Here's a play by play of the execution:
You call findShortestString() yourself
if lo doesn't not equal hi things continue. Otherwise they stop here and the function returns.
Once you call findShortestString() again, everything in this instance of the function completely stops and will not resume until the computer has a value to give minindex (aka the function returns.) We start over in a new instance of the function at the top. The only code executed until one of the functions return is the code BEFORE the method call. This could be compared to a while loop.
We only get beyond that line once one of the function instances has lo==hi and returns.
Control switches to the function instance before that, which assigns the returned lo value to minindex.
If (safeStringLength(paths[lo])<safeStringLength(paths[minindex])) then we return lo. Else, we return minindex. Either way, this function instance is complete and control returns to the one before it.
Each function called is now only executing the code AFTER the method call, as the method will not get called again. We are unwinding the stack of calls. All of the returns will now be from the last 2 statements, as the code at the top does not get executed again. Note how only one function instance returns with the top part of the code, terminating the while loop. All the rest terminate with the return statements in the part of the function after the recursive call.
Eventually the last function returns and you go back to the code you called the function from originally.
Here's a more readable version of what the code is actually doing:
In the code before the recursive call, all that happens is the creation of a chain of calls until lo==hi. Each time the function is called with lo being 1 greater. Here's a sample stack of calls:
findShortestString(2,5);
findShortestString(3,5);
findShortestString(4,5);
findShortestString(5,5);
When they unwind, each function instance compares the string lengths of the strings at the indexes lo and the index the previous index with the shortest string.
compare strings at indexes 2 and 5
if the string at 2 is smaller, compare the strings at indexes 2 and 4.
Otherwise, compare the strings with indexes at 3 and 5.
If lo>hi at the beginning, the code will continue to run until lo overflows an integer and becomes negative, then until lo finally gets all the way up to hi, or 4,94,967,296 - (original lo - original hi). In other words, in will take a long time. To fix this, add a check at the beginning of the method that throws an exception if lo>hi.
The code could be better rewritten as this:
static int findShortestString(String[] paths, int lo, int hi) {
int indexWithShortestString=lo;
for( int i=lo; i<=hi-1; i++) {
//assumption: lo and hi are both valid indexes of paths
if (paths[i+1].length < paths[i].length)
indexWithShortestString=i+1;
}
}