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Date: | 2006-02-12 (23:52) |
From: | Jacques Garrigue <garrigue@m...> |
Subject: | Re: [Caml-list] HOFs, recursion, and being tail-rec... |
From: Jonathan Roewen <jonathan.roewen@gmail.com> > > I have a simple implementation of depth-first-search, and was > wondering if my approach would qualify as tail-rec (whether from the > code it is/isn't, and whether ocaml can optimise it so it is). By definition a depth-first-search cannot be tail-recursive: you need a stack to implement the backtracking. There is a degenerate case where all nodes are non-branching (i.e. there is only one path), which in theory could be made tail-recursive. But it would not be the case with your code, as List.exists has no special case for the last element of the list (not that it would make a lot of sense in general.) > val positions : 'a -> ('a * 'a) list -> 'a list -> 'a list > (* I think that's right type: returns positions we can traverse to, > omitting nodes we've previously visited *) > > (* val dfs: 'a -> 'a -> ('a * 'a) list -> bool *) > let dfs start goal edges = > let rec search visited position = > if position = goal then true > else List.exists (search (position::visited)) (positions > position edges (position::visited)) > in search [] start;;