I used the debugger to examine this code but not understanding a couple areas.

  1. Why does the for loop repeat after it exits to print a new line? If it exits the loop, shouldn’t it be done with it?
  2. Why is n incremented and not i as stated with i++?

int main(void)
{
    int height = get_int("Height: ");

    draw(height);
}

void draw(int n)
{
    if (n <= 0)
    {
        return;
    }

    draw(n - 1);

    for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
    {
        printf("#");
    }
    printf("\n");
}

So is my example of Height 3 in line with your expectations?

@milon@lemm.ee
creator
link
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19M

Yep

I wrote an equivalent version just using nested loops - reading it might help you understand why the recursion works the way it does.

@milon@lemm.ee
creator
link
fedilink
19M

Thanks. I did see that. I have a general understanding of how recursion works I think where the function calls itself again and again but I don’t get why the code (for loop) below the draw(n - 1) is recursive.

The code below the draw(n - 1) isn’t recursive… the call to draw(n - 1) is the recursion.

Sometimes, it can be helpful to invert recursion. Think about what draw(0) would be and write it down… then compute draw(1) using the value you previously computed for draw(0).

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