376

I know that recursion is sometimes a lot cleaner than looping, and I'm not asking anything about when I should use recursion over iteration, I know there are lots of questions about that already.

What I'm asking is, is recursion ever faster than a loop? To me it seems like, you would always be able to refine a loop and get it to perform more quickly than a recursive function because the loop is absent constantly setting up new stack frames.

I'm specifically looking for whether recursion is faster in applications where recursion is the right way to handle the data, such as in some sorting functions, in binary trees, etc.

5
  • 5
    Sometimes iterative procedure or closed-form formulas for some recurrences take centuries to turn up. I think only at those times recursion is faster :) lol Apr 16, 2010 at 6:52
  • 57
    Speaking for myself, I much prefer iteration. ;-)
    – Iterator
    Oct 27, 2011 at 13:33
  • possible duplicate of Recursion or Iteration?
    – nawfal
    Dec 14, 2013 at 7:29
  • 4
  • 1
    @PratikDeoghare No, the question is not about choosing an entirely different algorithm. You can always convert a recursive function into an identically functioning method that uses a loop. For example, this answer has the same algorithm in both recursive and looping format. In general, you will put a tuple of the arguments to the recursive function into a stack, pushing to the stack to call, discarding from the stack to return from the function. Jun 15, 2020 at 7:12

13 Answers 13

449

This depends on the language being used. You wrote 'language-agnostic', so I'll give some examples.

In Java, C, and Python, recursion is fairly expensive compared to iteration (in general) because it requires the allocation of a new stack frame. In some C compilers, one can use a compiler flag to eliminate this overhead, which transforms certain types of recursion (actually, certain types of tail calls) into jumps instead of function calls.

In functional programming language implementations, sometimes, iteration can be very expensive and recursion can be very cheap. In many, recursion is transformed into a simple jump, but changing the loop variable (which is mutable) sometimes requires some relatively heavy operations, especially on implementations which support multiple threads of execution. Mutation is expensive in some of these environments because of the interaction between the mutator and the garbage collector, if both might be running at the same time.

I know that in some Scheme implementations, recursion will generally be faster than looping.

In short, the answer depends on the code and the implementation. Use whatever style you prefer. If you're using a functional language, recursion might be faster. If you're using an imperative language, iteration is probably faster. In some environments, both methods will result in the same assembly being generated (put that in your pipe and smoke it).

Addendum: In some environments, the best alternative is neither recursion nor iteration but instead higher order functions. These include "map", "filter", and "reduce" (which is also called "fold"). Not only are these the preferred style, not only are they often cleaner, but in some environments these functions are the first (or only) to get a boost from automatic parallelization — so they can be significantly faster than either iteration or recursion. Data Parallel Haskell is an example of such an environment.

List comprehensions are another alternative, but these are usually just syntactic sugar for iteration, recursion, or higher order functions.

5
  • 72
    I +1 that, and would like to comment that "recursion" and "loops" are just what humans name their code. What matters for performance is not how you name things, but rather how they are compiled/interpreted. Recursion, by definition, is a mathematical concept, and has little to do with stack frames and assembly stuff.
    – P Shved
    Apr 16, 2010 at 7:05
  • 2
    Also, recursion is, in general, the more natural approach in functional languages, and iteration is normally more intuitive in imperative languages. The performance difference is unlikely to be noticeable, so just use whatever feels more natural for that particular language. For example, you probably wouldn't want to use iteration in Haskell when recursion is much more simple. Apr 16, 2010 at 7:43
  • 4
    Generally recursion is compiled to loops, with loops being a lower level construct. Why? Because recursion is typically well founded over some data structure, inducing an Initial F-algebra and allowing you to prove some properties about termination along with inductive arguments about the structure of the (recursive) computation. The process by which recursion is compiled to loops is tail call optimization. Sep 16, 2012 at 9:40
  • What matters most is operations not performed. The more you "IO", the more you have to process. Un-IOing data (aka indexing) is always the biggest performance boost to any system because you don't have to process it in the first place. Dec 28, 2018 at 19:52
  • 1
    As I have checked many times, much more often than not, the fastest code among Java (a mostly-imperative language) solutions for problems on Leetcode.com are the recursive ones. That had been surprising to me. Jun 26, 2021 at 6:50
82

is recursion ever faster than a loop?

No, Iteration will always be faster than Recursion. (in a Von Neumann Architecture)

Explanation:

If you build the minimum operations of a generic computer from scratch, "Iteration" comes first as a building block and is less resource intensive than "recursion", ergo is faster.

Building a pseudo-computing-machine from scratch:

Question yourself: What do you need to compute a value, i.e. to follow an algorithm and reach a result?

We will establish a hierarchy of concepts, starting from scratch and defining in first place the basic, core concepts, then build second level concepts with those, and so on.

  1. First Concept: Memory cells, storage, State. To do something you need places to store final and intermediate result values. Let’s assume we have an infinite array of "integer" cells, called Memory, M[0..Infinite].

  2. Instructions: do something - transform a cell, change its value. alter state. Every interesting instruction performs a transformation. Basic instructions are:

    a) Set & move memory cells

    • store a value into memory, e.g.: store 5 m[4]
    • copy a value to another position: e.g.: store m[4] m[8]

    b) Logic and arithmetic

    • and, or, xor, not
    • add, sub, mul, div. e.g. add m[7] m[8]
  3. An Executing Agent: a core in a modern CPU. An "agent" is something that can execute instructions. An Agent can also be a person following the algorithm on paper.

  4. Order of steps: a sequence of instructions: i.e.: do this first, do this after, etc. An imperative sequence of instructions. Even one line expressions are "an imperative sequence of instructions". If you have an expression with a specific "order of evaluation" then you have steps. It means than even a single composed expression has implicit “steps” and also has an implicit local variable (let’s call it “result”). e.g.:

    4 + 3 * 2 - 5
    (- (+ (* 3 2) 4 ) 5)
    (sub (add (mul 3 2) 4 ) 5)  
    

    The expression above implies 3 steps with an implicit "result" variable.

    // pseudocode
    
           1. result = (mul 3 2)
           2. result = (add 4 result)
           3. result = (sub result 5)
    

    So even infix expressions, since you have a specific order of evaluation, are an imperative sequence of instructions. The expression implies a sequence of operations to be made in a specific order, and because there are steps, there is also an implicit "result" intermediate variable.

  5. Instruction Pointer: If you have a sequence of steps, you have also an implicit "instruction pointer". The instruction pointer marks the next instruction, and advances after the instruction is read but before the instruction is executed.

    In this pseudo-computing-machine, the Instruction Pointer is part of Memory. (Note: Normally the Instruction Pointer will be a “special register” in a CPU core, but here we will simplify the concepts and assume all data (registers included) are part of “Memory”)

  6. Jump - Once you have an ordered number of steps and an Instruction Pointer, you can apply the "store" instruction to alter the value of the Instruction Pointer itself. We will call this specific use of the store instruction with a new name: Jump. We use a new name because is easier to think about it as a new concept. By altering the instruction pointer we're instructing the agent to “go to step x“.

  7. Infinite Iteration: By jumping back, now you can make the agent "repeat" a certain number of steps. At this point we have infinite Iteration.

                       1. mov 1000 m[30]
                       2. sub m[30] 1
                       3. jmp-to 2  // infinite loop
    
  8. Conditional - Conditional execution of instructions. With the "conditional" clause, you can conditionally execute one of several instructions based on the current state (which can be set with a previous instruction).

  9. Proper Iteration: Now with the conditional clause, we can escape the infinite loop of the jump back instruction. We have now a conditional loop and then proper Iteration

    1. mov 1000 m[30]
    2. sub m[30] 1
    3. (if not-zero) jump 2  // jump only if the previous 
                            // sub instruction did not result in 0
    
    // this loop will be repeated 1000 times
    // here we have proper ***iteration***, a conditional loop.
    
  10. Naming: giving names to a specific memory location holding data or holding a step. This is just a "convenience" to have. We do not add any new instructions by having the capacity to define “names” for memory locations. “Naming” is not a instruction for the agent, it’s just a convenience to us. Naming makes code (at this point) easier to read and easier to change.

       #define counter m[30]   // name a memory location
       mov 1000 counter
    loop:                      // name a instruction pointer location
        sub counter 1
        (if not-zero) jmp-to loop  
    
  11. One-level subroutine: Suppose there’s a series of steps you need to execute frequently. You can store the steps in a named position in memory and then jump to that position when you need to execute them (call). At the end of the sequence you'll need to return to the point of calling to continue execution. With this mechanism, you’re creating new instructions (subroutines) by composing core instructions.

    Implementation: (no new concepts required)

    • Store the current Instruction Pointer in a predefined memory position
    • jump to the subroutine
    • at the end of the subroutine, you retrieve the Instruction Pointer from the predefined memory location, effectively jumping back to the following instruction of the original call

    Problem with the one-level implementation: You cannot call another subroutine from a subroutine. If you do, you'll overwrite the returning address (global variable), so you cannot nest calls.

    To have a better Implementation for subroutines: You need a STACK

  12. Stack: You define a memory space to work as a "stack", you can “push” values on the stack, and also “pop” the last “pushed” value. To implement a stack you'll need a Stack Pointer (similar to the Instruction Pointer) which points to the actual “head” of the stack. When you “push” a value, the stack pointer decrements and you store the value. When you “pop”, you get the value at the actual Stack Pointer and then the Stack Pointer is incremented.

  13. Subroutines Now that we have a stack we can implement proper subroutines allowing nested calls. The implementation is similar, but instead of storing the Instruction Pointer in a predefined memory position, we "push" the value of the IP in the stack. At the end of the subroutine, we just “pop” the value from the stack, effectively jumping back to the instruction after the original call. This implementation, having a “stack” allows calling a subroutine from another subroutine. With this implementation we can create several levels of abstraction when defining new instructions as subroutines, by using core instructions or other subroutines as building blocks.

  14. Recursion: What happens when a subroutine calls itself?. This is called "recursion".

    Problem: Overwriting the local intermediate results a subroutine can be storing in memory. Since you are calling/reusing the same steps, if the intermediate result are stored in predefined memory locations (global variables) they will be overwritten on the nested calls.

    Solution: To allow recursion, subroutines should store local intermediate results in the stack, therefore, on each recursive call (direct or indirect) the intermediate results are stored in different memory locations.

...

having reached recursion we stop here.

Conclusion:

In a Von Neumann Architecture, clearly "Iteration" is a simpler/basic concept than “Recursion". We have a form of "Iteration" at level 7, while "Recursion" is at level 14 of the concepts hierarchy.

Iteration will always be faster in machine code because it implies less instructions therefore less CPU cycles.

Which one is "better"?

  • You should use "iteration" when you are processing simple, sequential data structures, and everywhere a “simple loop” will do.

  • You should use "recursion" when you need to process a recursive data structure (I like to call them “Fractal Data Structures”), or when the recursive solution is clearly more “elegant”.

Advice: use the best tool for the job, but understand the inner workings of each tool in order to choose wisely.

Finally, note that you have plenty of opportunities to use recursion. You have Recursive Data Structures everywhere, you’re looking at one now: parts of the DOM supporting what you are reading are a RDS, a JSON expression is a RDS, the hierarchical file system in your computer is a RDS, i.e: you have a root directory, containing files and directories, every directory containing files and directories, every one of those directories containing files and directories...

6
  • 6
    You are assuming that your progression is 1) necessary and 2) that it stops there were you did. But 1) it isn't necessary (for example, recursion can be turned into a jump, as the accepted answer explained, so no stack is needed), and 2) it doesn't have to stop there (for example, eventually you'll reach concurrent processing, which might needs locks if you have mutable state as you introduced in your 2nd step, so everything slows down; while an immutable solution like a functional/recursive one would avoid locking, so could be faster/more parallel).
    – hmijail
    Aug 27, 2017 at 17:24
  • 3
    "recursion can be turned into a jump" is false. Truly useful recursion cannot be turned into a jump. Tail call "recursion" is a special case, where you code "as recursion" something that can be simplified into a loop by the compiler. Also you're conflating "immutable" with "recursion", those are orthogonal concepts. Aug 29, 2017 at 11:50
  • "Truly useful recursion cannot be turned into a jump" -> so tail call optimization is somehow useless? Also, immutable and recursion might be orthogonal, but you do link looping with mutable counters - look at your step 9. Seems to me that you're thinking that looping and recursion are radically different concepts; they aren't. stackoverflow.com/questions/2651112/…
    – hmijail
    Aug 30, 2017 at 11:19
  • @hmijail I think that a better word than "useful" is "true". Tail recursion isn't true recursion because it's just using function calling syntax to disguise unconditional branching, i.e. iteration. True recursion provides us with a backtracking stack. However, tail recursion is still expressive, which makes it useful. The properties of recursion which make it easy or easier to analyze code for correctness are conferred onto iterative code when it is expressed using tail calls. Though that is sometimes slightly offset by extra complication in the tail version like extra parameters.
    – Kaz
    Jan 14, 2020 at 16:09
  • If a compiler literally turns tail recursion into iteration, it's rather silly to call it "recursion" in the context of discussing its computational complexity. You might as well be talking about what brand of keyboard you typed it in at that point. Jul 24, 2020 at 14:02
52

Recursion may well be faster where the alternative is to explicitly manage a stack, like in the sorting or binary tree algorithms you mention.

I've had a case where rewriting a recursive algorithm in Java made it slower.

So the right approach is to first write it in the most natural way, only optimize if profiling shows it is critical, and then measure the supposed improvement.

3
  • 8
    +1 for "first write it in the most natural way" and especially "only optimize if profiling shows it is critical"
    – TripeHound
    Apr 16, 2014 at 14:39
  • 9
    +1 for acknowledging that the hardware stack may be faster than a software, manually implemented, in-heap stack. Effectively showing that all the "no" answers are incorrect.
    – sh1
    May 7, 2015 at 18:46
  • This assumes that the algorithm you wrote was actually the fastest iterative algorithm, though. Poor refactoring/optimization is also possible here. Sep 12, 2020 at 17:54
15

Tail recursion is as fast as looping. Many functional languages have tail recursion implemented in them.

1
15

Most of the answers here are wrong. The right answer is it depends. For example, here are two C functions which walks through a tree. First the recursive one:

static
void mm_scan_black(mm_rc *m, ptr p) {
    SET_COL(p, COL_BLACK);
    P_FOR_EACH_CHILD(p, {
        INC_RC(p_child);
        if (GET_COL(p_child) != COL_BLACK) {
            mm_scan_black(m, p_child);
        }
    });
}

And here is the same function implemented using iteration:

static
void mm_scan_black(mm_rc *m, ptr p) {
    stack *st = m->black_stack;
    SET_COL(p, COL_BLACK);
    st_push(st, p);
    while (st->used != 0) {
        p = st_pop(st);
        P_FOR_EACH_CHILD(p, {
            INC_RC(p_child);
            if (GET_COL(p_child) != COL_BLACK) {
                SET_COL(p_child, COL_BLACK);
                st_push(st, p_child);
            }
        });
    }
}

It's not important to understand the details of the code. Just that p are nodes and that P_FOR_EACH_CHILD does the walking. In the iterative version we need an explicit stack st onto which nodes are pushed and then popped and manipulated.

The recursive function runs much faster than the iterative one. The reason is because in the latter, for each item, a CALL to the function st_push is needed and then another to st_pop.

In the former, you only have the recursive CALL for each node.

Plus, accessing variables on the callstack is incredibly fast. It means you are reading from memory which is likely to always be in the innermost cache. An explicit stack, on the other hand, has to be backed by malloc:ed memory from the heap which is much slower to access.

With careful optimization, such as inlining st_push and st_pop, I can reach roughly parity with the recursive approach. But at least on my computer, the cost of accessing heap memory is bigger than the cost of the recursive call.

But this discussion is mostly moot because recursive tree walking is incorrect. If you have a large enough tree, you will run out of callstack space which is why an iterative algorithm must be used.

5
  • 2
    I can confirm that I have run into a similar situation, and that there are situations where recursion can be faster than a manual stack on the heap. Especially when optimization is turned on in the compiler to avoid some of the overhead of calling a function.
    – while1fork
    Mar 19, 2017 at 23:03
  • 2
    Did a pre-order traversal of a 7 node binary tree 10^8 times. Recursion 25ns. Explicit stack (bound-checked or not -- doesn't make much of a difference) ~ 15ns. Recursion needs to do more (register saving and restoration + (usually) stricter frame alignments) in addition to just pushing and jumping. (And it gets worse with PLT in dynamically linked libs.) You don't need to heap-allocate the explicit stack. You can do an obstack whose first frame is on the regular call stack so you don't sacrifice cache locality for the most common case where you don't exceed the first block. Jan 4, 2019 at 19:53
  • 2
    Thanks for this answer. I ran into this problem on a leet code tree comparison and couldn't figure out why my iterative solution was slower than 95% of recursive ones. The stack memory and multiple calls make a lot of sense, especially since I was using Java with its obfuscated memory management.
    – ameddin73
    Nov 6, 2021 at 15:04
  • Perhaps the most embarrassed fact here is that in (pure) C you cannot make sure when you will overflow the call stack. One more rediculous fact is an arbitrary small stack comforms to ISO C, which effectively means even argc from the main can overflow without any C function calls! Although this should never the case in practice, it suggests any restrictions about the call stack are already involved with enough implementation details. So, in the pure C sense, I'd ignore the resctrictions, and both algorithms shall be correct without more detailed requirements of the implementation environment.
    – FrankHB
    Apr 11, 2022 at 5:03
  • I had the same discovery. Everything I was taught was that iterative is better, faster, etc. than recursive. But in practice (vs theory), a large stack managed on the heap will be much slower b/c of cache misses. However, as you pointed out, it ultimately depends on how deep you need to go. Empirically, with C/C++, the fastest solution is recursion up to the point that stack overflow will occur, but then the other tradeoffs are code readability and the fact that stack overflow could occur in the future as the data grows.
    – jth_92
    Jul 8, 2023 at 2:52
15

Most answers here forget the obvious culprit why recursion is often slower than iterative solutions. It's linked with the build up and tear down of stack frames but is not exactly that. It's generally a big difference in the storage of the auto variable for each recursion. In an iterative algorithm with a loop, the variables are often held in registers and even if they spill, they will reside in the Level 1 cache. In a recursive algorithm, all intermediary states of the variable are stored on the stack, meaning they will generate many more spills to memory. This means that even if it makes the same amount of operations, it will have a lot memory accesses in the hot loop and what makes it worse, these memory operations have a lousy reuse rate making the caches less effective.

TL;DR recursive algorithms have generally a worse cache behavior than iterative ones.

12

Consider what absolutely must be done for each, iteration and recursion.

  • iteration: a jump to beginning of loop
  • recursion: a jump to beginning of called function

You see that there is not much room for differences here.

(I assume recursion being a tail-call and compiler being aware of that optimization).

5

In general, no, recursion will not be faster than a loop in any realistic usage that has viable implementations in both forms. I mean, sure, you could code up loops that take forever, but there would be better ways to implement the same loop that could outperform any implementation of the same problem via recursion.

You hit the nail on the head regarding the reason; creating and destroying stack frames is more expensive than a simple jump.

However, do note that I said "has viable implementations in both forms". For things like many sorting algorithms, there tends to not be a very viable way of implementing them that doesn't effectively set up its own version of a stack, due to the spawning of child "tasks" that are inherently part of the process. Thus, recursion may be just as fast as attempting to implement the algorithm via looping.

Edit: This answer is assuming non-functional languages, where most basic data types are mutable. It does not apply to functional languages.

3
  • That's also why several cases of recursion are often optimized by compilers in languages where recursion is frequently used. In F#, for instance, in addition to full support to tail recursive functions with the .tail opcode, you often see a recursive function compiled as a loop.
    – em70
    Apr 16, 2010 at 6:51
  • Yep. Tail recursion can sometimes be the best of both worlds - the functionally "appropriate" way to implement a recursive task, and the performance of using a loop.
    – Amber
    Apr 16, 2010 at 6:53
  • 1
    This is not, in general, correct. In some environments, mutation (which interacts with GC) is more expensive than tail recursion, which is transformed into a simpler loop in the output which does not use an extra stack frame. Apr 16, 2010 at 7:04
3

In any realistic system, no, creating a stack frame will always be more expensive than an INC and a JMP. That's why really good compilers automatically transform tail recursion into a call to the same frame, i.e. without the overhead, so you get the more readable source version and the more efficient compiled version. A really, really good compiler should even be able to transform normal recursion into tail recursion where that is possible.

1
  • Is gcc one of those really good compilers? Jul 1, 2023 at 11:54
1

Functional programming is more about "what" rather than "how".

The language implementors will find a way to optimize how the code works underneath, if we don't try to make it more optimized than it needs to be. Recursion can also be optimized within the languages that support tail call optimization.

What matters more from a programmer standpoint is readability and maintainability rather than optimization in the first place. Again, "premature optimization is root of all evil".

0

This is a guess. Generally recursion probably doesn't beat looping often or ever on problems of decent size if both are using really good algorithms(not counting implementation difficulty) , it may be different if used with a language w/ tail call recursion(and a tail recursive algorithm and with loops also as part of the language)-which would probably have very similar and possibly even prefer recursion some of the time.

0

According to theory its the same things. Recursion and loop with the same O() complexity will work with the same theoretical speed, but of course real speed depends on language, compiler and processor. Example with power of number can be coded in iteration way with O(ln(n)):

  int power(int t, int k) {
  int res = 1;
  while (k) {
    if (k & 1) res *= t;
    t *= t;
    k >>= 1;
  }
  return res;
  }
1
  • 2
    Big O is “proportional to”. So both are O(n), but one may take x times longer than the other, for all n. Jun 22, 2015 at 21:02
0

Here is an example when recursion ran faster than for looping in Java. This is a program which performs Bubble Sort on two arrays. The recBubbleSort(....) method sorts array arr using recursion and bbSort(....) method just uses looping to sort the array narr. The data are same in both the arrays.

public class BBSort_App {
    public static void main(String args[]) {
        int[] arr = {231,414235,23,543,245,6,324,-32552,-4};

        long time = System.nanoTime();
        recBubbleSort(arr, arr.length-1, 0);
        time = System.nanoTime() - time;

        System.out.println("Time Elapsed: "+time+"nanos");
        disp(arr);

        int[] narr = {231,414235,23,543,245,6,324,-32552,-4};
    
        time = System.nanoTime();
        bbSort(narr);
        time = System.nanoTime()-time;
        System.out.println("Time Elapsed: "+time+"nanos");
        disp(narr);
    }

    static void disp(int[] origin) {
        System.out.print("[");
        for(int b: origin)
            System.out.print(b+", ");
        System.out.println("\b\b \b]");
    }
    static void recBubbleSort(int[] origin, int i, int j) {
        if(i>0)
            if(j!=i) {
                if(origin[i]<origin[j]) {
                    int temp = origin[i];
                    origin[i] = origin[j];
                    origin[j] = temp;
                }
                recBubbleSort(origin, i, j+1);
            }
            else
                recBubbleSort(origin, i-1, 0);
    }

    static void bbSort(int[] origin) {
        for(int out=origin.length-1;out>0;out--)
            for(int in=0;in<out;in++)
                if(origin[out]<origin[in]) {
                    int temp = origin[out];
                    origin[out] = origin[in];
                    origin[in] = temp;
                }
    }
}

Running the test even 50 times gave alomst same results: Output to the above code

The answers given to this question is satisfactory but are without simple examples. Can anybody just give the reason to why this recursion runs faster?

2
  • Ns is pretty small comparison of time. You are talking about the difference between a few microseconds. I'd increase your array to 100k or 1 million and then compare the differences. What I've discovered is that iterative approaches are often working with the heap and recursion is with the stack and that is recursion is faster in practice due to cache misses up to the point stack overflow is reached. So as many of above answers have mentioned, it depends. Here is a link to a similar post that mentions this also - stackoverflow.com/questions/72209/….
    – jth_92
    Jul 8, 2023 at 2:59
  • 1
    @jth_92 Just tested it with increased array size. The loop technique was faster than the recursive one. The post you have put as link takes a slight dive in CPU and cache optimizations.
    – imraklr
    Jul 26, 2023 at 19:32

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