When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. A* search algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A*_search_algorithm

    A* is an informed search algorithm, or a best-first search, meaning that it is formulated in terms of weighted graphs: starting from a specific starting node of a graph, it aims to find a path to the given goal node having the smallest cost (least distance travelled, shortest time, etc.).

  3. Lifelong Planning A* - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lifelong_Planning_A*

    LPA* maintains two estimates of the start distance g*(n) for each node: . g(n), the previously calculated g-value (start distance) as in A*; rhs(n), a lookahead value based on the g-values of the node's predecessors (the minimum of all g(n' ) + d(n' , n), where n' is a predecessor of n and d(x, y) is the cost of the edge connecting x and y)

  4. Iterative deepening A* - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iterative_deepening_A*

    Iterative deepening A* (IDA*) is a graph traversal and path search algorithm that can find the shortest path between a designated start node and any member of a set of goal nodes in a weighted graph. It is a variant of iterative deepening depth-first search that borrows the idea to use a heuristic function to conservatively estimate the ...

  5. SMA* - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMA*

    function simple memory bounded A *-star (problem): path queue: set of nodes, ordered by f-cost; begin queue. insert (problem. root-node); while True do begin if queue. empty then return failure; //there is no solution that fits in the given memory node:= queue. begin (); // min-f-cost-node if problem. is-goal (node) then return success; s:= next-successor (node) if! problem. is-goal (s ...

  6. Anytime A* - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anytime_A*

    In computer science, anytime A* is a family of variants of the A* search algorithm.Like other anytime algorithms, it has a flexible time cost, can return a valid solution to a pathfinding or graph traversal problem even if it is interrupted before it ends, by generating a fast, non-optimal solution before progressively optimizing it.

  7. Admissible heuristic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Admissible_heuristic

    The search algorithm uses the admissible heuristic to find an estimated optimal path to the goal state from the current node. For example, in A* search the evaluation function (where is the current node) is: = + where = the evaluation function.

  8. Any-angle path planning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Any-angle_path_planning

    Any-angle path planning algorithms are pathfinding algorithms that search for a Euclidean shortest path between two points on a grid map while allowing the turns in the path to have any angle. The result is a path that cuts directly through open areas and has relatively few turns. [ 1 ]

  9. Search algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Search_algorithm

    Search algorithms can be made faster or more efficient by specially constructed database structures, such as search trees, hash maps, and database indexes. [1] [2] Search algorithms can be classified based on their mechanism of searching into three types of algorithms: linear, binary, and hashing. Linear search algorithms check every record for ...