I am relatively new to javascript. I am trying to code my web version of minesweeper. Here is a recursive function I needed, and it looks to work fine until browser gives this “too much recursion” error. The problem is that i need that recursion. Is there any other way to code minesweeper? Here is the demo: http://altynachar.com/minesweeper/
I can post my php code if needed.
function recursive(id){
var id = id;
//Determine what kind of cell this is: Clean, Bomb or Adjasent to bomb
if($("#"+id).hasClass("adj")== true)
var under = "adj";
if($("#"+id).hasClass("bomb")==true)
var under = "bomb";
if($("#"+id).hasClass("clean")==true)
var under = "clean";
//open up the cell
$("#"+id).hide();
$("#under_"+id).show();
//if it is bomb, open up whole grid and button for restart
if(under == 'bomb')
{
$(".cover").hide();
$(".under").show();
$("body").append("<br /><input type='button' value='restart' onClick='javascript:window.location.reload();' />");
} else {
//if it is clean cell
if(under == "clean")
{
//get all the adjasent cell ids
var split = id.split('-');
var row = parseInt(split[0]);
var col = parseInt(split[1]);
var adjasent = new Array();
adjasent[0] = (row-1)+"-"+ (col+1);
adjasent[1] = row +"-"+(col+1);
adjasent[2] = (row+1)+"-"+(col+1);
adjasent[3] = (row+1)+"-"+col;
adjasent[4] = (row+1)+"-"+(col-1);
adjasent[5] = row+"-"+(col-1);
adjasent[6] = (row -1)+"-"+(col-1);
adjasent[7] = (row -1)+"-"+col;
//loop through adjasent cells
for(var i=0; i<adjasent.length; i++)
{
var split2 = adjasent[i].split('-');
var row2 = parseInt(split2[0]);
var col2 = parseInt(split2[1]);
//check if cell is existent
if(row2 > 0 && row2 < 17)
{
if(col2 > 0 && col2 < 17)
{
//perform recursion
var adj = adjasent[i];
recursive(adj);
}
}
}
}
}
}
My guess is that if you have 2 clean cells next to each other your code will get in an infinite recursion.
Each iteration recurses to all adjacent cells. So say cell A and B are next to each other, and both are clean. A will call recurse to B, which will then recurse to A, which recurses to B, and so on.
You can either try to clean up your recursion so that it doesn’t look at cells that were already seen, or remove the recursion. You can accomplish the same thing by adding any unseen clean cells to a queue, and just keep popping off the end of the queue until it’s empty. That might make it easier to avoid checking the same cell twice too.
Also, please don’t build up strings just to split them into separate data later. Instead of:
just do