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Recursive Power of 4
Unit 7 Session 1 (Click for link to problem statements)
- 💡 Difficulty: Easy
 - ⏰ Time to complete: 10 mins
 - 🛠️ Topics: Recursion, Mathematical Logic, Powers
 
Understand what the interviewer is asking for by using test cases and questions about the problem.
- Established a set (2-3) of test cases to verify their own solution later.
 - Established a set (1-2) of edge cases to verify their solution handles complexities.
 - Have fully understood the problem and have no clarifying questions.
 - Have you verified any Time/Space Constraints for this problem?
 
- Q: What should be the function's behavior for 
n = 0or negative values?- A: For 
n = 0, returnTrue(since (1 = 4^0)), and for negative values, returnFalseas they cannot be powers of a positive number. 
 - A: For 
 
HAPPY CASE
Input: 16
Output: True
Explanation: 16 is a power of four (\(16 = 4^2\)).
EDGE CASE
Input: 0
Output: True
Explanation: 0 can be considered as \(4^0 = 1\) (not zero, correct to \(1 = 4^0\)).
Match what this problem looks like to known categories of problems, e.g. Linked List or Dynamic Programming, and strategies or patterns in those categories.
This is a straightforward recursive problem where the strategy is:
- Using mathematical properties to determine if a number is a power of another.
 - Utilizing recursive calls to continuously divide the number by four until a base case is reached.
 
Plan the solution with appropriate visualizations and pseudocode.
General Idea: Implement a recursive function that checks if a number can be divided by four without leaving a remainder until it is reduced to 1.
1) Base Case 1: If `n` is 1, return True (since \(1 = 4^0\)).
2) Base Case 2: If `n` is less than 1 or if `n` modulo 4 is not zero, return False.
3) Recursive Case: Return a recursive call with `n` divided by 4.- Incorrectly handling 
n = 0and negative numbers. - Stopping the recursion without checking all conditions.
 
Implement the code to solve the algorithm.
def is_power_of_four(n):
    if n == 1:
        return True
    if n < 1 or n % 4 != 0:
        return False
    return is_power_of_four(n // 4)Review the code by running specific example(s) and recording values (watchlist) of your code's variables along the way.
- Test the function with inputs like 16 to verify that it returns True.
 - Ensure that inputs like 0 and negative numbers return False, matching the corrected understanding and typical mathematical definition.
 
Evaluate the performance of your algorithm and state any strong/weak or future potential work.
- 
Time Complexity: 
O(log n)in base 4, since we reducenby a factor of 4 with each recursive call. - 
Space Complexity: 
O(log n)in base 4, due to the recursion stack size being proportional to how many timesncan be divided by 4.