Randell Dawson 73bdff45fd fix(curriculum): Added a Recursion challenge to the Basic JavaScript section (#35968)
* fix: added a recursion challenge

* fix: changed blockquote to triple backtick syntax

* fix: added an extra line to separate code section

* fix: renamed challenge and improved verbiage

* fix: added full path to challenge

Co-Authored-By: Oliver Eyton-Williams <ojeytonwilliams@gmail.com>

* fix: improved wording

Co-Authored-By: Oliver Eyton-Williams <ojeytonwilliams@gmail.com>

* fix: added closing )

Co-Authored-By: Oliver Eyton-Williams <ojeytonwilliams@gmail.com>

* fix: added missing comma and the word at

Co-Authored-By: Manish Giri <manish.giri.me@gmail.com>

* fix: added missing text for test case

Co-Authored-By: Manish Giri <manish.giri.me@gmail.com>

* fix: added note regarding startNum and endNum being same

* fix: wrapped parameter names with code tags
2019-07-12 13:40:50 +02:00

4.0 KiB

id, title, challengeType
id title challengeType
5cc0bd7a49b71cb96132e54c Use Recursion to Create a Range of Numbers 1

Description

In a previous challenge, you learned how to use recursion to replace a for loop. Now, let's look at a more complex function that returns an array of consecutive integers starting with 1 through the number passed to the function.

As mentioned in the previous challenge, there will be a base case. The base case tells the recursive function when it no longer needs to call itself. It is a simple case where the return value is already known. There will also be a recursive call which executes the original function with different arguments. If the function is written correctly, eventually the base case will be reached.

For example, say you want to write a recursive function that returns an array containing the numbers 1 through n. This function will need to accept an argument n representing the final number. Then it will need to call itself with progressively smaller values of n until it reaches 1. You could write the function as follows:

function count(n) {
  if (n === 1) {
    return [1];
  } else {
    var numbers = count(n - 1); 
    numbers.push(n);
    return numbers;
  }
}

At first this is counterintuitive since the value of n decreases, but the values in the final array are increasing. This happens because the push happens last, after the recursive call has returned. At the point where n is pushed into the array, count(n - 1) has already been evaluated and returned [1, 2, ..., n - 1].

Instructions

We have defined a function named rangeOfNumbers with two parameters. The function should return an array of integers which begins with a number represented by the startNum parameter and ends with a number represented by the endNum parameter. The starting number will always be less than or equal to the ending number. Your function must use recursion by calling itself and not use loops of any kind. It should also work for cases where both startNum and endNum are the same.

Tests

tests:
  - text: Your function should return an array.
    testString: assert(Array.isArray(rangeOfNumbers(5, 10)));
  - text: Your code should not use any loop syntax (<code>for</code> or <code>while</code> or higher order functions such as <code>forEach</code>, <code>map</code>, <code>filter</code>, or <code>reduce</code>).
    testString: assert(!removeJSComments(code).match(/for|while|forEach|map|filter|reduce/g));
  - text: <code>rangeOfNumbers</code> should use recursion (call itself) to solve this challenge.
    testString: assert(removeJSComments(rangeOfNumbers.toString()).match(/rangeOfNumbers\s*\(.+\)/));
  - text: <code>rangeOfNumbers(1, 5)</code> should return <code>[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]</code>.
    testString: assert.deepStrictEqual(rangeOfNumbers(1, 5), [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
  - text: <code>rangeOfNumbers(6, 9)</code> should return <code>[6, 7, 8, 9]</code>.
    testString: assert.deepStrictEqual(rangeOfNumbers(6, 9), [6, 7, 8, 9]);
  - text: <code>rangeOfNumbers(4, 4)</code> should should return <code>[4]</code>.
    testString: assert.deepStrictEqual(rangeOfNumbers(4, 4), [4]);

Challenge Seed

function rangeOfNumbers(startNum, endNum) {
  return [];
};

After Test

const removeJSComments = str => str.replace(/\/\*[\s\S]*?\*\/|\/\/.*$/gm, '');

Solution

function rangeOfNumbers(startNum, endNum) {
  if (endNum - startNum === 0) {
    return [startNum];
  } else {
    var numbers = rangeOfNumbers(startNum, endNum - 1);
    numbers.push(endNum);
    return numbers;
  }
}