{- | This module provides a solver for exact set cover problems. -} module Math.SetCover.Exact ( Assign(..), assign, bitVectorFromSetAssigns, partitions, search, step, State(..), initState, updateState, Set(..), ) where import qualified Math.SetCover.IntSet as IntSetX import qualified Math.SetCover.BitMap as BitMap import qualified Math.SetCover.BitSet as BitSet import qualified Math.SetCover.Bit as Bit import Control.Applicative ((<$>), (<$)) import qualified Data.IntSet as IntSet import qualified Data.Map as Map import qualified Data.Set as Set import qualified Data.List as List import qualified Data.List.Match as Match import qualified Data.Foldable as Fold import Data.Maybe.HT (toMaybe) import Data.Bits (setBit) import Prelude hiding (null) {- | This class provides all operations needed for the set cover algorithm. It allows to use the same algorithm both for @containers@' 'Set' and for sets represented by bit vectors. -} class Set set where null :: set -> Bool disjoint :: set -> set -> Bool unions :: [set] -> set difference :: set -> set -> set {- | Unchecked preconditions: 'set' must be a superset of all sets in the assign list. 'set' must be non-empty. The list of assignments must be non-empty. The output of assigns must be a subsequence of the input assigns, that is, it must be a subset of the input and it must be in the same order. This requirement was originally needed by 'minimize' for 'Map.Map', but currently it is not utilized anywhere. -} minimize :: set -> [Assign label set] -> [Assign label set] instance (Ord a) => Set (Set.Set a) where null = Set.null disjoint x y = Set.null $ Set.intersection x y unions = Set.unions difference = Set.difference minimize free = Fold.minimumBy Match.compareLength . foldr (Map.unionWith (++)) (constMap [] free) . map (\a -> constMap [a] $ labeledSet a) {- In containers-0.5 we have Map.fromSet -} {-# INLINE constMap #-} constMap :: (Ord a) => b -> Set.Set a -> Map.Map a b constMap a = Fold.foldMap (flip Map.singleton a) {- | This instance supports Maps of Sets. This way you can structure your sets hierarchically. You may also use it to combine several low-level bitsets. A Map must not contain empty subsets. -} instance (Ord k, Set a) => Set (Map.Map k a) where null = Map.null disjoint x y = Fold.and $ Map.intersectionWith disjoint x y unions = fmap unions . foldr (Map.unionWith (++)) Map.empty . map (fmap (:[])) difference = Map.differenceWith (\x y -> let z = difference x y in toMaybe (not $ null z) z) minimize free asns = map label $ Fold.minimumBy Match.compareLength $ Map.intersectionWith minimize free $ foldr (Map.unionWith (++)) ([] <$ free) $ map (\asn -> (:[]) . assign asn <$> labeledSet asn) asns instance (Bit.C a) => Set (BitSet.Set a) where null = BitSet.null disjoint = BitSet.disjoint unions = Fold.fold difference = BitSet.difference minimize free available = let singleMin = BitSet.keepMinimum $ BitMap.minimumSet free $ Fold.foldMap (BitMap.fromSet . labeledSet) available in filter (not . BitSet.disjoint singleMin . labeledSet) available instance Set IntSet.IntSet where null = IntSet.null disjoint x y = IntSet.null $ IntSet.intersection x y unions = IntSet.unions difference = IntSet.difference minimize free available = let bitset = BitSet.Set . IntSetX.fromIntSet singleMin = (\(BitSet.Set s) -> IntSetX.findMin s) $ BitMap.minimumSet (bitset free) $ Fold.foldMap (BitMap.fromSet . bitset . labeledSet) available in filter (IntSet.member singleMin . labeledSet) available {- | 'Assign' allows to associate a set with a label. If a particular set is chosen for a set cover, then its label is included in the output of 'partitions'. I have decided to separate sets and labels this way, since it is the easiest way to assign a meaning to a set. If you really want to know the sets in a partition, then you can fill the 'label' field with the set. -} data Assign label set = Assign { label :: label, labeledSet :: set } {- | Construction of a labeled set. -} assign :: label -> set -> Assign label set assign = Assign {- | You may use this to post-process a set of 'Assign's in order to speedup the solver considerably. You must process the whole set of 'Assign's at once, i.e. do not process only parts of the assignment list. The output of 'bitVectorFromSetAssigns' should go into the solver as is. -} bitVectorFromSetAssigns :: (Ord a) => [Assign label (Set.Set a)] -> [Assign label (BitSet.Set Integer)] bitVectorFromSetAssigns asns = let mapToInt = Map.fromList $ zip (Set.toList $ unions $ map labeledSet asns) [0..] err = error "bitVectorFromSetAssigns: element disappeared" bitVec = Fold.foldl' setBit 0 . map (flip (Map.findWithDefault err) mapToInt) . Set.toList in map (fmap (BitSet.Set . bitVec)) asns {- | The state of the search. @usedSubsets@ contains the partial partition built up so far. @availableSubsets@ is the list of sets we can still try to put into a partition. The lists @usedSubsets@ and @availableSubsets@ are disjoint, but their union is not necessarily equal to the list of initially given sets. There are sets not contained in the partial partition that overlap with the partial partition. Those sets are not available for extending the partition. @freeElements@ contains the elements that are not covered by the partial partition in @usedSubsets@. @unions usedSubset@ and @freeElements@ are disjoint and their union is the set of all elements. -} data State label set = State { availableSubsets :: [Assign label set], freeElements :: set, usedSubsets :: [Assign label set] } instance Functor (Assign label) where fmap f (Assign lab set) = Assign lab (f set) instance Functor (State label) where fmap f (State ab fp pb) = State (map (fmap f) ab) (f fp) (map (fmap f) pb) initState :: Set set => [Assign label set] -> State label set initState subsets = State { availableSubsets = subsets, freeElements = unions $ map labeledSet subsets, usedSubsets = [] } {-# INLINE updateState #-} updateState :: Set set => Assign label set -> State label set -> State label set updateState attempt@(Assign _ attemptedSet) s = State { availableSubsets = filter (disjoint attemptedSet . labeledSet) $ availableSubsets s, freeElements = difference (freeElements s) attemptedSet, usedSubsets = attempt : usedSubsets s } {- | This is the key of the search algorithm. The search algorithm tries to build partitions by adding sets to a partition list successively. A step starts on a partial partition and looks for new sets that could be added. The goal is to avoid to check a set again down in a search branch and to quickly determine search directions that lead to a dead end. To this end a search step selects a certain set element and tries all sets that contain that element and that do not overlap with the partial partition. Practically, 'step' selects an element with the minimal number of non-overlapping sets it is contained in. If this number is zero, then the search can be aborted in this branch. Most oftenly the power of the algorithm originates from the formulation of a problem as a set-cover problem and from the equal treatment of all elements. E.g. in the Soma cube example the algorithm chooses whether to do a case analysis on all bricks that cover a certain position, or to do a case analysis on all positions that are possible for a certain brick. The algorithm might not be extraordinarily fast, but in all cases it consumes only little memory since it only has to maintain the current state of search. -} {-# INLINE step #-} step :: Set set => State label set -> [State label set] step s = if List.null (availableSubsets s) || null (freeElements s) then [] else map (flip updateState s) $ minimize (freeElements s) (availableSubsets s) {- | Start the search for partitions on a certain search state. This can be an 'initState' or the result of performing some search 'step's. In the examples we use this for parallelization: We perform some steps manually and then run 'search' on the results in parallel. -} {-# INLINE search #-} search :: Set set => State label set -> [[label]] search s = if null (freeElements s) then [map label $ usedSubsets s] else step s >>= search {- | @partitions [assign '0' set0, assign '1' set1, assign '2' set2]@ computes @unions [set0, set1, set2]@ and tries to partition the union set using the sets @set0@, @set1@, @set2@. 'partitions' returns all such partitions. If a set is chosen for a partition, then its label is included in the output. E.g. @set0 = Set.fromList [0,1], set1 = Set.fromList [2], set2 = Set.fromList [0,1,2]@, then 'partitions' returns @["01", "2"]@. The order of partitions and the order of labels depends on the implementation and you must not rely on them. You may use 'listToMaybe' in order to select only the first solution. -} {-# INLINE partitions #-} partitions :: Set set => [Assign label set] -> [[label]] partitions = search . initState