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  2. File:Height Balanced Binary Tree.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Height_Balanced...

    English: Analysis of data structures, tree compared to hash and array based structures, height balanced tree compared to more perfectly balanced trees, a simple height balanced tree class with test code, comparable statistics for tree performance, statistics of worst case strictly-AVL-balanced trees versus perfect full binary trees.

  3. Weight-balanced tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weight-balanced_tree

    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.

  4. AVL tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AVL_tree

    It depends on the balance factor of the sibling Z (the higher child tree in figure 2) whether the height of the subtree decreases by one –and the retracing needs to continue– or does not change (if Z has the balance factor 0) and the whole tree is in AVL-shape.

  5. Leftist tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leftist_tree

    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 node into a tree, a new one-node tree is created and merged into the existing tree.

  6. BATON Overlay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BATON_Overlay

    Height-Balanced. BATON is considered balanced if and only if the height of its two sub-trees at any node in the tree differs by at most one. If any node detects that the height-balanced constraint is violated, a restructuring process is initiated to ensure that the tree remains balanced.

  7. Tree (abstract data type) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_(abstract_data_type)

    The height of a node is the length of the longest downward path to a leaf from that node. 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 ...

  8. Quadtree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadtree

    A tree-pyramid (T-pyramid) is a "complete" tree; every node of the T-pyramid has four child nodes except leaf nodes; all leaves are on the same level, the level that corresponds to individual pixels in the image.

  9. WAVL tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WAVL_tree

    The height of an external node is zero, and the height of any internal node is always one plus the maximum of the heights of its two children. Thus, the height function of an AVL tree obeys the constraints of a WAVL tree, and we may convert any AVL tree into a WAVL tree by using the height of each node as its rank. [1] [2]