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Chapter 19 Implementing Trees and Priority Queues. Fundamentals of Java. Objectives. Use the appropriate terminology to describe trees. Distinguish different types of hierarchical collections such as general trees, binary trees, binary search trees, and heaps. Objectives (cont.).
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Chapter 19Implementing Trees and Priority Queues Fundamentals of Java
Objectives • Use the appropriate terminology to describe trees. • Distinguish different types of hierarchical collections such as general trees, binary trees, binary search trees, and heaps. Fundamentals of Java
Objectives (cont.) • Understand the basic tree traversals. • Use binary search trees to implement sorted sets and sorted maps. • Use heaps to implement priority queues. Fundamentals of Java
Vocabulary • Binary search tree • Binary tree • Expression tree • General tree • Heap • Heap property Fundamentals of Java
Vocabulary (cont.) • Interior node • Leaf • Left subtree • Parse tree • Right subtree • Root Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees • Tree: Data structure in which each item can have multiple successors • All items have exactly one predecessor. • Except a privileged item called the root • Parse tree: Describes the syntactic structure of a sentence in terms of its component parts • Noun phrases and verb phrases Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) Figure 19-1: Parse tree for a sentence Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) Table 19-1: Summary of terms used to describe trees Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) Table 19-1: Summary of terms used to describe trees (cont.) Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) Figure 19-2: Tree and some of its properties Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) • General trees: Trees with no restrictions on number of children • Binary trees: Each node has at most two children: left child and right child. Figure 19-3: Two unequal binary trees that have equal sets of nodes Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) • Recursive processing of trees is common, so useful to have recursive definitions of trees • General tree: Either empty or consists of a finite set of nodes T • Node r is the root. • Set T - {r} partitioned into disjoint subsets (general trees) • Binary tree: Either empty or consists of a root plus a left subtreeand a right subtree (binary trees) Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) Figure 19-4: Different types of binary trees Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) • Full binary tree: Contains maximum number of nodes for its height • Fully balanced • If height is d, 2d-1 nodes • Level n has up to 2n nodes. • Height of a fully balanced tree of n nodes is log2n. Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) • Heap: Binary tree in which the item in each node is less than or equal to the items in both of its children • Heap property Figure 19-5: Examples of heaps Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees (cont.) • Expression tree: For evaluating expressions Figure 19-6: Some expression trees Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees: Binary Search Trees Figure 19-7: Call tree for the binary search of an array Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees: Binary Search Trees (cont.) Figure 19-8: Binary search tree Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees: Binary Search Trees (cont.) • Binary search tree: Each node is greater than or equal to left child and less than or equal to right child. • Recursive search process: Fundamentals of Java
An Overview of Trees: Binary Search Trees (cont.) Figure 19-9: Three binary tree shapes with the same data Fundamentals of Java
Binary Tree Traversals Figure 19-10: Preorder traversal Figure 19-11: Inorder traversal Fundamentals of Java
Binary Tree Traversals (cont.) Figure 19-12: Postorder traversal Figure 19-13: Level-order traversal Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees Table 19-2: Methods of the BSTPT interface Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) Table 19-2: Methods of the BSTPT interface (cont.) Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) Figure 19-14: Interfaces and classes used in the binary search tree prototype Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) Example 19.1: Interface for binary search tree prototypes Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) Example 19.1: Interface for binary search tree prototypes (cont.) Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) add method Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) add method (cont.) Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) • Pseudocode for searching a binary tree: Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) • Inorder traversal code: Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) • Pseudocode for level-order traversal: Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) • Steps for removing a node: Fundamentals of Java
Linked Implementation of Binary Trees (cont.) • Expanded step 4 for removing a node from a binary tree: Fundamentals of Java
Array Implementation of a Binary Tree Figure 19-16: Complete binary tree Figure 19-17: Array representation of a complete binary tree Fundamentals of Java
Array Implementation of a Binary Tree (cont.) Table 19-3: Locations of given items in an array representation of a complete binary tree Fundamentals of Java
Array Implementation of a Binary Tree (cont.) Table 19-4: Relatives of a given item in an array representation of a complete binary tree Fundamentals of Java
Implementing Heaps Table 19-5: Methods in the interface HeapPT Fundamentals of Java
Implementing Heaps (cont.) • add method: Fundamentals of Java
Implementing Heaps (cont.) • pop method: Fundamentals of Java
Implement Heaps (cont.) • pop method (cont.): Fundamentals of Java
Using a Heap to Implement a Priority Queue Example 19.3: Heap implementation of a priority queue Fundamentals of Java
Using a Heap to Implement a Priority Queue (cont.) Example 19.3: Heap implementation of a priority queue (cont.) Fundamentals of Java
Summary • There are various types of trees or hierarchical collections such as general trees, binary trees, binary search trees, and heaps. • The terminology used to describe hierarchical collections is borrowed from biology, genealogy, and geology. Fundamentals of Java
Summary (cont.) • Tree traversals: preorder, inorder, postorder, and level-order traversal • A binary search tree preserves a natural ordering among its items and can support operations that run in logarithmic time. • Binary search trees are useful for implementing sorted sets and sorted maps. Fundamentals of Java
Summary (cont.) • Heap • Useful for ordering items according to priority • Guarantees logarithmic insertions and removals • Useful for implementing priority queues • Binary search trees typically have a linked implementation. • Heaps typically have an array representation. Fundamentals of Java