Since this is your first question I am wondering if this is a real post.
But I am going to answer just in case it is real.
No. Not advisable
Children thrive on security. They gain this with structure, expectations and rules.
Your daughter needs to feel secure that she has a home base. This is not about you and not about her father. This needs to be where your daughter feels the most comfortable and feels like is her home.
She needs the stability of knowing what is hers. Her school, her friends, her bed, her pets.
Sure she may have a room at a second home. She may have a parent living in their home, but she needs to have a permanent home.
Divorce is hard enough. I know very well being a child of divorce.,
We walk a tight rope not wanting to hurt our parents by being honest as to what we really want. We love our parents equally, but since these 2 people cannot live together, we then are at the mercy of all of the parents decisions and choices. BUT we may have different needs and wants.
You and your ex must allow your child to feel free to say where she wants to live.. This means IF you and her dad both are willing to be the main residence. Allow her to choose what city and what school she wants to put her energy into.
In my family, my father did not have a main residence. He was more mobile. He lived with girl friends, with my grand mother then a wife, but she lived 100's of miles away.. and so my decision was made for me.
I knew that my moms home was my home.
My niece and nephew do have 2 homes, but their parents live less than a mile apart. So they spend 1 week with their father at his home and 1 week with my sister at her home. They are then able to easily attend schools that are close by. But In the end, they tended to stay more at their dads home, because it was larger. They could invite friends over, They had their parties there. And because he remarried and his wife was home, they tended to stay there because their mom worked so much.
Parents that think they can get a divorce and live in different cities and have 50% - 50% with the child, are not being realistic. She needs her school. She needs to be able to have her friends from school. She needs to be able to invite her friends over to her home. She needs the stability of something in her life. She needs to be able to participate in school activities. Example, if she runs for Cheerleader or Student Council President, she will need to know she is going to be there to fulfill these commitments. Many times the elections are at the end of one school year, so that they can train during the summer. If you are switching schools every other year, it is hard to get into the grove of the new school every fall..
Sure Military families can be stationed all over the place each year, but your child is not in the military.. There is no reason for her to have to go through this on her own each year.
Make common sense choices when it comes to your child's life.