User:Dardan shatri/Lisi Binarë

Në shkencat kompjuterike, një lis binarë (Anglisht : binary tree) është një lis i të dhënave në te cilin çdo nen ka një ose dy nene fëmije, normalisht "fëmiu i djathte" dhe "fëmiu i majtë". Neni i cili ka "fëmiun e djathte" ose "fëmiun e majtë" ose që të dy quhet neni prind, keshtu qe nenet fëmije kanë reference për nenet e tyre prindër. Jasht kësaj strukture qëndron një referencë në "nenin rrenjë" nenin (paraardhësin e të gjithe neneve), në qofte se ai egziston. Çdo nen në kët strukturë te dhënash mundet të takohet duke filluar nga "neni rrenjë" dhe duke përcjellur përsërituri referencën se a do zbresim në nenin fëmiu i majtë apo i djathtë. Lisat Binarë përdoren për të krijuar lisat e kërkimit dhe grumbujt binarë;

Definicioni për lisat me rrënjë
Shembull.: thellësia e lisit me Niveli = 3; atëhere madhësia do të jetë e barabarte me:Niveli+1=4.
 * Rruga e drejtë na tregon lidhjen nga prind në fëmije (siç e shihni dhe në figurën lartë me shigjeta).
 * Pra neni rrenjë i lisit ështëneni që nuk ka prind. Lisat me rrënje duhen të kenë së paku një rrënjë.
 * Një nen fletë nuk ka fëmijë.
 * Thellësia e një neni n ështe gjatësia e rrugës nga rrënja deri në at nen. Kështu mund të themi se thellësia e të gjith neneve mund të quhet Nivel,Lartesi. Rrënja ështe ne thellësine zero.
 * Lartësia e një lisi ështe rruga nga rrënja deri në nenin më të thellë në at lis. Lisi i rrënjëzuar apo vetëm me elementin rrënjë ka lartësinë zero.
 * Binjakët janë nene që ndajnë të njejtin prind.
 * Neni p është paraardhës i një neni q në qofte se egziston ai nen q në rrugën prej q deri në rrënjë. Kështu qe neni q është i quajtur pasaardhës i një neni p.
 * Madhësia e një neni ështe numri i pasaardhësve që ai përmban në vetëvete.
 * Shkalla e brendëshme e një neni është numri i shigjetave që arrijnë në at nen.
 * Shkalla e jashtëme e një neni është numri i shigjetave që largohen nga ai nen.
 * Rrënja është e vetmja nyje në lis që ka Shkallën e brendëshme = 0.

Llojet e lisave binarë

 * Lisat e rrënjëzuar jan lisa me nenin rrënje  i cili ne çdo nen më së shumti mund të ket 2 fëmije.
 * A full binary tree (sometimes proper binary tree or 2-tree or strictly binary tree) is a tree in which every node other than the leaves has two children.
 * A perfect binary tree is a full binary tree in which all leaves are at the same depth or same level. (This is ambiguously also called a complete binary tree.)
 * A complete binary tree is a binary tree in which every level, except possibly the last, is completely filled, and all nodes are as far left as possible.


 * An infinite complete binary tree is a tree with ${\aleph_0}$ levels, where for each level d the number of existing nodes at level d is equal to 2d. The cardinal number of the set of all nodes is $${\aleph_0}$$. The cardinal number of the set of all paths is $$2^{\aleph_0}$$. The infinite complete binary tree essentially describes the structure of the Cantor set; the unit interval on the real line (of cardinality $$2^{\aleph_0}$$) is the continuous image of the Cantor set; this tree is sometimes called the Cantor space.
 * A balanced binary tree is commonly defined as a binary tree in which the height of the two subtrees of every node never differ by more than 1., although in general it is a binary tree where no leaf is much farther away from the root than any other leaf.   (Different balancing schemes allow different definitions of "much farther" ).  Binary trees that are balanced according to this definition have a predictable depth (how many nodes are traversed from the root to a leaf, root counting as node 0 and subsequent as 1, 2, ..., depth). This depth is equal to the integer part of $$log_2(n)$$ where $$n$$ is the number of nodes on the balanced tree.  Example 1: balanced tree with 1 node, $$log_2(1) = 0$$ (depth = 0).  Example 2: balanced tree with 3 nodes, $$log_2(3)=1.59$$ (depth=1).  Example 3: balanced tree with 5 nodes, $$log_2(5)=2.32$$ (depth of tree is 2 nodes).
 * A rooted complete binary tree can be identified with a free magma.
 * A degenerate tree is a tree where for each parent node, there is only one associated child node. This means that in a performance measurement, the tree will behave like a linked list data structure.
 * A Tango tree is a tree optimized for fast searches.

Note that this terminology often varies in the literature, especially with respect to the meaning "complete" and "full".
 * A Strictly Binary Tree:- Its when the tree is fully expanded i.e., with 2 degree expansion.

Properties of binary trees

 * The number of nodes $$n$$ in a perfect binary tree can be found using this formula: $$n = 2^{h+1}-1$$ where $$h$$ is the height of the tree.
 * The number of nodes $$n$$ in a complete binary tree is minimum: $$n = 2^{h}$$ and maximum: $$n = 2^{h+1}-1$$ where $$h$$ is the height of the tree.
 * The number of leaf nodes $$L$$ in a perfect binary tree can be found using this formula: $$L = 2^h$$ where $$h$$ is the height of the tree.
 * The number of nodes $$n$$ in a perfect binary tree can also be found using this formula: $$n = 2L-1$$ where $$L$$ is the number of leaf nodes in the tree.
 * The number of NULL links in a Complete Binary Tree of n-node is (n+1).
 * The number of leaf nodes in a Complete Binary Tree of n-node is $$\lceil n/2 \rceil$$.
 * For any non-empty binary tree with n0 leaf nodes and n2 nodes of degree 2, n0 = n2 + 1.
 * n = n0 + n1 + n2 + n4 + n3 + n5 + .... + nB-1 + nB
 * B = n - 1, n = 1 + 1*n1 + 2*n2 + 3*n3 + 4*n4 + ... + B*nB, NOT include n0

Proof
proof: n0=n2+1

Let n = the total number of nodes B = the branches in T       n0, n1, n2 represent the nodes with no children, single child, and two children respectively.

B = n - 1 B = n1 + 2*n2 n = n1+ 2*n2 + 1 n = n0 + n1 + n2   n1+ 2*n2 + 1 = n0 + n1 + n2 ==> n0 = n2 + 1

Common Operations
There are a variety of different operations that can be performed on binary trees. Some are mutator operations, while others simply return useful information about the tree.

Insertion
Nodes can be inserted into binary trees in between two other nodes or added after an external node. In binary trees, a node that is inserted is specified as to which child it is.

External nodes
Say that the external node being added on to is node A. To add a new node after node A, A assigns the new node as one of its children and the new node assigns node A as its parent.

Internal nodes
Insertion on internal nodes is slightly more complex than on external nodes. Say that the internal node is node A and that node B is the child of A. (If the insertion is to insert a right child, then B is the right child of A, and similarly with a left child insertion.) A assigns its child to the new node and the new node assigns its parent to A. Then the new node assigns its child to B and B assigns its parent as the new node.

Deletion
Deletion is the process whereby a node is removed from the tree. Only certain nodes in a binary tree can be removed unambiguously.

Node with zero or one children
Say that the node to delete is node A. If a node has no children (external node), deletion is accomplished by setting the child of A's parent to null and A's parent to null. If it has one child, set the parent of A's child to A's parent and set the child of A's parent to A's child.

Node with two children
In a binary tree, a node with two children cannot be deleted unambiguously. However, in certain binary trees these nodes can be deleted, including binary search trees.

Iteration
Often, one wishes to visit each of the nodes in a tree and examine the value there, a process called iteration or enumeration. There are several common orders in which the nodes can be visited, and each has useful properties that are exploited in algorithms based on binary trees:


 * Pre-Order:     Root first, children after
 * Post-Order:    Children first, root after
 * In-Order:      Left child, root, right child.

Pre-order, in-order, and post-order traversal
Pre-order, in-order, and post-order traversal visit each node in a tree by recursively visiting each node in the left and right subtrees of the root. If the root node is visited before its subtrees, this is pre-order; if after, post-order; if between, in-order. In-order traversal is useful in binary search trees, where this traversal visits the nodes in increasing order.

Depth-first order
In depth-first order, we always attempt to visit the node farthest from the root 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 this. See depth-first search for more information.

Breadth-first order
Contrasting with depth-first order is breadth-first order, which always attempts to visit the node closest to the root that it has not already visited. See breadth-first search for more information. Also called a level-order traversal.

Type theory
In type theory, a binary tree with nodes of type A is defined inductively as TA = μα. 1 + A &times; α &times; α.

Definition in graph theory
For each binary tree data structure, there is equivalent rooted binary tree in graph theory.

Graph theorists use the following definition: A binary tree is a connected acyclic graph such that the degree of each vertex is no more than three. It can be shown that in any binary tree of two or more nodes, there are exactly two more nodes of degree one than there are of degree three, but there can be any number of nodes of degree two. A rooted binary tree is such a graph that has one of its vertices of degree no more than two singled out as the root.

With the root thus chosen, each vertex will have a uniquely defined parent, and up to two children; however, so far there is insufficient information to distinguish a left or right child. If we drop the connectedness requirement, allowing multiple connected components in the graph, we call such a structure a forest.

Another way of defining binary trees is a recursive definition on directed graphs. A binary tree is either: This also does not establish the order of children, but does fix a specific root node.
 * A single vertex.
 * A graph formed by taking two binary trees, adding a vertex, and adding an edge directed from the new vertex to the root of each binary tree.

Combinatorics
In combinatorics one considers the problem of counting the number of binary trees of a given size. Here the trees have no values attached to their nodes (this would just multiply the number of possible trees by an easily determined factor), and trees are distinguished only by their structure; however the left and right child of any node are distinguished (if they are different trees, then interchanging them will produce a tree distinct from the original one). The size of the tree is taken to be the number n of internal nodes (those with two children); the other nodes are leaf nodes and there are n + 1 of them. The number of such binary trees of size n is equal to the number of ways of fully parenthesizing a string of n + 1 symbols (representing leaves) separated by n binary operators (representing internal nodes), so as to determine the argument subexpressions of each operator. For instance for one has to parenthesize a string like $X*X*X*X$, which is possible in five ways:
 * $$((X*X)*X)*X,\qquad (X*(X*X))*X,\qquad (X*X)*(X*X),\qquad X*((X*X)*X),\qquad X*(X*(X*X)).$$

The correspondence to binary trees should be obvious, and the addition of redundant parentheses (around an already parenthesized expression or around the full expression) is disallowed (or at least not counted as producing a new possibility).

There is a unique binary tree of size 0 (consisting of a single leaf), and any other binary tree is characterized by the pair of its left and right children; if these have sizes i and j respectively, the full tree has size i + j + 1. Therefore the number $$C_n$$ of binary trees of size n has the following recursive description $$C_0=1$$, and $$\textstyle C_n=\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}C_iC_{n-1-i}$$ for any positive integer n. It follows that $$C_n$$ is the Catalan number of index n.

The above parenthesized strings should not be confused with the set of words of length 2n in the Dyck language, which consist only of parentheses in such a way that they are properly balanced. The number of such strings satisfies the same recursive description (each Dyck word of length 2n is determined by the Dyck subword enclosed by the initial '(' and its matching ')' together with the Dyck subword remaining after that closing parenthesis, whose lengths 2i and 2j satisfy i + j + 1 = n); this number is therefore also the Catalan number $$C_n$$. So there are also five Dyck words of length 10:
 * $$,\qquad (),\qquad (),\qquad (),\qquad (())$$.

These Dyck words do not correspond in an obvious way to binary trees. A bijective correspondence can nevertheless be defined as follows: enclose the Dyck word in a extra pair of parentheses, so that the result can be interpreted as a Lisp list expression (with the empty list as only occurring atom); then the dotted-pair expression for that proper list is a fully parenthesized expression (with NIL as symbol and '.' as operator) describing the corresponding binary tree (which is in fact the internal representation of the proper list).

The ability to represent binary trees as strings of symbols and parentheses implies that binary trees can represent the elements of a free magma on a singleton set.

Methods for storing binary trees
Binary trees can be constructed from programming language primitives in several ways.

Nodes and references
In a language with records and references, binary trees are typically constructed by having a tree node structure which contains some data and references to its left child and its right child. Sometimes it also contains a reference to its unique parent. If a node has fewer than two children, some of the child pointers may be set to a special null value, or to a special sentinel node.

In languages with tagged unions such as ML, a tree node is often a tagged union of two types of nodes, one of which is a 3-tuple of data, left child, and right child, and the other of which is a "leaf" node, which contains no data and functions much like the null value in a language with pointers.

Arrays
Binary trees can also be stored as an implicit data structure in arrays, and if the tree is a complete binary tree, this method wastes no space. In this compact arrangement, if a node has an index i, its children are found at indices $$2i + 1$$(for the left child) and $$2i +2$$(for the right), while its parent (if any) is found at index $$\left \lfloor \frac{i-1}{2} \right \rfloor$$ (assuming the root has index zero). This method benefits from more compact storage and better locality of reference, particularly during a preorder traversal. However, it is expensive to grow and wastes space proportional to 2h - n for a tree of height h with n nodes.



Succinct encodings
A succinct data structure is one which takes the absolute minimum possible space, as established by information theoretical lower bounds. The number of different binary trees on $$n$$ nodes is $$\mathrm{C}_{n}$$, the $$n$$th Catalan number (assuming we view trees with identical structure as identical). For large $$n$$, this is about $$4^{n}$$; thus we need at least about $$\log_{2}4^{n} = 2n$$ bits to encode it. A succinct binary tree therefore would occupy only 2 bits per node.

One simple representation which meets this bound is to visit the nodes of the tree in preorder, outputting "1" for an internal node and "0" for a leaf. If the tree contains data, we can simply simultaneously store it in a consecutive array in preorder. This function accomplishes this:

function EncodeSuccinct(node n, bitstring structure, array data) { if n = nil then append 0 to structure; else append 1 to structure; append n.data to data; EncodeSuccinct(n.left, structure, data); EncodeSuccinct(n.right, structure, data); }

The string structure has only $$2n + 1$$ bits in the end, where $$n$$ is the number of (internal) nodes; we don't even have to store its length. To show that no information is lost, we can convert the output back to the original tree like this:

function DecodeSuccinct(bitstring structure, array data) { remove first bit of structure and put it in b if b = 1 then create a new node n remove first element of data and put it in n.data n.left = DecodeSuccinct(structure, data) n.right = DecodeSuccinct(structure, data) return n    else return nil }

More sophisticated succinct representations allow not only compact storage of trees but even useful operations on those trees directly while they're still in their succinct form.

Encoding general trees as binary trees
There is a one-to-one mapping between general ordered trees and binary trees, which in particular is used by Lisp to represent general ordered trees as binary trees. To convert a general ordered tree to binary tree, we only need to represent the general tree in left child-sibling way. The result of this representation will be automatically binary tree, if viewed from a different perspective. Each node N in the ordered tree corresponds to a node N'  in the binary tree; the left child of N'  is the node corresponding to the first child of N, and the right child of N'  is the node corresponding to N 's next sibling --- that is, the next node in order among the children of the parent of N. This binary tree representation of a general order tree is sometimes also referred to as a left child-right sibling binary tree (LCRS tree), or a doubly-chained tree, or a Filial-Heir chain.

One way of thinking about this is that each node's children are in a linked list, chained together with their right fields, and the node only has a pointer to the beginning or head of this list, through its left field.

For example, in the tree on the left, A has the 6 children {B,C,D,E,F,G}. It can be converted into the binary tree on the right.



The binary tree can be thought of as the original tree tilted sideways, with the black left edges representing first child and the blue right edges representing next sibling. The leaves of the tree on the left would be written in Lisp as:


 * (((N O) I J) C D ((P) (Q)) F (M))

which would be implemented in memory as the binary tree on the right, without any letters on those nodes that have a left child.