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Home/ Questions/Q 7017305
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T22:53:49+00:00 2026-05-27T22:53:49+00:00

I’ve tried to write the recursive Ackermann function in Java. But I think I’ve

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I’ve tried to write the recursive Ackermann function in Java. But I think I’ve gone very very wrong somewhere! Could anyone take a look, check and maybe point my in the right direction of correcting my code? Thanks!

Ackermann

The issue I have with the code is that after I wrote it, I thought, what if n == 0 and m == 0, there’s not an area for this? Would this fall under the if (m == 0) or would it need it’s own if-statement?

Is my following solution correct? If I give it there same numbers in different sequence it gives a different result and I’m unsure if this is meant to be the case.

public static int ackermann(int m, int n) {

        if (m == 0) {

            return n + 1;

        } else if ((m > 0) && (n == 0)) {

            return ackermann(m-1, n);

        } else if ((m > 0) && (n > 0)) {

            return ackermann(m-1, ackermann(m,n-1));

        } else {

            return 0;

        }

    }

I thought about it some more and I think I’ve gone even more wrong. If you can’t figure out what I’ve done I gave each if statement an opposite, because I thought if the m and n values are given in a different way the following code will work. It clearly doesn’t but could someone try to explain where I’ve gone wrong?

public static int ackermann(int m, int n) {

        if (m == 0) {

            return n + 1;

        } else if (n == 0) {

            return m + 1;

        } else if ((m > 0) && (n == 0)) {

            return ackermann(m-1, n);

        } else if ((n > 0) && (m == 0)) {

            return ackermann(n-1, m);

        } else if ((m > 0) && (n > 0)) {

            return ackermann(m-1, ackermann(m,n-1));

        } else if ((n > 0) && (m > 0)) {

            return ackermann(n-1, ackermann(n, m-1));

        } else {

            return 0;

        }

    }
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T22:53:49+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 10:53 pm

    I think your first version is almost correct. I’d modify it slightly:

    public static int ackermann(int m, int n) {
        if (m < 0 || n < 0) {
            throw new IllegalArgumentException("Non-negative args only!");
        }
    
        if (m == 0) {
            return n + 1;
        } else if (n == 0) {
            return ackermann(m-1, 1); // Corrected!
        } else {
            // perforce (m > 0) && (n > 0)
            return ackermann(m-1, ackermann(m,n-1));
        }
    }
    

    The m == 0 && n == 0 case should be included in the m == 0 case.

    EDIT: Note that the Ackermann function is defined only for non-negative arguments. In particular, ackermann(0, -1) should throw an exception. Thus, you cannot just convert your last else clause to a throw.

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