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  2. Multidimensional assignment problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multidimensional...

    The multidimensional assignment problem (MAP) is a fundamental combinatorial optimization problem which was introduced by William Pierskalla. [1] This problem can be seen as a generalization of the linear assignment problem. [2] In words, the problem can be described as follows: An instance of the problem has a number of agents (i.e ...

  3. Assignment problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assignment_problem

    This is an unbalanced assignment problem. One way to solve it is to invent a fourth dummy task, perhaps called "sitting still doing nothing", with a cost of 0 for the taxi assigned to it. This reduces the problem to a balanced assignment problem, which can then be solved in the usual way and still give the best solution to the problem.

  4. List of NP-complete problems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NP-complete_problems

    Flow Shop Scheduling Problem; Generalized assignment problem; Integer programming. The variant where variables are required to be 0 or 1, called zero-one linear programming, and several other variants are also NP-complete [2] [3]: MP1 Some problems related to Job-shop scheduling

  5. Static single-assignment form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_single-assignment_form

    For example, consider this piece of code: y := 1 y := 2 x := y Humans can see that the first assignment is not necessary, and that the value of y being used in the third line comes from the second assignment of y. A program would have to perform reaching definition analysis to determine this. But if the program is in SSA form, both of these are ...

  6. Fair random assignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_random_assignment

    Fair random assignment (also called probabilistic one-sided matching) is a kind of a fair division problem. In an assignment problem (also called house-allocation problem or one-sided matching), there are m objects and they have to be allocated among n agents, such that each agent receives at most one object. Examples include the assignment of ...

  7. NP-completeness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NP-completeness

    The Boolean satisfiability problem (SAT) asks to determine if a propositional formula (example depicted) can be made true by an appropriate assignment ("solution") of truth values to its variables. While it is easy to verify whether a given assignment renders the formula true , [ 1 ] no essentially faster method to find a satisfying assignment ...

  8. Boolean satisfiability problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boolean_satisfiability_problem

    WMSAT is the problem of finding an assignment of minimum weight that satisfy a monotone Boolean formula (i.e. a formula without any negation). Weights of propositional variables are given in the input of the problem. The weight of an assignment is the sum of weights of true variables. That problem is NP-complete (see Th. 1 of [26]).

  9. Assignment (computer science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assignment_(computer_science)

    In this case chain assignment can be implemented by having a right-associative assignment, and assignments happen right-to-left. For example, i = arr[i] = f() is equivalent to arr[i] = f(); i = arr[i]. In C++ they are also available for values of class types by declaring the appropriate return type for the assignment operator.