Every type of iterating through any data structure can be done with recursion. In fact you can replace every loop construct like for
, while
, do while
, foreach
, etc as simple recursion:
function factorial($n) {
$result = $n < 0 ? -1 : 1;
for($i = abs($n), $i > 1; $i--) {
$result *= $i;
}
return $result;
}
Can be written:
function factorial($n) {
$forHelper = function($result, $i) {
return $i === 1 ? $result : $forHelper($result * $i, $i - 1);
}
return $forHelper($n < 0 ? -1 : 1, abs($n));
}
This is called tail recursion. In some languages the two above produces very similar runtime code, but not PHP. It uses some memory for each call it does. For me both are equally readable, but I bet most programmers would find it easier with the loop, especially when it gets nested.
Some algorithms where you iterate a graph or tree will have a simpler version using recursion rather than iteration:
function treeDepth($node) {
if( $node === null ) {
return 0;
} else {
return 1 + max(treeDepth($node->left), treeDepth($node->right));
}
}
An iterative solution here would need some way of keeping track of the places it needs to visit and thus you are doing some housekeeping that is handled automatically by the recursive version.
function treeDepth($node) {
$max = 0;
$backtrack = [[0, $node]];
while( count($backtrack) ) {
list($depth, $node) = array_pop($backtrack);
while($node !== null) {
array_push($backtrack, [++$depth, $node->right]);
$node = $node->left;
}
$max = max($max, $depth);
}
return $max;
}
The limitation depends on the language. In PHP it allocates some memory for each call frame that is not allocated for a simple loop. The node traversal always uses memory since the process is inherently recursive.
Ultimately you should code in the way that makes your code as clear as possible without thinking about optimization. Use looping constructs where it is clearest and recursion where it is clearest. Only when you actually stumble on performance issues you should profile and rewrite the parts that use most time. I use to keep the original code as comment if it's short and documents what actually goes on in the more complex iterative version. In PHP function calls themselves are expensive.