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  2. Polynomial-time reduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynomial-time_reduction

    A polynomial-time many-one reduction from a problem A to a problem B (both of which are usually required to be decision problems) is a polynomial-time algorithm for transforming inputs to problem A into inputs to problem B, such that the transformed problem has the same output as the original problem.

  3. PTAS reduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PTAS_reduction

    In computational complexity theory, a PTAS reduction is an approximation-preserving reduction that is often used to perform reductions between solutions to optimization problems. It preserves the property that a problem has a polynomial time approximation scheme (PTAS) and is used to define completeness for certain classes of optimization ...

  4. Polynomial-time counting reduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynomial-time_counting...

    A polynomial-time counting reduction is usually used to transform instances of a known-hard problem into instances of another problem that is to be proven hard. It consists of two functions f {\displaystyle f} and g {\displaystyle g} , both of which must be computable in polynomial time .

  5. List of NP-complete problems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NP-complete_problems

    Remains NP-complete for 3-sets. Solvable in polynomial time for 2-sets (this is a matching). [2] [3]: SP2 Finding the global minimum solution of a Hartree-Fock problem [37] Upward planarity testing [8] Hospitals-and-residents problem with couples; Knot genus [38]

  6. P versus NP problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P_versus_NP_problem

    It runs in polynomial time on inputs that are in SUBSET-SUM if and only if P = NP: // Algorithm that accepts the NP-complete language SUBSET-SUM. // // this is a polynomial-time algorithm if and only if P = NP. // // "Polynomial-time" means it returns "yes" in polynomial time when // the answer should be "yes", and runs forever when it is "no".

  7. NP-hardness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NP-hardness

    In computational complexity theory, a computational problem H is called NP-hard if, for every problem L which can be solved in non-deterministic polynomial-time, there is a polynomial-time reduction from L to H. That is, assuming a solution for H takes 1 unit time, H ' s solution can be used to solve L in polynomial time.

  8. Reduction (complexity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduction_(complexity)

    As described in the example above, there are two main types of reductions used in computational complexity, the many-one reduction and the Turing reduction.Many-one reductions map instances of one problem to instances of another; Turing reductions compute the solution to one problem, assuming the other problem is easy to solve.

  9. Turing reduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_reduction

    A set A is polynomial-time reducible to a set if there is a Turing reduction of to that runs in polynomial time. The concept of log-space reduction is similar. These reductions are stronger in the sense that they provide a finer distinction into equivalence classes, and satisfy more restrictive requirements than Turing reductions.