FP Laboratory 11
Binary Trees
- Create a data type
Tree
that defines binary tree where values are stored in leaves and also in branches.
data Tree a = Leaf a
| Branch a (Tree a) (Tree a) deriving (Show)
- Prepare an example of a binary tree.
testTree1 :: Tree Int
testTree1 = Branch 12 (Branch 23 (Leaf 34) (Leaf 45)) (Leaf 55)
testTree2 :: Tree Char
testTree2 = Branch 'a' (Branch 'b' (Leaf 'c') (Leaf 'd')) (Leaf 'e')
- Create a function that counts the values stored in the leaves.
sum' :: Tree Int -> Int
sum' :: Tree Int -> Int
sum' (Leaf x) = x
sum' (Branch x l r) = sum' l + x + sum' r
- Create a function that extracts all values from the leaves into an list.
toList :: Tree a -> [a]
toList :: Tree a -> [a]
toList (Leaf x) = [x]
toList (Branch x l r) = toList l ++ [x] ++ toList r
- One possibility how to represent a tree in a textual form is
a(b(d,e),c(e,f(g,h)))
. Create functions that are able to read and store a tree in such a notation.
toString :: Show a => Tree a -> String
fromString :: Read a => String -> Tree a
toString :: Show a => Tree a -> String
toString (Leaf x) = show x
toString (Branch x l r) = show x ++ "(" ++ (toString l) ++ "," ++ (toString r) ++ ")"
fromString :: Read a => String -> Tree a
fromString inp = fst (fromString' inp) where
fromString' :: Read a => String -> (Tree a,String)
fromString' inp =
let
before = takeWhile (\x -> x /='(' && x /=',' && x/=')') inp
after = dropWhile (\x -> x /='(' && x /=',' && x/=')') inp
value = read before
in if null after || head after /= '(' then (Leaf value, after) else
let
(l,after') = fromString' (tail after)
(r,after'') = fromString' (tail after')
in (Branch value l r, tail after'')