@mr5 are you sure this function will not call itself infinite times in a loop if node.children.length is not equal or less than zero? I would rewrite the entire thing I don't maybe that's just me
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try this one it's only 42 characters :P 14 bytes (for Chrome): data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACw= For comparsion purposes, Your shortest dataurl was 66 characters.
Have a weird problem with my JS code, couldn't find a reason for it. When I load up the program with Node.js, it doesn't return anything. Not the stuff I wrote for logging, nor any errors. View my code here: stackoverflow.com/questions/64089766/…
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I've spent almost 2 hours searching around on Google for similar problems or solutions, without any result (did find some other useful things though). My guess is, that getting some variable that is badly defined stops the process without throwing an error (is that even possible?).
hmm, I think adding more argument into the function would do
I did try some tweaks on the original function and ended up with this:
function getProfit(node, maxProfit = 0, i = node.children.length - 1) {
if (i <= 0)
return node.profit + maxProfit;
if (node.children.length <= 0)
return node.profit;
return getProfit(node.children[i], maxProfit);
}
now, my problem with this is the i parameter.
if I would be able to convert this into a proper recursive form, that is, can be trimmed into tail recurse, I think I could follow along with the link I mentioned.
shoot, that's not even the same. I forgot the Math.max...
@Wietlol will this be two loops? one for pushing one for popping?
From Wikipedia:
In graph theory, a k-ary tree is a rooted tree in which each node has
no more than k children. It is also sometimes known as a k-way tree,
an N-ary tree, or an M-ary tree. A binary tree is the special case
where k=2.
So the answer your question is: Yes, it is the same ...