First my code:
import java.util.Scanner;
public class recursionQuestion {
public static void methodB(boolean b) {
if(b == true) {
System.out.println("'b' is true!");
} else {
methodA();
}
}
public static void methodA() {
Scanner keyboard = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.print("Enter 0 or 1: ");
int val = keyboard.nextInt();
boolean b;
if(val == 0) {
b = false;
} else {
b = true;
}
methodB(b);
System.out.println("Why is this being processed when b is false?");
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
methodA();
}
}
I always thought I understood recursion, but perhaps I do not. If the user is prompted for input and enters '0' x amount of times, why does this code print the line "Why is this being processed when b is false?" x number of times?
Put another way, why is the code (in methodA()
) below the call to methodB()
being processed more than once? Shouldn't the call (in methodB()
) to methodA()
return the flow of execution to the top of methodA()
?