<Think Python>中斐波那契使用memo实现的章节

If you played with the fibonacci function from Section 6.7, you might have noticed that
the bigger the argument you provide, the longer the function takes to run. Furthermore,
the run time increases very quickly.
To understand why, consider Figure 11.2, which shows the call graph for fibonacci with
n=4:
A call graph shows a set of function frames, with lines connecting each frame to the frames
of the functions it calls. At the top of the graph, fibonacci with n=4 calls fibonacci with
n=3 and n=2. In turn, fibonacci with n=3 calls fibonacci with n=2 and n=1. And so on.
Count how many times fibonacci(0) and fibonacci(1) are called. This is an inefficient
solution to the problem, and it gets worse as the argument gets bigger.
One solution is to keep track of values that have already been computed by storing them
in a dictionary. A previously computed value that is stored for later use is called a memo.
Here is an implementation of fibonacci using memos:

known = {0:0, 1:1}
def fibonacci(n):
  if n in known:
    return known[n]
  res = fibonacci(n-1) + fibonacci(n-2)
  known[n] = res
  return res

known is a dictionary that keeps track of the Fibonacci numbers we already know. It starts
with two items: 0 maps to 0 and 1 maps to 1.


posted @ 2013-09-28 21:27  l3sl!e  阅读(252)  评论(0编辑  收藏  举报