That's as good a complete tree as you're likely to get, down to the class level. Some species in the class Aves survived, and progenitor species with Aves are still around today. There's no significant evidence of species in other classes of the clade Dinosauria surviving much past the impact boundary.
You can push this up one level to the clade Avemetatarsalia (including Pterosaurs along with Dinosaurs) and the statement above would still be true; but pushing it further to Archosauria would not be valid, because crocodilians survived (and survive) as well.
That's as good a complete tree as you're likely to get, down to the class level. Some species in the class Aves survived, and progenitor species with Aves are still around today. There's no significant evidence of species in other classes of the clade Dinosauria surviving much past the impact boundary.
You can push this up one level to the clade Avemetatarsalia (including Pterosaurs along with Dinosaurs) and the statement above would still be true; but pushing it further to Archosauria would not be valid, because crocodilians survived (and survive) as well.