The iterative algorithm for Fibonacci, because for me it nailed down the fact that the most elegant code (in this case, the recursive version) is not necessarily the most efficient.
To elaborate- The "fib(10) = fib(9) + fib(8)" approach means that fib(9) will be evaluated to fib(8) + fib(7). So evaluation of fib(8) (and therefor fib7, fib6) will all be evaluated twice.
The iterative method, (curr = prev1 + prev2 in a forloop) does not tree out this way, nor does it take as much memory since it's only 3 transient variables, instead of n frames in the recursion stack.
I tend to strive for simple, elegant code when I'm programming, but this is the algorithm that helped me realize that this isn't the end-all-be-all for writing good software, and that ultimately the end users don't care how your code looks.