In a standard implementation of the Rope data structure using splay trees, the nodes would be ordered according to a rank statistic measuring the position of each one from the start of the string, so the keys normally found in binary search tree would be irrelevant, would they not?
I ask because the keys shown in the graphic below (thanks Wikipedia!) are letters, which would presumably become non-unique once the number of nodes exceeded the length of the chosen alphabet. Wouldn't it be better to use integers or avoid using keys altogether?
Separately, can anyone point me to a good implementation of the logic to recompute rank statistics after each operation?
Presumably, if the index for a split falls within the substring attached to a particular node, say, between "Hel" and "llo_" on the node E above, you would remove the substring from E, split it and reattach it as two children of E. Correct?
Finally, after a certain number of such operations, the tree could, I suppose, end up with as many leaves as letters. What would be the best way to keep track of that and prune the tree (by combining substrings) as necessary?
Thanks!