How to go around infinite recursions
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Albert Garcia
on 5 Nov 2019
Answered: Albert Garcia
on 15 Nov 2019
Hi. I have a series of functions that go Weight_Approx_1 -> Geometric_Approx -> Weight_Approx_2 . I would like for the Weight_Approx_2 to feed back in to Weight_Approx_1 so it can act as the new input. I can do this so well that I get an infinite loop without trying. How do I get a loop like this to return a final value from the Weight_Approx_2 program after a number of iterations I choose?
In other words, how do I rewrite a series of functions like below such that I control how many times f_c gets run? Once int == 2, it'll just be an infinite loop
function a = fa
for int = (1:10)
if int = 1
a = 1;
else
a = fc;
end
end
end
function b = fb
b = fa*2
end
function c = fc
c = fb + 1;
end
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Richard Brown
on 5 Nov 2019
I'm not sure the code you've written describes what you intend. It's going to create an unterminated recursion that will cause an error very quickly.
Can you describe in words a little more clearly what you mean? Why are you using recursion at all? Why not something like:
x = 1; % whatever your initial estimate of the "thing" is
for k = 1:max_iterations
a = weight_approx_1(x);
b = geometric_approx(a);
x = weight_approx_2(b);
end
6 Comments
Richard Brown
on 7 Nov 2019
Sorry for taking a while to get back to you. Just looking at it now - what do you mean by "value output from WEIGHT_SIZING is seen in all the other files". The function WEIGHT_SIZING has no inputs or global variables, so I don't see how running this again will help ...
perhaps you could step me through the actual calculation you want performed (what variables need to be iterated)?
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