I used the debugger to examine this code but not understanding a couple areas.
- Why does the for loop repeat after it exits to print a new line? If it exits the loop, shouldn’t it be done with it?
- Why is n incremented and not i as stated with i++?
int main(void)
{
int height = get_int("Height: ");
draw(height);
}
void draw(int n)
{
if (n <= 0)
{
return;
}
draw(n - 1);
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
{
printf("#");
}
printf("\n");
}


Recursion is much easier to understand if you use
gotoinstead of functions. Functions are a high level concept in the C language (and most other languages) but it gets compiled down to (essentially) the oldergotostyle of programming which is much easier to understand.goto 42will move execution to line 42 of the code.goto xwill move to the line of code labeledx.Most modern languages don’t even have
gotosupport, since functions are cleaner and tend to produce more easily maintained code, however as a programmer you should be aware what’s going on under the hood. Here’s your code rewritten to usegoto:int main(void) { int height = get_int("Height: "); int row = 1; // Starting row int col = 0; // Starting column draw: if (row > height) // Exit condition { goto end; } if (col < row) { printf("#"); col++; goto draw; // Repeat the same row } // Move to the next row printf("\n"); row++; col = 0; // Reset column for the next row goto draw; end: return 0; }PS:
gotois also howforloops,ifstatements,switchblocks and others work under the hood.