Aitken's delta-squared process

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28 year-old Painting Investments Worker Truman from Regina, usually spends time with pastimes for instance interior design, property developers in new launch ec Singapore and writing. Last month just traveled to City of the Renaissance. In mathematics, a constraint is a condition of an optimization problem that the solution must satisfy. There are several types of constraints—primarily equality constraints, inequality constraints, and integer constraints. The set of candidate solutions that satisfy all constraints is called the feasible set.

Example

The following is a simple optimization problem:

minf(x)=x12+x24

subject to

x11

and

x2=1,

where x denotes the vector (x1, x2).

In this example, the first line defines the function to be minimized (called the objective function, loss function, or cost function). The second and third lines define two constraints, the first of which is an inequality constraint and the second of which is an equality constraint. These two constraints are hard constraints, meaning that it is required that they be satisfied; they define the feasible set of candidate solutions.

Without the constraints, the solution would be (0,0) where f(x) has the lowest value. But this solution does not satisfy the constraints. The solution of the constrained optimization problem stated above is x=(1,1), which is the point with the smallest value of f(x) that satisfies the two constraints.

Terminology

  • If an inequality constraint holds with equality at the optimal point, the constraint is said to be Template:Visible anchor, as the point cannot be varied in the direction of the constraint even though doing so would improve the value of the objective function.
  • If an inequality constraint holds as a strict inequality at the optimal point (that is, does not hold with equality), the constraint is said to be Template:Visible anchor, as the point could be varied in the direction of the constraint, although it would not be optimal to do so. If a constraint is non-binding, the optimization problem would have the same solution even in the absence of that constraint.
  • If a constraint is not satisfied at a given point, the point is said to be infeasible.

Hard and soft constraints

If the problem mandates that the constraints be satisfied, as in the above discussion, the constraints are sometimes referred to as hard constraints. However, in some problems, called flexible constraint satisfaction problems, it is preferred but not required that certain constraints be satisfied; such non-mandatory constraints are known as soft constraints. Soft constraints arise in, for example, preference-based planning. In a MAX-CSP problem, a number of constraints are allowed to be violated, and the quality of a solution is measured by the number of satisfied constraints.

See also

External links

ca:Restricció es:Restricción (matemáticas)