Towers of Hanoi: A Complete Recursive Visualization

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • This video is about an in depth look at one of the most challenging recursive problems for computer science students: Towers of Hanoi. We first take the perspective of how we would solve it if it was just a puzzle, where we look specifically at developing a general strategy. Afterwards, we then convert this strategy into a complete recursive solution to the problem. On the way to this solution, we learn a framework to think about and solve tough recursive problems like this one. We finish the video by take a step back and analyzing the recursive solution and how the recursion unravels.
    Support: / reducible
    This video wouldn't be possible without the open source manim library created by 3blue1brown: github.com/3b1b/manim
    Here is link to the repository that contains the code used to generate the animations in this video: github.com/nipunramk/Reducible
    Music:
    October by Kai Engel freemusicarchive.org/music/Ka...
    November by Kai Engel
    freemusicarchive.org/music/Ka...
    Cobweb Morning by Kai Engel
    freemusicarchive.org/music/Ka...

Komentáře • 493

  • @leonardofillipe7668
    @leonardofillipe7668 Před 3 lety +787

    Now I realized that the steps for recursive problem solving is basically the same steps taken in induction proofs in mathematics.

    • @HuyTran-ny7mg
      @HuyTran-ny7mg Před 3 lety +111

      That's why they're usually taught together in discrete math courses for computer science!

    • @angrymurloc7626
      @angrymurloc7626 Před 3 lety +30

      There is a generalized version of induction called "structural induction" which has uses in proving things about recursively defined objects

    • @srujangurram
      @srujangurram Před 2 lety +6

      @@HuyTran-ny7mg yes I learnt that along with recursive functions in discrete math

    • @curiosdevcookie
      @curiosdevcookie Před 2 lety +2

      I’m stunned 😮

    • @_mrmark
      @_mrmark Před rokem +19

      Now I realized that I do not understand anything in either one or the other.😭

  • @JamesJon1187
    @JamesJon1187 Před 2 lety +313

    If anyone else had didn't immediately catch the logic behind the " other = 6 - (start + end) ", it's because if you tally up the values of rods 1,2, 3 that will equal six. Thus if start = rod 1 and end = rod3, 6-(rod1+rod3) = rod2, thus "other = rod2".

    • @mohammedsuhail1500
      @mohammedsuhail1500 Před 2 lety +16

      u made my day thank you:)

    • @ryannickles3218
      @ryannickles3218 Před rokem +14

      I was just about to say that "6" appears to be a *magic number* that should be defined based on core principles. Thank you for elucidating.

    • @isaiahpaul56
      @isaiahpaul56 Před rokem +1

      @@ryannickles3218 lol same

    • @thomaslao9832
      @thomaslao9832 Před rokem +3

      unless you are using indices to store values or calculating distance between indices or having some kind of significance with adding up the labels of the rods, im going to call that "logic" presented in the video magic numbered bullshit for the sake of pseudo-genius content.

    • @mohammadraddad9446
      @mohammadraddad9446 Před rokem +2

      so if I had 4 rods it will be (1+2+3+4) => 10-(strat+end)?

  • @boredpotato6366
    @boredpotato6366 Před 4 lety +634

    If you keep making videos like this, you'll become the best and most famous CS teacher on CZcams.

    • @codeoncloudtv7193
      @codeoncloudtv7193 Před 3 lety +15

      I agree. Never see someone like him. So passionate

    • @princessassmunch4354
      @princessassmunch4354 Před 3 lety +4

      The amount of ads on this video fucking disgusts me tho.

    • @lqv3223
      @lqv3223 Před 3 lety +19

      @@princessassmunch4354 Man’s gotta make his bread. At this point, only 20 people support him on Patreon and he has tens of thousands of viewers who get such amazing content for free.

    • @princessassmunch4354
      @princessassmunch4354 Před 3 lety +1

      @@lqv3223 He can't tone it down just
      a little? I mean for God sakes man, fucking 6 ads on a 20 min video.

    • @lqv3223
      @lqv3223 Před 3 lety +2

      @@princessassmunch4354 That sounds like a lot tbh. A portion of my premium membership fee goes towards this channel, making it easier to support this channel and guarantee an ad-free experience. I'm sure he'll tone down the number of ads once he has a decent number of subscribers.

  • @anujjadhav2175
    @anujjadhav2175 Před 3 lety +30

    I am a simple person, I see recursion, I panic.

  • @igor-yc7ey
    @igor-yc7ey Před 3 lety +68

    Great explanation! Just a suggestion: highlight which line of the code is doing each step as you explain it

  • @jonathanhirsch1717
    @jonathanhirsch1717 Před 3 lety +63

    My jaw literally dropped when I saw that you had 32k subs, I was expecting over 500k!!! But now you're one sub closer!

  • @pankajbisht897
    @pankajbisht897 Před 3 lety +5

    the effort you put into explaining these complex concepts is unimaginable. I have never seen this kind of presentation for explaining an algorithm. Keep it up please.

  • @markomozina7894
    @markomozina7894 Před 4 lety +122

    I can’t even belive that the video of this quality has so few views. Keep up the good work!

  • @fairextl
    @fairextl Před 3 lety +2

    I was thinking about this problem a while back, today I got one of your videos recommended to me, and now I'm here! Astounding explanation!

  • @tmorid3
    @tmorid3 Před 3 lety +4

    This is actually an amazing video, with super clear and simple explanations and animations. This is absolutely amazing and mind blows.
    Thank you so much

  • @jocelynchang183
    @jocelynchang183 Před 3 lety +4

    This video is soooo great! It took me awhile, but after repeating your video for 5 times, I finally understand this completely and was able to even work out examples with 5+ discs on my own. Thank you so much!!!

  • @puspamadak
    @puspamadak Před 3 lety +4

    I don't ever take the time to think of such hard problems. But your lessons gives me confidence. Thanks a lot!

  • @mohammedsanaullah1065
    @mohammedsanaullah1065 Před 4 lety +118

    Im really glad that CZcams finally recommended something that I really needed. Your passion for CS I really resonate with. Amazing video and unparalleled explanation. After encountering recursion, my interest in dynamic programming dwindled quite a lot, but your videos really helped me overcome this hurdle of mine. Many thanks, keep up the amazing work, Here's to hoping for more amazing content Cheers!

    • @Reducible
      @Reducible  Před 4 lety +29

      Wow, that is one powerful comment Mohammad! Thanks for taking the time to write it and comments like yours mean a lot to me. I'm glad this video helped rekindle your interest in recursion and dynamic programming. Those are hard topics so there's no shame in admitting that they can be frustrating, and the goals of videos like this are to find a way past that frustration and focus on learning the beauty of the concepts, however hard that can be at times. I'm happy that you were able to see that through this video. I'm definitely planning on making future content, so stay tuned!

  • @HalfEye79
    @HalfEye79 Před 3 lety +39

    A few years ago, I solved the towers of hanoi with a loop.
    I assumed, that there are always three rods. And I said, that an empty rod is a very large disc.
    I only needed one input: the number of discs. I had realized quite another pattern, for which it is important, whether the number of discs is odd or even.
    The pattern is, that every other move is the move of the smallest disc. If the number of discs is odd, it always moves start -> end -> other -> start. If the number of discs is even, it always moves start -> other -> end -> start. The other move is always the smaller of the two discs on top of the bigger disc.
    This solution might might have a few memory issues, but it works.

    • @juliuskadel7696
      @juliuskadel7696 Před rokem +1

      That is so interesting

    • @muhammadumarorakzai
      @muhammadumarorakzai Před 9 měsíci +1

      that is how i solved it for my C lab problem. had to play it so many times to figure out that pattern

  • @iszaffar
    @iszaffar Před 3 lety +19

    Thank you for taking the time and effort to make this video. The quality of the editing and animations in the video are excellent and remind me of 3Blue1Brown's videos. Great explanation and it really helped me to visualise and understand how this problem works!

    • @Reducible
      @Reducible  Před 3 lety +7

      Thanks for the awesome comment! Glad this content helped you with this problem!

    • @alinac5512
      @alinac5512 Před 3 lety

      Lol, I was thinking of 3blue1brown too.

    • @chriswu6823
      @chriswu6823 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Reducible was that intro a reference to his ted talk hahaha

  • @monkmode9138
    @monkmode9138 Před rokem +20

    I feel so stupid.

  • @harikrishnan204
    @harikrishnan204 Před 3 lety +1

    the explanation is amazing! I hope you make more videos on more algorithmic problems. there are very few on youtube who explain with such clarity

  • @jayantverma6196
    @jayantverma6196 Před 4 lety +4

    This was so awesome man, i watched all of your videos and they are amazing. Big fan here!!!!!

  • @bubblesort8760
    @bubblesort8760 Před rokem

    the best videos that i have ever watched that explains Towers of Hanoi. I love this channel. Keep up the good work. I can't wait watching this kind of vids.

  • @bntejn
    @bntejn Před 3 lety

    Beautiful. You’re really talented at unraveling seemingly complex concepts very elegantly. After watching your videos, I can’t help but knowing the concepts matter-of-factly. And wonder to myself why I wasn’t able to get it earlier.

  • @eduardorios6463
    @eduardorios6463 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you so much for these awesome videos. I'm currently taking course MITx 6.00.1x over on edX and your videos are really helping me understand the concepts. Thank you again.

  • @lakshyamangal51
    @lakshyamangal51 Před 3 lety

    thank you so much man ❤️ please keep making videos like this 🙏the quality and simplicity you have is unmatched.

  • @bhautiksavaliya3635
    @bhautiksavaliya3635 Před 3 lety +1

    The best explanation with the best visual animation. An extraordinary work.
    Thank you very much and please keep doing it.

  • @voidproc
    @voidproc Před rokem

    Honestly great job dude
    You have much respect from me
    I havent seen anyone having such a great ability making something so complex , look so easy

  • @maheshvshet
    @maheshvshet Před 4 lety +10

    You amaze with awesome content. The explanation was some understandable, I can hardly forget it. Thanks.

  • @vsk0208
    @vsk0208 Před 3 lety

    Best explanation I have seen on CZcams, I appreciate your effort. Thanks for uploading this video :)

  • @samuelsitina8558
    @samuelsitina8558 Před 2 lety +1

    The simplicity of the code is truly beautiful.

  • @samgodse5824
    @samgodse5824 Před rokem +1

    Greatest video ever on towers of hanoi problem. Even though I have tried to understand this problem number of time I finally understood it here. Because I was trying to name the discs as well but now I realised it isn't necessary since we'll always be moving top disc on a certain rod. Absolutely amazing way of explaining!! Keep it up!!🎉

  • @eriktruong9856
    @eriktruong9856 Před 2 lety +42

    What is the reason for other = 6 - (start + end). There are 10 disks on the example? 14:02. If the first, second and third rod was labeled 1,2 and 3. Then the other rod is 6- (start+end). Is there a 4th rod? Edit: After som afterthought I think you possibly referring to the sum of tower numbers 1+2+3 = 6, but this wasn't explained deeply enough to be satisfying. So essentially this is a method of finding the auxiliary rod at any given time in the recursion.

    • @debjeet5715
      @debjeet5715 Před 2 lety +4

      Your comment helped here. Thanks mate 🤜🏼

    • @quyenscc
      @quyenscc Před 2 lety +25

      We always have 3 rods: 1, 2 and 3. When start is 1, end is 2, then other is 6-(1+2) = 3. When start is 1, end is 3, then other is 6-(1+3) = 2. When start is 2, end is 3, then other is 6-(2+3) = 1, and so on. Thus, the formula makes sense.

    • @nikosrouskas2438
      @nikosrouskas2438 Před 2 lety +3

      It was quite clear I think

    • @charlierock000
      @charlierock000 Před 2 lety

      @@nikosrouskas2438 I think he though he had to add the number of disks in each rod

    • @ponyride23
      @ponyride23 Před 4 měsíci

      @@quyenscc Thank you! Our teacher taught us by naming the rods 'from', 'to' and 'other' and passing them as string parameters 'A', 'B', 'C'. The lesson was on divide and conquer though, not recursion, maybe that's why.

  • @surabhigupta49
    @surabhigupta49 Před rokem

    Thank you so much. This is by far the best explanation on youtube for this problem. Thoroughly understood the logic because of the amazing animation.

  • @abhirup619
    @abhirup619 Před 8 měsíci

    spent 2 hours last year trying to understand towers of hanoi without any context (just by lloking at code) ...finally gave up and now, after you explained the recursive approach I coded it in python in 10 minutes. just shows what a huge difference a systematic approach can make. your video helped me immensely. thank you

  • @VirajChokhany
    @VirajChokhany Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much Sir. It gives such satisfaction about understanding these concepts so clearly. Often I end up facing problems while solving recursion and backtracking problems. Please do make videos on those topics. 💓

  • @noorfathima3499
    @noorfathima3499 Před 3 lety

    This is the best explanation I have come across till date!! and nothing can be better than this.. thank you

  • @sparrrooww5473
    @sparrrooww5473 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Very detailed and simple explanation. Keep up the good work

  • @dansmar_2414
    @dansmar_2414 Před rokem

    What an insane work you did here. It's awesome. Thank you so much!

  • @zhangyi5145
    @zhangyi5145 Před 3 lety +5

    It was my biggest challenge when I started my CS course. It's a wonderful presentation, what a great work!

  • @nikosrouskas2438
    @nikosrouskas2438 Před 2 lety

    Amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have been trying to solve this problem for a while now and I was so confused with other solutions on the internet (the code of the solutions) but yours is extremely intuitive and elegant. I am very new to recursion and you made this so understandable. THANKS! I hope you continue making such videos because you really really help the community!

  • @umchoyka
    @umchoyka Před 3 lety +1

    Holy crap, that 3 step list gave me an "aha!" moment. Great video!

  • @akhilgupta3664
    @akhilgupta3664 Před 4 lety +2

    This video just explained it in easy manner..
    Using animations make things to understand easily...Carry on and keep on adding the videos of data structures and algorithms in your playlist ..😀
    Eagerly waiting for next video !!!
    Happy Learning !!

  • @kedardeshmukh1168
    @kedardeshmukh1168 Před 8 měsíci

    This is the best video visualization of any CS concept i have erver seen....... Keep it up

  • @mariiatverdokhlib2057
    @mariiatverdokhlib2057 Před 7 měsíci

    Your work brought a lot of insights into solving recursive tasks, thanks!

  • @vinwizard1217
    @vinwizard1217 Před rokem

    Such a beautifully visualised video that I was able to code it within minutes of seeing it. Thank you so much

  • @dacfniel5442
    @dacfniel5442 Před 3 lety +1

    Bless you, man. The best explanation on CZcams.

  • @swapnilnagar4710
    @swapnilnagar4710 Před 3 lety +5

    Mindblowing explanation and animation! That 'Dominos' concept :), I personally liked it!

    • @Reducible
      @Reducible  Před 3 lety

      Thank you, I had a lot of fun making that domino animation so glad you appreciated it!

  • @12jgy
    @12jgy Před 3 lety +4

    Love this! I just recently discovered this channel through the FFT video (CZcams recommendations) and I just immediately loved it! The topics covered are really cool, and I really like the way they're presented in here (Reminds me of 3b1b, not only because Manin is used here to do the bulk of the animations, but too because of the quality of the explanations). Now, one neat little fact about this algorithm for solving the towers of Hanoi is that if you have n disks, this algorithm takes exactly 2^n - 1 steps to complete (The proof is just a simple induction argument for those who might want to try to figure it out), and in fact, if I'm recalling this correctly, this is actually the optimal amount of steps, you can't go any lower than this! Quite fascinating if you ask me.

    • @Reducible
      @Reducible  Před 3 lety +3

      Thank you for this comment! I absolutely love compliments like this one!
      And yeah that's a fun inductive reasoning exercise -- fun fact by the way, you can see the number is steps is 2^n - 1 visually by generalizing the tree diagram for the recursion that we did here. In fact, I believe I touched upon this in the Big O notation video with the O(2^n) example. The basic idea is counting the number of nodes in a tree where at each level we have two branches representing calls to n - 1 and continue until we reach the base case of 1. The inductive argument you mentioned also works for solving this problem, but a fun visual addition.
      Thanks for sharing this!

  • @davidruiz2656
    @davidruiz2656 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for this. No one has explained recursion as well as you did. I had a similar problem to this in one of my assignments: Find recursive function to solve a tower of hanoi for n discs if you want to move them from 1st peg to 3rd peg and you can only move discs to an adjacent peg. I was overwhelmed when I tried it on my own the first time but after watching your video I was able to figure out the solution for this modified version of the problem. Keep up the great work.

  • @mohd.salahuddinansari8008

    This is the best explanation of tower of hanoi on CZcams.
    So thanks a lot.

  • @piperamp3331
    @piperamp3331 Před 3 lety

    Thanks so much! This video and your last video about recursion helped me understand the topic way better.

  • @AnantaAkash.Podder
    @AnantaAkash.Podder Před 22 dny

    By Far the Best Explanation Ever for Recursion with Those Tips😀😀

  • @tastypie2276
    @tastypie2276 Před rokem

    This, indeed, blew my mind! Thank you so much! This was very interesting and educational to me!

  • @surfnerder
    @surfnerder Před 3 lety +1

    As always, fantastic video, thanks a lot!
    I'm certain you know about this and just didn't mention it to keep things organized and a little more intuitive but I'd like to point it out anyways for the fellow viewers who might be interested:
    You can simplify the code even further when having n = 0 as your base case. It sounds kind of useless at first but solving the problem with 0 discs just means “do nothing“ which allows you to save space in your code:
    def h( n, start, end):
    if n = 0:
    do nothing
    else:
    other = 6 - (start + end)
    h(n - 1, start, other)
    pm(start, end)
    h(n - 1, other, end)
    ...this boils down to:
    def h( n, start, end):
    if n > 0:
    other = 6 - (start + end)
    h(n - 1, start, other)
    pm(start, end)
    h(n - 1, other, end)

  • @williamrutherford553
    @williamrutherford553 Před 3 lety +32

    Great video for introducing the puzzle! One piece of critique though, When you talked about the "recursive leap of faith" (the induction hypothesis) you took n-1 to mean the second to last domino. This can be a bit confusing. I think it's more explanatory if you just said: Pick any domino, and assume it will fall over. If it falls over, prove the next domino (+1) will ALSO fall over. Thus, the first domino falls because of the base case. The second domino falls down, because the first one falls. The third falls, because the second falls because the first, etc etc. That explanation is better at showing how a proof by Induction kind of "cascades" like dominoes, proving every case. Otherwise, it can seem a bit like assuming something random, just to come up with a result.

    • @Reducible
      @Reducible  Před 3 lety +11

      Ah, that is a subtle and good point. Thanks for the feedback!

    • @sandeepverma-mp9co
      @sandeepverma-mp9co Před rokem +2

      Yes that was a bit confusing

  • @MUHAMMADASADSHAHAB
    @MUHAMMADASADSHAHAB Před rokem

    Simply no words to praise this person! I often feel lazy for leaving comments on youtube videos, but this time I must. Kindly make a playlist for explaining the theory of all the data structures and algorithms.

  • @clemofunhound8381
    @clemofunhound8381 Před 2 lety

    You saved my day! I am taking a course on discrete mathematics and this was a heck of an explanation!!!! Cheers!

  • @ershadulrayhan7324
    @ershadulrayhan7324 Před 3 lety

    Thank you very much for this video. You have not only explained the problem easily but also introduced us to a framework to solve recursive problems. 👍

    • @Reducible
      @Reducible  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for the kind comment! Glad to hear that this content helped you!

  • @aminmaleki4592
    @aminmaleki4592 Před měsícem

    Best explanation to Hanoi tower and its basis in discrete mathematics and algorithms, This is multi target video!!

  • @Saikiran-pf1ry
    @Saikiran-pf1ry Před 3 lety

    You need more views! Excellent explanation. Nothing can beat the Aha moment when you actually understand how something works! Thanks a ton

  • @fangle0121
    @fangle0121 Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you so much! The animations are amazing to aid our understanding of this problem. :)

    • @Reducible
      @Reducible  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you for the kind comment and I'm glad the animations were able to help with your understanding!

  • @anjumaurya6233
    @anjumaurya6233 Před 3 lety

    Thankyou so much for the wonderful explanation. Your efforts are like blessings for the learners.

  • @SaumyaSharma007
    @SaumyaSharma007 Před 3 lety +3

    Best Teacher Award goes to u Man.....
    Seriously best explanation I have ever seen 👌🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @alkamishra9974
    @alkamishra9974 Před 3 lety

    Great video. Only watched a couple of videos of tours but can tell your love for the subject.

  • @user-dp7ye3cg2z
    @user-dp7ye3cg2z Před rokem

    This is the video that explains the problem the best so far.

  • @alexmattyou
    @alexmattyou Před rokem

    Woooow, this is mind blowing. I'll try to understand this again. Thanks for making it visual, I can undertake something

  • @robyfischer4501
    @robyfischer4501 Před 2 lety

    Wow, that's just magic.
    Thank you for the detailed, visualised and simplified explication. Thanks to you another man on earth understood this problem and by extension a bit about recursion xD.
    And you obtain a subscriber of course

  • @souravsharma9505
    @souravsharma9505 Před rokem

    Nobody could have explained it better..genius.The dominos concept is gold!

  • @uljhe_hue_wires_ka_khambha
    @uljhe_hue_wires_ka_khambha Před 10 měsíci

    Great explanation, cleared the confusion to a great extent. Thanks

  • @praphulyadav4471
    @praphulyadav4471 Před 2 lety

    thank you very much i never thought this problem will be so simple to understand. you made this hard problem very simple

  • @alexkang7336
    @alexkang7336 Před 3 lety +1

    These videos remind me of 3blue1brown's videos. Really appreciating your work! Thank you!

  • @rajat0610
    @rajat0610 Před rokem

    woooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooowww!!
    this was wonderful!
    the only explanation of this problem that made sense
    i tried searching all over and failed to get a good explanation of the problem and underlying concepts and this video covers all of it
    Grant Sanderson would be proud :)

  • @rmatarrita
    @rmatarrita Před 2 lety +1

    I had solved this problem on my own before watching the video. Btw, in my personal case I found the iterative solution harder to come up with than the recursive one. Since I had already solved this problem before watching the video, what blew mi mind was the little arithmetic "hack" to find the "other" rod: 6 - (start + end) LOL. Great stuff!

  • @tlqy
    @tlqy Před 3 lety +1

    You are the 3blue1brown of computer science. Keep it up!

  • @alphamega3306
    @alphamega3306 Před 3 lety

    Excellent explanation. This recursive program definitely blew my mind when I first saw it two days ago. I hand-drew out the stack frames for a 3 disk problem. And even though it worked, I still couldn’t grasp HOW it was working-the abstract idea of n-1 recursively moving sequentially smaller stacks was the part the really got me. After watching this video a second time, it clicked. The crux of the program’s ability is in that assumption that n-1 will work. It’s pretty amazing stuff. Thank you!

  • @susantipsyhealy7655
    @susantipsyhealy7655 Před měsícem

    I have never been good in math, even simple math. I have an app called IMPULSE. One of the games is Tower of Hanoi. It started out relatively simple but I was taking so long to finish each level and was ending up at 2% of the number of moves and time used.
    So i searched out a video to help me understand how this game works.
    I never thought it was a mathematical problem.
    One of my issues is my ADHD & ASD brain.
    Trying to keep organized in my thinking is not easy. But now I hope to finish my next level in much fewer moves. I will never reach a faster time, but improving in fewer moves is now my biggest goal.
    Thank you for this video

  • @arielcavalcante8187
    @arielcavalcante8187 Před 3 lety +6

    after watching the code part (from 16:00 to 20:00) a couple of times and not understanding a single thing, I wrote the functions on paper and watched again and my mind blew away. Damn you're amazing.

  • @Ayan-od8hk
    @Ayan-od8hk Před rokem

    Best explanation ! I tried understanding this problem before but gave up, thankfully I found this video

  • @dvdpro3726
    @dvdpro3726 Před 3 lety +4

    damn, this channel is so underrated. I came here after watching your 5 steps for solving recursive problems and I am blown away after seeing that whole thing took only 10 lines of code, that's amazing

  • @amandubey6331
    @amandubey6331 Před 2 lety

    This is Awesome man! Subbed

  • @sherazdotnet
    @sherazdotnet Před rokem

    Best explanation to leap of faith concept in recursion hands down (time trac: 11:00). Absolutely amazig. Subscribed

  • @ialgorithms
    @ialgorithms Před rokem

    Thank you so much. I was using n,A,B,C initially which was bit difficult but after watching your video it make more sense now.
    i.e. n, source, temp, dest as n, A,B,C

  • @davedsp8513
    @davedsp8513 Před 2 lety

    I remember this being a pancake themed recurring puzzle in a Professor Layton game when I was young. I didn't understand the whole recursive ramifications of it but I'm pretty proud I managed to figure out the general strategy of breaking it down to each smaller tower

  • @loveandlive5563
    @loveandlive5563 Před 2 lety

    Great work. Thanks for such an amazing video.

  • @ratikgoyal7841
    @ratikgoyal7841 Před rokem

    best video ... literally background music .. soothes my mind

  • @thachkiencao3883
    @thachkiencao3883 Před 3 lety

    The thing is i subscribe to your channel in my first arrival to the channel after seeing this video
    I dont often do that to other channels
    Keep goodjob!

  • @ImBlackDragon
    @ImBlackDragon Před 2 lety

    Thank you for existing🙏.

  • @darasimiajewole007
    @darasimiajewole007 Před 2 lety

    My mind is absolutely blown by this solution

  • @jacksonwang3974
    @jacksonwang3974 Před 3 lety +7

    This is the visual version of CS Bible. A ton of respect and appreciation

  • @nikhilgupta7697
    @nikhilgupta7697 Před 3 lety

    Loved your explanation! You earned a sub.

  • @Arya-mf3ey
    @Arya-mf3ey Před 3 lety

    He made it so simple. Thank you.

  • @diegollanespasos
    @diegollanespasos Před 3 lety

    Love the animations!

  • @Theooolone
    @Theooolone Před 3 lety

    This is completely mind blowing! Will try coding this in Java when I next have time

  • @sivag519
    @sivag519 Před rokem

    Awesome ! Great Explanation

  • @crjacinro
    @crjacinro Před 3 lety +1

    More contents please! Would like to see some visual explaination on other problems in DSA. Maybe some hard problems on leetcode or google interview questions.

  • @Lee-tj8bn
    @Lee-tj8bn Před 3 lety

    Thanks, man!!! This really helped me... very well done, sir.

  • @lovisharora7604
    @lovisharora7604 Před rokem

    Excellent explanation 🔥🔥🔥

  • @WisdomIsAwesome
    @WisdomIsAwesome Před 3 lety

    Wow, just the kind of visualization I wad looking for, for this problem. Thanks!

  • @RaghavendraK458
    @RaghavendraK458 Před rokem

    Thanks a lot for the great explanation !

  • @HuyTran-ny7mg
    @HuyTran-ny7mg Před 3 lety +2

    Underrated channel.

  • @akshaygiram
    @akshaygiram Před 2 lety

    Here's a small typo (speako) you might want to address. Thanks for such clear visualizations, you've been a great help.
    15:05 "solving hanoi for n-1 disks where the start ROD is the middle and the end ROD is the last ROD"

  • @Flopsaurus
    @Flopsaurus Před 2 lety +2

    Black magic I tell you! That was crazy how a simple rule can solve a seemingly complex problem. I would have spent hours trying to intuit some complex solution to this.

  • @pauljoneseyboy9615
    @pauljoneseyboy9615 Před 3 lety

    Excellent work