I've been working on the 8 queens problem but I got stuck. I don't want code. I would love guidance and directions in order to understand how to solve this problem myself using backtracking recursion.

The program should enumerate all solutions to the N-queens problem by drawing the location of the queens in ASCII like the two solutions here.

My pseudocode so far is:

void queen(int n){

   for( int i = 0; i < n; i++){

       place queen[ i ] on row i;

       for(int j = 0 ; j < n ; j++){
               if( queen[ i ] is not in the same column as queen[0] through queen[ i - 1 ]  &&
                   queen[ i ] is not on the same major diagonal with queen[0] through queen[ i -1 ]  &&
                   queen[ i ] is not on the same minor diagonal with queen[0] through queen[ i -1 ]  ) {
                              print 'Q ';
                   }
               else{
                              print '* ';
                   }

               System.out.println();
         }

         System.out.println();

  }

}

There is no any backtracking recursion in my pseudocode because I don't know how to do it.

Any help is greatly appreciated.No code, please.

(Update in response to Nemo):

solver(int n, Board b){
    for(int i = 0; i < b.length; i++){
       place queen in column i;
       for(int j = 0; j < b.length; j++){
           change b;
           solver(n+1,changed b); 
       }
    }
}

Is it correct?

(Update 2):

 solver8(board /* with queens presented in first 7 columns */){
    // place a queen in the 8th column;
    for(each possible placement of the queen in column 8 
        or in other words int i = 0; i < board.length; i++ ){
             place the queen and print the board
    }
}


 solver7(board /* with queens presented in first 6 columns */){
    // place a queen in the 7th column;
    for(each possible placement of the queen in column 7 
        or in other words int i = 0; i < board.length; i++ ){
             solver8(board with queens placed in first 7 columns);
    }
}


 solver6(board /* with queens presented in first 5 columns */ ){
    // place a queen in the 6th column;
    for(each possible placement of the queen in column 6 
        or in other words int i = 0; i < board.length; i++ ){
             solver7(board with queens presented in first 6 columns);
    }
}

and so on until

 solver1(1, empty board){
     for(int i = 0; i < board.length; i++){
        place queen in row[i] of column 1;
        solver2(board with queen in row[i] of column 1);
      }
}

Update 3 (Edited):

private int numberOfQueens = 8;
solver(int n, Board b){

        for(int r = 0; r < b.length; r++){

               place queen in row[r] of column[n];

               if(n == numberOfQueens){
                    print the board;
                    return;
                }
                else{
                    solver(n+1, board with queen in row[r] of column[n]);
                }
           }
     }
}
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Is this homework? If so, you should tag the question as such. It might prevent people from giving you complete solutions that wouldn't help you at all. – Bertrand Marron Jun 14 '11 at 0:07
4  
+1 for explicitly requesting that we don't write the code for you. :-) – Aasmund Eldhuset Jun 14 '11 at 0:10
@Bertrand: I wouldn't say it's homework since I am studying on my own. – Nath Jun 14 '11 at 0:10
3  
@Aasmund: Yes, exaclty. No code. I want to understand it and do it myself. – Nath Jun 14 '11 at 0:12
Couple of points: 1) look up what recursion means (not meant to be snotty.) You're not doing it in your pseudo code because, in short, you haven't invoked the method Queen from within the method Queen. 2) To solve this problem, your program is going to have to try many different solutions until it finds one that works. To do so, it won't print anything out until it has a solution. So you're going to need some sort of data structure to hold the problem in memory while your program works on it. – Marvo Jun 14 '11 at 0:17
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4 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

The purpose of using recursion for these kinds of problems is that they allow you to think in terms of "I have now placed k queens; how can I place the remaining ones if the total number of queens is n?" So the recursive function should take two parameters: the target number of queens, and the number of queens placed so far. When writing the function, your goal is first and foremost to try out different ways of placing the k th queen. But when you have selected a possible placement and found it to be valid, you need to place the remaining n - k - 1 queens. How can we do this? The answer: recursion! Call the function (from within itself) with the parameter k - 1 to indicate that you want to place the remaining k - 1 queens. Whenever you exhaust all possibilities (or find that none are possible), simply return from the function - you will then get back to the previous function call (e.g. the one that tries to place the k th queen).

Edit: You will also need to create a two-dimensional array to represent the current state of your board; this array must either be sent as an additional parameter to the recursive function, or be kept as a field of the class that contains the method.

As for the backtracking, that is accomplished simply by making sure that the function that gets called with k + 1 removes the k + 1 th queen from the board before returning; this essentially says "We've now (unsuccessfully) tried all ways of placing the remainder of the queens - based on the positions of the k queens that have already been placed. None of them succeeded, so please adjust the positions of the first k queens (which will be done by the function that was called with k, and the function which called that function, and so on) and try again."

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I will need to carefully review all the responses. Since I haven't done any problems involving backtracking recursion yet I thought backtracking itself is kind of something hard to understand and implement. – Nath Jun 14 '11 at 1:03
>> You will also need to create a *two-dimensional* array That is not necessary. you can keep one dimensional array (each field index is row and the number at the index is column where the queen is) – Op De Cirkel Jun 14 '11 at 1:49
@Nath: Very understandable. I suggest that you try a simpler problem first to get comfortable with the technique. For instance: given a one-dimensional array of int (with, say, 10 elements), what are the possible ways you can fill it with zeroes and ones such that there is at most three ones? (e.g. 0011000001 is valid, but 0011000011 is not). – Aasmund Eldhuset Jun 14 '11 at 10:12
@Op De Cirkel: True. – Aasmund Eldhuset Jun 14 '11 at 10:12
@Aasmund Eldhuset: I was trying to find a simpler problem in order to understand the backtracking recursion as you said but I couldn't. Thanks for your example. So, you mean how I would fill all the elements of the array with zeroes and ones such that every given element of the array doesn't have more than three ones? – Nath Jun 14 '11 at 19:01
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See this nice animation here on 8 queen's problem using recursion.

Also, check out : 8 queens problem - Java/C++.

Check out the logic explained here.

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Generally speaking, a recursive backtracking search looks something like this:

// On input, s represents a valid State up to depth d-1
sub do_it(int d, State s)
    if (d == MAX_DEPTH+1)
        // State s represents an answer!  Print it and return.
    else
        (augment s to make it valid for depth d)
        for each augmented_s
            do_it(d+1, augmented_s)
        end for
    end if
end sub

// top level
do_it(0, empty_state)

Note that for a given s valid up to depth d-1, there could be multiple ways to augment it into a state valid up to depth d. The idea is to call yourself with each of them.

For this problem, the "state" is the board. The depth "d-1" might mean the first d-1 columns are populated. The legal augmented states would be those with a queen in column d such that she cannot be captured.

[update]

Here is another way to look at it. Work the problem backwards.

Suppose I ask you to write a simple function called solver8(). This function takes as input a board with queens already present in the first 7 columns. All it has to do is take that board, find all ways to add a queen to the 8th column, and print out those boards. Do you think you could write this function? Good; write it.

Now suppose I ask you to write an almost-as-simple function called solver7(). This function takes as input a board with queens already present in the first 6 columns. All it has to do is take that board, find all ways to add a queen to the 7th column, and pass each of those boards as an argument to solver8(). Could you write this function?

Now suppose I ask you to write another function called solver6(). As input, it takes a board with queens present in the first 5 columns. All it has to do is take that board, find all ways to add a queen to the 6th column, and then pass each of those boards to solver7().

And so on, until we get to solver1(). This one takes an empty board, finds all ways to place a queen in the first column, and passes each of those boards to solver2().

You have just written 8 functions that together solve the 8 queens problem. If this does not make sense, write it out as 8 functions and stare at it until you do.

Now, if you look at all of these functions, you will find they are pretty similar. So instead of writing solver8, solver7, solver6, ..., solver1, you write a single function:

solver(int n, Board b)

...such that solver(1, b) is the same as solver1(b), solver(2, b) is the same as solver2(b), ..., and solver(8, b) is the same as solver8(b). And instead of solver2(...) calling solver3(...), for instance, you will just have solver(2, ...) calling solver(3, ...). One function instead of 8, but doing the same thing.

You will pretty quickly discover that the final code is cleaner if you start with a solver9() that just takes a fully populated board and prints it out, and have solver8() call that.

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@Nemo: Can you, please give me some simpler example where I can try the above pseudocode? – Nath Jun 14 '11 at 21:46
1  
@Nath: I have added an update with an attempt at a different explanation. Let me know what you think. – Nemo Jun 14 '11 at 23:56
1  
@Nath: Sorry, but that is not it... Each "solver()" should only have one loop. I really think you should start by forgetting the recursive version and write it down as 8 separate functions like I describe. solver6 (just for example) does not need to loop through any columns; it should assume the first 5 columns are already populated, and its sole job is to place a queen in the 6th column and call solver7(). It calls solver7() once for each possible placement of the queen in the 6th column. That's it. – Nemo Jun 15 '11 at 18:42
1  
@Nath: I have edited your second update to look more like what I mean... Hope that is OK – Nemo Jun 15 '11 at 21:42
1  
All 8 solvers have to place a queen. solver1() places a queen in column1. solver2() places a queen in column 2. solver3() places a queen in column 3. etc – Nemo Jun 16 '11 at 20:23
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Put the first queen in [0][0], then find a spot for the second. lets say you found one go to the next, so on and so forth. Assumingly your 5th queen cant be placed anywhere in the 5th column or row (whichever you follow). Go back to the 4th and find another spot to that. Than go to the 5th again.Lets say you are in the 8th one and there are no spots available. Go to 7th and still nothing back there. You will kep on going back until the 2nd and find a spot to the 2nd again, and go to the 3rd. Does it make sense...

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