Cords package (also known as "cord library") is a string package that uses a tree-based representation.
See cord.h file for a description of the basic functions provided. And,
ec.h file describes "extensible cords", those are essentially output streams
that write to a cord; these allow for efficient construction of cords without
requiring a bound on the size of a cord.
The cord library is built along with gc library by default unless manually
disabled (e.g., in case of cmake-based build, unless -Dbuild_cord=OFF option
is passed to cmake).
More details on the data structure can be found in: Boehm, Atkinson, and Plass, "Ropes: An Alternative to Strings", Software Practice and Experience 25, 12, December 1995, pp. 1315-1330.
A fundamentally similar "rope" data structure is also part of SGI's standard template library implementation, and its descendants, which include the GNU C++ library. That uses reference counting by default. There is a short description of that data structure in Rope Implementation Overview.
All of these are descendants of the "ropes" in Xerox Cedar.
cord/tests/de.c file is a very dumb text editor that illustrates the use of
cords. It maintains a list of file versions. Each version is simply a cord
representing the file contents. Nonetheless, standard editing operations are
efficient, even on very large files. (Its 3-line "user manual" can be
obtained by invoking it without arguments. Note that ^R^N and ^R^P move
the cursor by almost a screen. It does not understand tabs, which will show
up as highlighted "I"s. Use the UNIX expand program first.) To build the
editor, type make de in the bdwgc root directory.
Note that CORD_printf and friends use C functions with variable numbers
of arguments in non-standard-conforming ways. This code is known to break on
some platforms, notably PowerPC. It should be possible to build the remainder
of the library (everything but cordprnt.c file) on any platform that
supports the collector.