I'm trying to experiment with recursion so as to grasp the concept. It is language agnostic, so the same concept applies to both C# and Java.
I've got a TreeView which has a number of nodes. I would like to iterate through every single node and count the ones which satisfy a certain condition. If at any time the condition is not satisfied, I would like the algorithm to finally return -1.
Each TreeViewItem will only be considered if it has a Tag named "Condition" (there are 3 types of TreeViewItems in all - I will only consider the "Condition" ones).
Once a TreeViewItem is found to be of the "Condition" type, I would like to check to see that it satisfies a certain condition. As I mentioned before, even if only one TreeViewItem does not satisfy the condition, I want the algorithm to return -1 in the end.
If the algorithm does not return -1, I want it to return the amount of valid conditions which it has found - i.e. an integer is to be incremented each time a condition is successfully passed, and the final count is returned at the end.
This is what I've tried so far:
private int CountConditions(TreeViewItem item)
{
int conditionCount = 0;
foreach (TreeViewItem child in item.Items)
{
int previousCount = CountConditions(child);
if (previousCount == -1)
{
return -1;
}
else
{
return conditionCount += previousCount;
}
}
if (item.Tag.Equals("Condition"))
{
if (/*Condition is not satisfied*/)
{
return -1;
}
else
{
return conditionCount++;
}
}
else
{
return conditionCount;
}
}
My current algorithm does infact return -1 if a condition is not satisfied, however if conditions are satisfied it just returns 0, rather than the amount of valid conditions.

C#andJavaat the same time. And this for sure is not Java. – Rohit Jain Dec 18 '12 at 9:28