adding binary tree test case
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@@ -11,119 +11,109 @@ Review from Lecture 20
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## Today’s Lecture
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- Red Black Trees
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- B+ Trees
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- Morris Traversal
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## 21.1 Red-Black Trees
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In addition to the binary search tree properties, the following
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red-black tree properties are maintained throughout all
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modifications to the data structure:
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## 21.1 Morris Traversal
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- Each node is either red or black.
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- The root node is always black.
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- The NULL child pointers are black.
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- Both children of every red node are black.
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- Thus, the parent of a red node must also be black.
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- All paths from a particular node to a NULL child pointer contain the same
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number of black nodes.
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Morris Traversal is a tree traversal algorithm that allows inorder (and also preorder) traversal of a binary tree without using recursion or a stack, achieving O(1) space complexity. It modifies the tree temporarily but restores it afterward.
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Instead of using extra memory (like recursion stack or an explicit stack), Morris Traversal utilizes threaded binary trees by:
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What tree does our **ds_set** implementation produce if we insert the
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numbers 1-14 **in order**?
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- Finding the inorder predecessor of the current node.
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The tree at the top is the result using a red-black tree. Notice how the tree is still quite balanced.
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- Temporarily modifying the tree structure by creating threads (links) to the current node.
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Visit these links for an animation of the sequential insertion and re-balancing:
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- Using these links to traverse back instead of a recursive call.
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http://babbage.clarku.edu/~achou/cs160fall03/examples/bst_animation/RedBlackTree-Example.html
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## 21.2 Morris Traversal - In Order
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https://www.cs.usfca.edu/~galles/visualization/RedBlack.html
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- Start from the root.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDHFF4wjWYU&noredirect=1
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- If the left subtree is NULL, print the node and move to the right.
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What is the best/average/worst case height of a red-black tree with $n$ nodes?
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- If the left subtree exists, find the inorder predecessor (rightmost node in the left subtree):
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- If the predecessor’s right child is NULL, set it to the current node (threading) and move left.
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What is the best/average/worst case shortest-path from root to leaf node in a red-black tree with $n$ nodes?
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- If the predecessor’s right child points to the current node (thread already exists), remove the thread, print the current node, and move right.
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## Exercise 21.2
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Fill in the tree on the right with the integers 1-7 to make a binary search tree. Also, color each node "red" or "black" so that the tree also fulfills the requirements of a Red-Black tree.
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Which nodes are red?
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**Note:** Red-Black Trees are just one algorithm for **self-balancing binary search tress**. We have many more, including the AVL trees that we discussed last week.
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## 21.3 Trinary Tree
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A **trinary tree** is similar to a binary tree except that each node has at most 3 children.
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Write a **recursive** function named **EqualsChildrenSum** that takes one argument, a pointer to the root of a trinary tree, and returns true if the value at each non-leaf node is the sum of the values of all of its children and false otherwise. In
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the examples below, the tree on the left will return true and the tree on the right will return false.
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- Repeat until you traverse the entire tree.
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```cpp
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class Node {
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public:
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int value;
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Node* left;
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Node* middle;
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Node* right;
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};
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vector<int> inorderTraversal(TreeNode* root) {
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vector<int> result;
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TreeNode *current=root;
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TreeNode *rightmost;
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while(current!=NULL){
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if(current->left!=NULL){
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rightmost=current->left;
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while(rightmost->right!=NULL && rightmost->right!=current){
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rightmost=rightmost->right;
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}
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if(rightmost->right==NULL){ /* first time */
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rightmost->right=current;
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current=current->left;
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}else{ /* second time */
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result.push_back(current->val);
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rightmost->right=NULL;
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current=current->right;
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}
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}else{ /* nodes which do not have left child */
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result.push_back(current->val);
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current=current->right;
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}
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}
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return result;
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}
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```
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## 21.4 B+ Trees
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You can test the above function using this program: [inorder_main.cpp](inorder_main.cpp).
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Unlike binary search trees, nodes in B+ trees (and their predecessor, the B tree) have up to b children. Thus
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B+ trees are very flat and very wide. This is good when it is very expensive to move from one node to another.
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- B+ trees are supposed to be associative (i.e. they have key-value pairs), but we will just focus on the keys.
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- Just like STL map and STL set, these keys and values can be any type, but keys must have an operator<
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defined.
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- In a B tree key-value pairs can show up anywhere in the tree, in a B+ tree all the key-value pairs are in the
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leaves and the non-leaf nodes contain duplicates of some keys.
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- In either type of tree, all leaves are the same distance from the root.
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- The keys are always sorted in a B/B+ tree node, and there are up to b − 1 of them. They act like b − 1 binary
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search tree nodes mashed together.
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- In fact, with the exception of the root, nodes will always have between roughly b/2 and b − 1 keys (in our
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implementation).
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- If a B+ tree node has k keys key0, key1, key2, . . . , keyk−1, it will have k + 1 children. The keys in the leftmost
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child must be < key0, the next child must have keys such that they are ≥key0 and < key1, and so on up to
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the rightmost child which has only keys ≥keyk−1.
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For this test case,
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A B+ tree visualization can be seen at: https://www.cs.usfca.edu/~galles/visualization/BPlusTree.html
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The testing program prints:
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Considerations in a full implementation:
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- What happens when we want to add a key to a node that's already full?
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- How do we remove values from a node?
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- How do we ensure the tree stays balanced?
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- How to keep laves linked together? WHy would we want this?
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- How to represent key-value pairs?
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```console
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$ g++ inorder_main.cpp
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$ ./a.out
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Inorder Traversal using Morris Traversal:
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4 2 6 5 7 1 3 9 8
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```
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## 21.5 Exercise
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## 21.3 Morris Traversal - Pre Order
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Draw a B+ tree with b=3 with values inserted in the order 1,2,3,4,5,6. Now draw a B+ tree with b=3 and values inserted in the order 6,5,4,3,2,1. The two trees have a different number of levels.
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```cpp
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vector<int> preorderTraversal(TreeNode* root) {
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vector<int> result;
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int index=0;
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TreeNode *current=root;
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TreeNode *rightmost;
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while(current != nullptr){
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if(current->left != nullptr){
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rightmost=current->left;
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while(rightmost->right!=nullptr && rightmost->right!=current){
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rightmost=rightmost->right;
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}
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if(rightmost->right==nullptr){ /* first time */
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result.push_back(current->val);
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rightmost->right=current;
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current=current->left;
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}else{ /* second time */
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rightmost->right=nullptr;
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current=current->right;
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}
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}else{ /* nodes which do not have left child */
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result.push_back(current->val);
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current=current->right;
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}
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}
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return result;
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}
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```
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## 21.4 Morris Traversal - Post Order
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```cpp
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```
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BIN
lectures/21_trees_IV/binaryTree.png
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BIN
lectures/21_trees_IV/binaryTree.png
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