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In mathematics and computer science, an optimization problem is the problem of finding the best solution from all feasible solutions. More formally, an optimization problem A is a quadruple (I,f,m,g), where
The goal is then to find for some instance x an optimal solution, that is, a feasible solution y with ![]() For each optimization problem, there is a corresponding decision problem that asks whether there is a feasible solution for some particular measure m0. For example, if there is a graph G which contains vertices u and v, an optimization problem might be "find a path from u to v that uses the fewest edges". This problem might have an answer of, say, 4. A corresponding decision problem would be "is there a path from u to v that uses 10 or fewer edges?" This problem can be answered with a simple 'yes' or 'no'. An NP optimization problem has the following further restrictions:
This implies that the corresponding decision problem is in NP. Since interesting optimization problems usually fulfill these criteria, "optimization problem" is often used synonymously with "NP optimization problem". See also |
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