I answered a question here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/28862668/2642059 Where I needed to use recurrence to step through a string. I wanted to use a const string& as my parameter on each function, but unless I wanted to reconstruct the string each recursion I found that I needed to pass a start and finish position as well as the string itself. So it became pointless to pass the string at all.
In the end I choose to just pass a start and finish pointer to the char[].
As an example, say that I'm given a string which contains nested parenthesis (but no side by side parenthetical insertions.) So like this:
(abc(def(ghi((j)klm)nop)qrs)tuv)wxyz
But not like this:
(abc(def)(ghi)(j)(klm)(nop)(qrs)tuv)wxyz
I want to write a recursive program to extract the string in the deepest nested parentheses. Something like:
string foo(const string& bar){
    auto start = bar.find('(') + 1;
    return start == string::npos + 1 ? bar : foo(bar.substr(start, bar.find_last_of(')') - start));
}
However I'm unhappy reconstructing a string for each recurrence of foo. The alternative is to pass start and finish pointers as in the linked example (or to pass string::const_iterators.)
Is there a wrapper or something which would allow me to use string functionality, but not reconstruct a string?
 
     
     
    