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In addition to the heap property, leftist trees are maintained so the right descendant of each node has the lower s-value. The height-biased leftist tree was invented by Clark Allan Crane. [2] The name comes from the fact that the left subtree is usually taller than the right subtree. A leftist tree is a mergeable heap. When inserting a new ...
Isomorphism between LLRB trees and 2–3–4 trees. LLRB trees are isomorphic 2–3–4 trees. Unlike conventional red-black trees, the 3-nodes always lean left, making this relationship a 1 to 1 correspondence. This means that for every LLRB tree, there is a unique corresponding 2–3–4 tree, and vice versa.
The height of the root is the height of the tree. The depth of a node is the length of the path to its root (i.e., its root path). Thus the root node has depth zero, leaf nodes have height zero, and a tree with only a single node (hence both a root and leaf) has depth and height zero.
6-ary tree represented as a binary tree. Every multi-way or k-ary tree structure studied in computer science admits a representation as a binary tree, which goes by various names including child-sibling representation, [1] left-child, right-sibling binary tree, [2] doubly chained tree or filial-heir chain. [3]
Animation showing the insertion of several elements into an AVL tree. It includes left, right, left-right and right-left rotations. Fig. 1: AVL tree with balance factors (green) In computer science, an AVL tree (named after inventors Adelson-Velsky and Landis) is a self-balancing binary search tree.
The tree rotation renders the inorder traversal of the binary tree invariant. This implies the order of the elements is not affected when a rotation is performed in any part of the tree. Here are the inorder traversals of the trees shown above: Left tree: ((A, P, B), Q, C) Right tree: (A, P, (B, Q, C))
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A weight-balanced tree is a binary search tree that stores the sizes of subtrees in the nodes. That is, a node has fields key, of any ordered type; value (optional, only for mappings) left, right, pointer to node; size, of type integer. By definition, the size of a leaf (typically represented by a nil pointer) is zero.