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Home/ Questions/Q 4067646
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T16:16:33+00:00 2026-05-20T16:16:33+00:00

If I have this recursive function: int mystery(int n) { if ( n ==

  • 0

If I have this recursive function:

int mystery(int n) {

if ( n == 0 || n == 1 ||  n ==  2) return  n ;
 return (mystery(n-1) + mystery(n-2) + mystery(n-3))  ;
}

I am working with finding mystery(20).

How can I find out how many addition operations are carried out when calculating the function and how many invocations of mystery() there are in order to calculate mystery(20)?

I tried adding some cout statements like:

int mystery(int n) {
    if ( n == 0 || n == 1 ||  n ==  2) {
      cout << n << endl; 
      return  n ;
    }
        cout << n << endl;
    return (mystery(n-1) + mystery(n-2) + mystery(n-3))  ;
}

But I couldn’t really make sense of it since there were over a thousand numbers outputted. And I don’t believe those cout statements do much in the way of telling me how many addition operations are carried out and how many invocations of mystery() there are in order to calculate mystery(20)?

Thanks for any and all help!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T16:16:34+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 4:16 pm

    The easiest way to do is to increment a global (or static global) variable.

    Something like to get the number of mystery call:

    int nb_of_invok = 0;
    int mystery(int n)
    {
      nb_of_invok++;
      ...your code here...
    }
    

    And this to get the number of additions:

    int nb_of_invok = 0;
    int nb_of_add = 0;
    int mystery(int n)
    {
      nb_of_invok++;
      if(...)return n;
      nb_of_add++;
      return(...);
    }
    
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