Is there a work around to use gamultiobj with linear constraints and binary variables?
조회 수: 3 (최근 30일)
이전 댓글 표시
Hi,
I'm trying to minimize a linear and several quadratic functions with gamultiobj like the following:
y(8)= ((Befaehiger(:,2).*VF2(8,:)') .* x')'*(1+ (VF1(8,:)'.*x')' * FCM*0.1)'-0.23;
y(9)= x*Befaehiger(:,1);
Befaehiger,FCM, VF1 and VF2 are arrays. x are the binary variables.
My optimization problem has also linear inequality constraints.
Unfortunately my variables are binary. So when using 'PopulationType','bitstring' constraints are not supported. Setting variables as integers (intcon), combined with using bounds 0 and 1 is, also not possible with gamultiobj.
Does someone know a way to use gamultiobj (or another way) to minimize these functions with binary variables?
Thank you for reading
Steffen
댓글 수: 4
Brendan Hamm
2016년 9월 14일
Apologies, I was thinking of ga when I mentioned (alluded to) intcon earlier. I can't see a way to forces this to work with gamultiobj. Is x very large in size? What are the dimensions of the arrays?
채택된 답변
Brendan Hamm
2016년 9월 15일
I was thinking if the problem was not too large we could directly compute all 2^n possibilities. Obviously this is not something we would want to do. So, I looked into Walter's suggestion and was able to implement a smaller example.
The implementation I created is not guaranteed to work well with large problems as there is the possibility of having to re-sample data many times to satisfy the constraints. You would likely need to implement some specific re-sampling which is more probable to produce constraint satisfying points.
Please see the attached files. The main file is PopExample.m.
Up-voting Walter for his suggestion.
추가 답변 (1개)
Walter Roberson
2016년 9월 14일
The standard approach for this is to not use integer constraints, but instead to specify population generators that only happen to return integer values.
댓글 수: 4
참고 항목
카테고리
Help Center 및 File Exchange에서 Linear Least Squares에 대해 자세히 알아보기
제품
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!