Understanding the tree data structure

Osgood Gunawan
3 min readSep 21, 2020
Photo by Todd Quackenbush on Unsplash

In the last journal of data structure, I concluded the linked-list data structure and its time for a new data structure topic: ’Tree.’

What is a tree?

The word itself is pretty self-explanatory; a tree data structure is similar to the model tree in real life. A tree in data structure consists of nodes(just like in linked list), but they are in a parent/child relationship. Usually, in a tree’s data structure diagram, it starts with a root on top, which is the opposite in a real-life diagram. A tree data structure doesn’t store data linearly, such as a single-linked list (one path /one line), but in non-linear(hierarchically). A tree data structure branches out more than one pathway (multiple lines/paths).

A tree data structure, the root of this tree is 2.

A tree data structure in real life could be something like a family tree or corporate ladder.

Family Tree
Corporate ladder

There are a lot of tree data structures in the computer world. For instance: HTML DOM, Network Routing, Abstract syntax tree, Artificial Intelligence, Folders in Operating Systems, computer file System, JSON parsing.

HTML DOM Tree
Abstract Syntax Tree
Folders in Operating Systems and computer file System
JSON parsing

Tree basic terminology

  • Root: First node of the tree, the top node in a tree.
  • Edge: The connecting between one node and another.
  • Child: A node directly connected to another node when moving away from the root
  • Parent: Anode that has an edge to a child node(the converse notion of a child)
  • Siblings: A group of nodes with the same parent
  • Leaf: A node with no children
  • Height: The length of the longest path to a leaf (going down)
  • Depth: The length of the path to its root (going up)
Tree Terminology
Dept vs. Height

Fundamental rules of tree data structure

  • A node can only point to a child, not siblings or parents.
  • Every tree must have a root node and only one root, not multiple root nodes in a tree.

Ther are different types of trees data structure. In the next Journal, I will be implementing one of the most popular types of tree data structures ( binary search tree spoiler alert) from scratch. So stay tuned for that one, and as always, thanks for reading, and I hope you enjoy it!

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Osgood Gunawan

UX designer | Software Engineer | Dancer | ETL Developer | Data Migration. More about me : https://www.osgood1024.com/