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A 1999 study of the Stony Brook University Algorithm Repository showed that, out of 75 algorithmic problems related to the field of combinatorial algorithms and algorithm engineering, the knapsack problem was the 19th most popular and the third most needed after suffix trees and the bin packing problem.
The knapsack problem is one of the most studied problems in combinatorial optimization, with many real-life applications. For this reason, many special cases and generalizations have been examined. For this reason, many special cases and generalizations have been examined.
The continuous knapsack problem may be solved by a greedy algorithm, first published in 1957 by George Dantzig, [2] [3] that considers the materials in sorted order by their values per unit weight. For each material, the amount x i is chosen to be as large as possible:
A minimum spanning tree of a weighted planar graph.Finding a minimum spanning tree is a common problem involving combinatorial optimization. Combinatorial optimization is a subfield of mathematical optimization that consists of finding an optimal object from a finite set of objects, [1] where the set of feasible solutions is discrete or can be reduced to a discrete set.
One variation of this problem assumes that the people making change will use the "greedy algorithm" for making change, even when that requires more than the minimum number of coins. Most current currencies use a 1-2-5 series , but some other set of denominations would require fewer denominations of coins or a smaller average number of coins to ...
Greedy algorithms fail to produce the optimal solution for many other problems and may even produce the unique worst possible solution. One example is the travelling salesman problem mentioned above: for each number of cities, there is an assignment of distances between the cities for which the nearest-neighbour heuristic produces the unique ...
The problem is NP-hard, but it has efficient constant-factor approximation algorithms as well as an FPTAS. In practice, usually the demands s i are publicly known (e.g., the length of the advertisement of each advertiser must be known), but the valuations v i are the private information of the bidders.
Knapsack problem, quadratic knapsack problem, and several variants [2] [3]: MP9 Some problems related to Multiprocessor scheduling; Numerical 3-dimensional matching [3]: SP16 Open-shop scheduling; Partition problem [2] [3]: SP12 Quadratic assignment problem [3]: ND43 Quadratic programming (NP-hard in some cases, P if convex)