Mutual recursion
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Mutual recursion is a form of recursion where two mathematical or computational functions are defined in terms of each other.
For instance, consider two functions even?
and odd?
defined as follows:
function even?(number : Integer) if number == 0 then return true else return odd?(number-1) function odd?(number : Integer) if number == 0 then return false else return even?(number-1)
These functions are based on the realization that the question is three even is equivalent to the question, is two odd, which is the same as asking if 1 is even or 0 is odd. In the end, the answer is no, as realized by the function odd?
.
Mutual recursion is very common in the functional programming style, and is often used for programs written in LISP, Scheme, ML, and similar languages. In languages such as Prolog, mutual recursion is almost unavoidable.
Some programming styles discourage mutual recursion, claiming that it can be confusing to distinguish the conditions which will return an answer from the conditions that would allow the code to run forever without producing an answer. It is usually possible to turn two mutually recursive functions into a single recursive function by inlining the code of one into the other, possibly at the expense of legibility.
In mathematics, the Hofstadter Female and Male sequences are an example of a pair of integer sequences defined in a mutually recursive manner.