11. Reactive Programming Index

Recursive algorithms


As I have already pointed out, recursive algorithms are a different way of thinking about solving a problem. For example, say our problem is to write a program that, given a positive integer n, returns the sum of numbers from zero to n. The known imperative way of writing it is simple:

public int sum_upto(int n){
  int sum=0;
  for(int i=0;i<=n;i++){
    sum+=i;
  }
  return sum;
}

The following would be the functional version of the problem:

public int sum_upto_functional(int n){
  return n==0?0:n+sum_upto_functional(n-1);
}

That's it–just a one-liner! This is probably nothing new to Java programmers, as they do understand recursive functions. However, an imperative programmer would use recursion only when nothing else worked. But this is a different way of thinking. How do we justify that it is equivalent to solving the problem for a smaller input and then composing it with something else? Well, we are certainly first computing the same function for an input that is...

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