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  2. Threaded binary tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threaded_binary_tree

    In computing, a threaded binary tree is a binary tree variant that facilitates traversal in a particular order. An entire binary search tree can be easily traversed in order of the main key, but given only a pointer to a node , finding the node which comes next may be slow or impossible.

  3. Tree (abstract data type) - Wikipedia

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

    A walk in which each parent node is traversed before its children is called a pre-order walk; a walk in which the children are traversed before their respective parents are traversed is called a post-order walk; a walk in which a node's left subtree, then the node itself, and finally its right subtree are traversed is called an in-order traversal.

  4. Tree traversal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_traversal

    In computer science, tree traversal (also known as tree search and walking the tree) is a form of graph traversal and refers to the process of visiting (e.g. retrieving, updating, or deleting) each node in a tree data structure, exactly once. Such traversals are classified by the order in which the nodes are visited.

  5. Order statistic tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_statistic_tree

    To turn a regular search tree into an order statistic tree, the nodes of the tree need to store one additional value, which is the size of the subtree rooted at that node (i.e., the number of nodes below it). All operations that modify the tree must adjust this information to preserve the invariant that size[x] = size[left[x]] + size[right[x]] + 1

  6. Tree sort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_sort

    A tree sort is a sort algorithm that builds a binary search tree from the elements to be sorted, and then traverses the tree so that the elements come out in sorted order. [1] Its typical use is sorting elements online : after each insertion, the set of elements seen so far is available in sorted order.

  7. Binary expression tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_expression_tree

    Creating a one-node tree. Continuing, a '+' is read, and it merges the last two trees. Merging two trees. Now, a '*' is read. The last two tree pointers are popped and a new tree is formed with a '*' as the root. Forming a new tree with a root. Finally, the last symbol is read. The two trees are merged and a pointer to the final tree remains on ...

  8. 2–3 tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2–3_tree

    In computer science, a 2–3 tree is a tree data structure, where every node with children (internal node) has either two children (2-node) and one data element or three children (3-node) and two data elements. A 2–3 tree is a B-tree of order 3. [1] Nodes on the outside of the tree have no children and one or two data elements.

  9. Interval tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_tree

    An augmented tree can be built from a simple ordered tree, for example a binary search tree or self-balancing binary search tree, ordered by the 'low' values of the intervals. An extra annotation is then added to every node, recording the maximum upper value among all the intervals from this node down.