Recursion and Induction Recurrence Equations vs. Recursive Procedures

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TECH
Computer Science
Recursion and Induction
For advanced algorithm development,
recursion is an essential design technique
Recursive Procedures
What is a Proof?
Induction Proofs
Proving Correctness of Procedures
Recurrence Equations
Recursion Trees
Recurrence Equations vs.
Recursive Procedures
Recurrence Equations:
defines a function over the natural numbers, say T(n),
in terms of its own value at one or more integers
smaller than n.
T(n) is defined inductively.
There are base cases to be defined separately.
Recurrence equation applies for n larger than
the base cases
Recursive Procedures:
a procedure calls a unique copy of itself
converging to a base case (stopping the recursion)
e.g. Fibonacci Function
Recurrence Equation: e.g. Fibonacci Function
fib(0) = 0; fib(1) = 1; // base cases
fib(n) = fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) // all n>2
Recursive Procedure:
int fib(int n)
int f, f1, f2;
1. if (n < 2)
2. f = n; // base cases
3. else
4. f1 = fib( n-1 );
5. f2 = fib( n-2 );
6. f = f1 + f2;
7. return f;
The working of recursive procedure
a unique copy for each call to itself
individual procedure invocation at run time
i.e. activation frame
e.g. The working of fib(n)
main ()
int x = fib(3);
Activation Tree
Each node corresponds to a different procedure
invocation, just at the point when it is about to return.
A preorder traversal visits each activation frame in
order of its creation
Analysis for algorithm without loops
In a computation without loops, but possible with
recursive procedure calls:
The time that any particular activation frame is on the
top of the frame stack is O(L),
where L is the number of lines in the procedure that
contain either a simple statement or a procedure call.
The total computation time is (C),
where C is the total number of procedure calls that
occur during the computation.
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Designing Recursive Procedures
// Think Inductively
converging to a base case (stopping the recursion)
identify some unit of measure (running variable)
identify base cases
assume p solves all sizes 0 through 100
assume p99 solve sub-problem all sizes 0 through 99
if p detect a case that is not base case it calls p99
p99 satisfies:
1. The sub-problem size is less than ps problem size
2. The sub-problem size is not below the base case
3. The sub-problem satisfies all other preconditions of
p99 (which are the same as the preconditions of p)
Recursive Procedure design e.g.
Problem:
write a delete(L, x) procedure for a list L
which is supposed to delete the first occurrence of x.
Possibly x does not occur in L.
Strategy:
Use recursive Procedure
The size of the problem is
the number of elements in list L
Use IntList ADT
Base cases: ??
Running variable (converging number): ??
ADT for IntList
IntList cons(int newElement, IntList oldList)
Precondition: None.
Postconditions: If x = cons(newElement, oldList) then
1. x refers to a newly created object;
2. x != nil;
3. first(x) = newElement;
4. rest(x) = oldList
int first(IntList aList) // access function
Precondition: aList != nil
IntList rest(IntList aList) // access function
Precondition: aList != nil
IntList nil //constant denoting the empty list.
Recurrence Equation for
delete(L, x) from list L
Think Inductively
delete(nil, x) = nil
delete(L, x) = rest(L) /; x == first(L)
delete(L, x) = cons(first(L), delete(rest(L), x))
Algorithm for Recursive delete(L, x) from list
//
IntList delete(IntList L, int x)
IntList newL, fixedL;
if (L == nil)
newL = L;
else if (x == first(L))
newL = rest(L);
else
fixedL = delete99(rest(L), x);
newL = cons(first(L), fixedL);
return newL;
Algorithm for non-recursive delete(L, x)
IntList delete(IntList L, int x)
IntList newL, tempL;
tempL = L; newL = nil;
while (tempL != nil && x != first(tempL)) //copy elements
newL = cons(first(tempL), newL);
tempL = rest(tempL)
If (tempL != nil) // x == first(tempL)
tempL = rest(tempL) // remove x
while (tempL != nil) // copy the rest elements
newL = cons(first(tempL), newL);
tempL = rest(tempL)
return newL;
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Convert a non-recursive procedure
to a recursive procedure
Convert procedure with loop
to recursive procedure without loop
Recursive Procedure acting like WHILE loop
While(Not Base Case)
Setting up Sub-problem
Recursive call to continue
The recursive function may need an additional
parameter
which replaces an index in a FOR loop of the
non-recursive procedure.
Transforming loop into a recursive procedure
Local variable with the loop body
give the variable only one value in any one pass
for variable that must be updated, do all the updates at
the end of the loop body
Re-expressing a while loop with recursion
Additional parameters
f Variables updated in the loop become procedure input parameters.
Their initial values at loop entry correspond to the actual
parameters in the top-level call of the recursive procedure.
f Variables referenced in the loop but not updated may also become
parameters
The recursive procedure begins by mimicking the while
condition and returns if while condition is false
f a break also corresponds to a procedure return
Continue by updating variable and make recursive call
Removing While loop, e.g.
int factLoop(int n)
int k=1; int f = 1
while (k <= n)
int fnew = f*k;
int knew = k+1
k = knew; f = fnew;
return f;
int factLoop(int n)
return factRec(n, 1, 1);
int factRec(int n, int k, int f)
if (k <= n)
int fnew = f*k;
int knew = k+1
return factRec(n, knew, fnew)
return f;
Removing For loop, e.g.
Convert the following seqSearch
to recursive procedure without loop
int seqSearch(int[] E, int num, int K)
1. int ans, index;
2. ans = -1; // Assume failure.
3. for (index = 0; index < num; index++)
4. if (K == E[index])
5. ans = index; // Success!
6. break; // Done!
7. return ans;
Recursive Procedure without loops e.g.
Call with: seqSearchRec(E, 0, num, K)
seqSearchRec(E, index, num, K)
1: if (index >= num)
2: ans = -1;
3: else if (E[index] == K) // index < num
4: ans = index;
5: else
6: ans = seqSearchRec(E, index+1, num, K);
7: return ans;
Compare to: for (index = 0; index < num; index++)
Analyzing Recursive Procedure
using Recurrence Equations
Let n be the size of the problem
Worst-Case Analysis (for procedure with no loops)
T(n) =
the individual cost for a sequence of blocks
add the maximum cost for an alternation of blocks
add the cost of subroutine call, S( f(n) )
add the cost of recursive procedure call, T( g(n) )
e.g. seqSearchRec,
Basic operation is comparison of array element, cost 1
statement: 1: + max(2:, (3: + max(4:, (5: + 6:))) + (7:)
Cost: 0 + max(0, (1 + max(0, (0+T(n-1))) + 0
T(n) = T(n-1) + 1; T(0) = 0
=> T(n) = n; T(n) (n)
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Evaluate recursive equation
using Recursion Tree
Evaluate: T(n) = T(n/2) + T(n/2) + n
Work copy: T(k) = T(k/2) + T(k/2) + k
For k=n/2, T(n/2) = T(n/4) + T(n/4) + (n/2)
[size|cost]
Recursion Tree e.g.
To evaluate the total cost of the recursion tree
sum all the non-recursive costs of all nodes
= Sum (rowSum(cost of all nodes at the same depth))
Determine the maximum depth of the recursion tree:
For our example, at tree depth d
the size parameter is n/(2
d
)
the size parameter converging to base case, i.e. case 1
such that, n/(2
d
) = 1,
d = lg(n)
The rowSumfor each row is n
Therefore, the total cost, T(n) = n lg(n)
Proving Correctness of Procedures: Proof
What is a Proof?
A Proof is a sequence of statements that form a logical
argument.
Each statement is a complete sentence in the normal
grammatical sense.
Each statement should draw a new conclusion from:
axiom: well known facts
assumptions: premises of the theorem you are proving
or inductive hypothesis
intermediate conclusions: statements established earlier
To arrive at the last statement of a proof that must be
the conclusion of the proposition being proven
Format of Theorem, Proof Format
A proposition (theorem, lemma, and corollary) is
represented as:
x W ( A(x) => C(x) )
for all x in W, if A(x) then C(x)
the set W is called world,
A(x) represents the assumptions
C(x) represents the conclusion, the goal statement
=> is read as implies
Proof sketches provides outline of a proof
the strategy, the road map, or the plan.
Two-Column Proof Format
Statement : Justification (supporting facts)
Induction Proofs
Induction proofs are a mechanism, often the only
mechanism, for proving a statement about an infinite
set of objects.
Inferring a property of a set based on the property of its
objects
Induction is often done over the set of natural
numbers {0,1,2,}
starting from 0, then 1, then 2, and so on
Induction is valid over a set, provided that:
The set is partially ordered;
f i.e. an order relationship is defined between some pairs of elements,
but perhaps not between all pairs.
There is no infinite chain of decreasing elements in the
set. (e.g. cannot be set of all integers)
Induction Proof Schema
0: Prove: x W ( A(x) => C(x) )
Proof:
1: The Proof is by induction on x, <description of x>
2: The base case is, cases are, <base-case>
3: <Proof of goal statement with base-case substituted
into it, that is, C(base-case)>
4: For <x> greater than <base-case>,
assume that A(y) => C(y)
holds for all y W
such that y < x.
5: <Proof of the goal statement, C(x), exactly as it
appears in the proposition>.
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Induction Proof e.g.
Prove:
For all n >= 0,

i=0
n
i(i+1)/2 = n(n+1)(n+2)/6
Proof:
Proving Correctness of Procedures
Things should be made as simple as possible
but not simpler
Albert Einstein
Proving Correctness of procedures is a difficult task
in general; the trick is to
make it as simple as possible.
No loops is allowed in the procedure!
Variable is assigned a value only once!
Loops are converted into Recursive procedures.
Additional variables are used to make single-
assignment (write-once read many) possible.
x = y+1 does imply the equation x = y+1 for entire time
General Correctness Lemma
If all preconditions hold when the block is entered,
then all postconditions hold when the block exits
And, the procedure will terminate!
Chains of Inference: Sequence
Proving Correctness of Binary Search, e.g.
int binarySearch(int[] E, int first, int last, int K)
1. if (last < first)
2. index = -1;
3. else
4. int mid = (first + last)/2
5. if (K == E[mid])
6. index = mid;
7. else if (K < E[mid])
8. index = binarySearch(E, first, mid-1, K)
9. else
10. index = binarySearch(E, mid+1, last, K);
11. return index
Proving Correctness of Binary Search
Lemma (preconditions => postconditions)
if binarySearch(E, first, last, K) is called, and
the problem size is n = (last first + 1),
for all n >= 0, and
E[first], E[last] are in nondecreasing order,
then it returns 1 if K does not occur in E within the
range first, , last, and
it returns index such that K=E[index] otherwise
Proof
The proof is by induction on n, the problem size.
The base case in n = 0.
In this case, line 1 is true, line 2 is reached, and 1 is
returned. (the postcondition is true)
Inductive Proof, continue
For n > 0, assume that binarySearch(E, first, last, K) satisfies
the lemma on problems of size k, such that 0 <= k < n, and first
and last are any indexes such that k = last first + 1
For n > 0, line 1 is false, mid is within the search range
(first <= mid <= last).
If line 5 is true, the procedure terminates with
index = mid. (the postcondition is true)
If line 5 is false, from (first <= mid <= last) and def. of n,
(mid 1) first + 1 <= (n 1)
last (mid + 1) + 1 <= (n 1)
so the inductive hypothesis applies for both recursive calls,
If line 7 is true, the preconditions of binarySearch are satisfied,
we can assume that the call accomplishes the objective.
If line 8 return positive index, done.
If line 8 returns 1, this implies that K is not in E in the first
mid-1, also since line 7 is true, K is not in E in range minlast, so
returning 1 is correct (done).
If line 7 is false, similar the postconditions are true. (done!)

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