In the standard coin exchange problem were each denominations are available infinite times and we need to find the number of ways in which we can form the target value :
for a recursive function int fun(int n , int val) and the arr contains the denominations.
this is how the possible cases for the recursive calls should be .
But before seeing the solution I thought it like this instead ( definitely wrong )
I considered one more case too, where we take the coin and move to the next index . I cant find a reasoning why this is wrong logically .
Might be a stupid doubt but cant get over it just like that. Can anyone tell me why is it wrong to consider that case.
Thanks
fun(n — 1, val — arr[n]) will be counted as part of fun(n, val — arr[n]) follwed by fun(n — 1, val — arr[n]), so you are going to be double counting.