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  2. Tree traversal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_traversal

    Depending on the problem at hand, pre-order, post-order, and especially one of the number of subtrees − 1 in-order operations may be optional. Also, in practice more than one of pre-order, post-order, and in-order operations may be required. For example, when inserting into a ternary tree, a pre-order operation is performed by comparing items.

  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. Binary tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_tree

    In depth-first order, we always attempt to visit the node farthest from the root node that we can, but with the caveat that it must be a child of a node we have already visited. Unlike a depth-first search on graphs, there is no need to remember all the nodes we have visited, because a tree cannot contain cycles. Pre-order is a special case of ...

  5. Binary search tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_search_tree

    A BST can be traversed through three basic algorithms: inorder, preorder, and postorder tree walks. [10]: 287 Inorder tree walk: Nodes from the left subtree get visited first, followed by the root node and right subtree. Such a traversal visits all the nodes in the order of non-decreasing key sequence.

  6. Threaded binary tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threaded_binary_tree

    "A binary tree is threaded by making all right child pointers that would normally be null point to the in-order successor of the node (if it exists), and all left child pointers that would normally be null point to the in-order predecessor of the node." [1] This assumes the traversal order is the same as in-order traversal of the tree. However ...

  7. m-ary tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-ary_tree

    The pre-order traversal goes to parent, left subtree and the right subtree, and for traversing post-order it goes by left subtree, right subtree, and parent node. For traversing in-order, since there are more than two children per node for m > 2, one must define the notion of left and right subtrees. One common method to establish left/right ...

  8. Random binary tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_binary_tree

    In a binary search tree the internal nodes are labeled by numbers or other ordered values, called keys, arranged so that an inorder traversal of the tree lists the keys in sorted order. The external nodes remain unlabeled. [3] Binary trees may also be studied with all nodes unlabeled, or with labels that are not given in sorted order.

  9. Preorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preorder

    Both of these are special cases of a preorder: an antisymmetric preorder is a partial order, and a symmetric preorder is an equivalence relation. Moreover, a preorder on a set X {\displaystyle X} can equivalently be defined as an equivalence relation on X {\displaystyle X} , together with a partial order on the set of equivalence class.