Searching extreme points of polyhedron





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3












$begingroup$


In my Uni, my scientific professor asked me to make some researches about the extreme points of polyhedrals. And I did them. I found that there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions (n - x's), but polyhedrons are everywhere (CV, game theories, etc.). I wrote a function for this task and made a python library (also there are matrix and array combination maker functions).



All I want is to make this code more optimal and compatible for all python versions (I have some troubles that some times happen when I install it by "pip install lin", but other times no). I want to make the life of people easier and make it more comfortable.



I am asking for you to test this function on your computer and write if you have any bugs, fails or thoughts on how to make it better. I am open to constructive criticism and non-constructive too (it will help to understand if somebody needs it or that is just a waste of time).



All the examples, instructions and code on my GitHub: https://github.com/r4ndompuff/polyhedral_set



import numpy as np
import itertools as it
import math
import re

def permutation(m,n):
return math.factorial(n)/(math.factorial(n-m)*math.factorial(m))

def matrix_combinations(matr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def array_combinations(arr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
for i in range(m):
td_answer = sum(matr[i]*x)
if sym_comb[i] == '>':
if td_answer <= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
if td_answer < arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
if td_answer >= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
if td_answer > arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
if td_answer != arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
if td_answer == arr[i]:
return 0
else:
return 0
return 1

def extreme_points(m,n,A,b,sym_comb):
# Input
A = np.array(A).reshape(m,n)
b = np.array(b).reshape(m,1)
# Proccess
ans_comb = np.zeros((1,n))
arr_comb = array_combinations(b,n)
matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A,n)
for i in range(int(permutation(n,m))):
if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i],arr_comb[i])
ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb,x])
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (0), axis=0)
j = 0
for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
ans_comb = ans_comb
j = j + 1
else:
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (j), axis=0)
# Output
return ans_comb


And I am uploading some more tests. https://imgur.com/mjweDyy










share|improve this question









New contributor




Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Can you provide some more information on what exactly is going on, from a math standpoint? Is this actually a polyhedron, or a polytope? In how many dimensions? By "extreme", what do you mean? Euclidean norm from (the origin, an arbitrary point)?
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    "there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions" - I can nearly guarantee that that isn't the case.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Reinderien I am still in the process of deciphering the question. I have a math background, and I share the mother tongue with OP. My impression is that by extremal points OP means the vertices of a simplex where a certain linear form (defined by A, b, and the condition) achieves an extremum. I could be wrong.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @vnp That's kind of what I guessed, and if that's the case, linear programming is a quite well-established field already - with some stuff built right into scipy.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Reinderien Agreed. Still deciphering.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago


















3












$begingroup$


In my Uni, my scientific professor asked me to make some researches about the extreme points of polyhedrals. And I did them. I found that there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions (n - x's), but polyhedrons are everywhere (CV, game theories, etc.). I wrote a function for this task and made a python library (also there are matrix and array combination maker functions).



All I want is to make this code more optimal and compatible for all python versions (I have some troubles that some times happen when I install it by "pip install lin", but other times no). I want to make the life of people easier and make it more comfortable.



I am asking for you to test this function on your computer and write if you have any bugs, fails or thoughts on how to make it better. I am open to constructive criticism and non-constructive too (it will help to understand if somebody needs it or that is just a waste of time).



All the examples, instructions and code on my GitHub: https://github.com/r4ndompuff/polyhedral_set



import numpy as np
import itertools as it
import math
import re

def permutation(m,n):
return math.factorial(n)/(math.factorial(n-m)*math.factorial(m))

def matrix_combinations(matr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def array_combinations(arr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
for i in range(m):
td_answer = sum(matr[i]*x)
if sym_comb[i] == '>':
if td_answer <= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
if td_answer < arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
if td_answer >= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
if td_answer > arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
if td_answer != arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
if td_answer == arr[i]:
return 0
else:
return 0
return 1

def extreme_points(m,n,A,b,sym_comb):
# Input
A = np.array(A).reshape(m,n)
b = np.array(b).reshape(m,1)
# Proccess
ans_comb = np.zeros((1,n))
arr_comb = array_combinations(b,n)
matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A,n)
for i in range(int(permutation(n,m))):
if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i],arr_comb[i])
ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb,x])
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (0), axis=0)
j = 0
for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
ans_comb = ans_comb
j = j + 1
else:
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (j), axis=0)
# Output
return ans_comb


And I am uploading some more tests. https://imgur.com/mjweDyy










share|improve this question









New contributor




Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Can you provide some more information on what exactly is going on, from a math standpoint? Is this actually a polyhedron, or a polytope? In how many dimensions? By "extreme", what do you mean? Euclidean norm from (the origin, an arbitrary point)?
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    "there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions" - I can nearly guarantee that that isn't the case.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Reinderien I am still in the process of deciphering the question. I have a math background, and I share the mother tongue with OP. My impression is that by extremal points OP means the vertices of a simplex where a certain linear form (defined by A, b, and the condition) achieves an extremum. I could be wrong.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @vnp That's kind of what I guessed, and if that's the case, linear programming is a quite well-established field already - with some stuff built right into scipy.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Reinderien Agreed. Still deciphering.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago














3












3








3





$begingroup$


In my Uni, my scientific professor asked me to make some researches about the extreme points of polyhedrals. And I did them. I found that there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions (n - x's), but polyhedrons are everywhere (CV, game theories, etc.). I wrote a function for this task and made a python library (also there are matrix and array combination maker functions).



All I want is to make this code more optimal and compatible for all python versions (I have some troubles that some times happen when I install it by "pip install lin", but other times no). I want to make the life of people easier and make it more comfortable.



I am asking for you to test this function on your computer and write if you have any bugs, fails or thoughts on how to make it better. I am open to constructive criticism and non-constructive too (it will help to understand if somebody needs it or that is just a waste of time).



All the examples, instructions and code on my GitHub: https://github.com/r4ndompuff/polyhedral_set



import numpy as np
import itertools as it
import math
import re

def permutation(m,n):
return math.factorial(n)/(math.factorial(n-m)*math.factorial(m))

def matrix_combinations(matr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def array_combinations(arr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
for i in range(m):
td_answer = sum(matr[i]*x)
if sym_comb[i] == '>':
if td_answer <= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
if td_answer < arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
if td_answer >= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
if td_answer > arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
if td_answer != arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
if td_answer == arr[i]:
return 0
else:
return 0
return 1

def extreme_points(m,n,A,b,sym_comb):
# Input
A = np.array(A).reshape(m,n)
b = np.array(b).reshape(m,1)
# Proccess
ans_comb = np.zeros((1,n))
arr_comb = array_combinations(b,n)
matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A,n)
for i in range(int(permutation(n,m))):
if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i],arr_comb[i])
ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb,x])
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (0), axis=0)
j = 0
for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
ans_comb = ans_comb
j = j + 1
else:
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (j), axis=0)
# Output
return ans_comb


And I am uploading some more tests. https://imgur.com/mjweDyy










share|improve this question









New contributor




Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




In my Uni, my scientific professor asked me to make some researches about the extreme points of polyhedrals. And I did them. I found that there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions (n - x's), but polyhedrons are everywhere (CV, game theories, etc.). I wrote a function for this task and made a python library (also there are matrix and array combination maker functions).



All I want is to make this code more optimal and compatible for all python versions (I have some troubles that some times happen when I install it by "pip install lin", but other times no). I want to make the life of people easier and make it more comfortable.



I am asking for you to test this function on your computer and write if you have any bugs, fails or thoughts on how to make it better. I am open to constructive criticism and non-constructive too (it will help to understand if somebody needs it or that is just a waste of time).



All the examples, instructions and code on my GitHub: https://github.com/r4ndompuff/polyhedral_set



import numpy as np
import itertools as it
import math
import re

def permutation(m,n):
return math.factorial(n)/(math.factorial(n-m)*math.factorial(m))

def matrix_combinations(matr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def array_combinations(arr,n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
all = np.array(list(timed))
return all

def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
for i in range(m):
td_answer = sum(matr[i]*x)
if sym_comb[i] == '>':
if td_answer <= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
if td_answer < arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
if td_answer >= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
if td_answer > arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
if td_answer != arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
if td_answer == arr[i]:
return 0
else:
return 0
return 1

def extreme_points(m,n,A,b,sym_comb):
# Input
A = np.array(A).reshape(m,n)
b = np.array(b).reshape(m,1)
# Proccess
ans_comb = np.zeros((1,n))
arr_comb = array_combinations(b,n)
matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A,n)
for i in range(int(permutation(n,m))):
if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i],arr_comb[i])
ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb,x])
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (0), axis=0)
j = 0
for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
ans_comb = ans_comb
j = j + 1
else:
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, (j), axis=0)
# Output
return ans_comb


And I am uploading some more tests. https://imgur.com/mjweDyy







python algorithm numpy homework computational-geometry






share|improve this question









New contributor




Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 15 mins ago









200_success

131k17157422




131k17157422






New contributor




Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 4 hours ago









Andrey LovyaginAndrey Lovyagin

161




161




New contributor




Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • $begingroup$
    Can you provide some more information on what exactly is going on, from a math standpoint? Is this actually a polyhedron, or a polytope? In how many dimensions? By "extreme", what do you mean? Euclidean norm from (the origin, an arbitrary point)?
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    "there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions" - I can nearly guarantee that that isn't the case.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Reinderien I am still in the process of deciphering the question. I have a math background, and I share the mother tongue with OP. My impression is that by extremal points OP means the vertices of a simplex where a certain linear form (defined by A, b, and the condition) achieves an extremum. I could be wrong.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @vnp That's kind of what I guessed, and if that's the case, linear programming is a quite well-established field already - with some stuff built right into scipy.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Reinderien Agreed. Still deciphering.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago


















  • $begingroup$
    Can you provide some more information on what exactly is going on, from a math standpoint? Is this actually a polyhedron, or a polytope? In how many dimensions? By "extreme", what do you mean? Euclidean norm from (the origin, an arbitrary point)?
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    "there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions" - I can nearly guarantee that that isn't the case.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    4 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @Reinderien I am still in the process of deciphering the question. I have a math background, and I share the mother tongue with OP. My impression is that by extremal points OP means the vertices of a simplex where a certain linear form (defined by A, b, and the condition) achieves an extremum. I could be wrong.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @vnp That's kind of what I guessed, and if that's the case, linear programming is a quite well-established field already - with some stuff built right into scipy.
    $endgroup$
    – Reinderien
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Reinderien Agreed. Still deciphering.
    $endgroup$
    – vnp
    2 hours ago
















$begingroup$
Can you provide some more information on what exactly is going on, from a math standpoint? Is this actually a polyhedron, or a polytope? In how many dimensions? By "extreme", what do you mean? Euclidean norm from (the origin, an arbitrary point)?
$endgroup$
– Reinderien
4 hours ago




$begingroup$
Can you provide some more information on what exactly is going on, from a math standpoint? Is this actually a polyhedron, or a polytope? In how many dimensions? By "extreme", what do you mean? Euclidean norm from (the origin, an arbitrary point)?
$endgroup$
– Reinderien
4 hours ago












$begingroup$
"there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions" - I can nearly guarantee that that isn't the case.
$endgroup$
– Reinderien
4 hours ago




$begingroup$
"there is still no code in public for searching extreme points for polyhedral with n dimensions" - I can nearly guarantee that that isn't the case.
$endgroup$
– Reinderien
4 hours ago




1




1




$begingroup$
@Reinderien I am still in the process of deciphering the question. I have a math background, and I share the mother tongue with OP. My impression is that by extremal points OP means the vertices of a simplex where a certain linear form (defined by A, b, and the condition) achieves an extremum. I could be wrong.
$endgroup$
– vnp
2 hours ago




$begingroup$
@Reinderien I am still in the process of deciphering the question. I have a math background, and I share the mother tongue with OP. My impression is that by extremal points OP means the vertices of a simplex where a certain linear form (defined by A, b, and the condition) achieves an extremum. I could be wrong.
$endgroup$
– vnp
2 hours ago












$begingroup$
@vnp That's kind of what I guessed, and if that's the case, linear programming is a quite well-established field already - with some stuff built right into scipy.
$endgroup$
– Reinderien
2 hours ago




$begingroup$
@vnp That's kind of what I guessed, and if that's the case, linear programming is a quite well-established field already - with some stuff built right into scipy.
$endgroup$
– Reinderien
2 hours ago












$begingroup$
@Reinderien Agreed. Still deciphering.
$endgroup$
– vnp
2 hours ago




$begingroup$
@Reinderien Agreed. Still deciphering.
$endgroup$
– vnp
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1












$begingroup$

I created a rudimentary pull request to your GitHub repo. I won't show all of the content here except for the main file:



import numpy as np
import itertools as it
import math
import re


def permutation(m, n):
return math.factorial(n) / (math.factorial(n - m) * math.factorial(m))


def matrix_combinations(matr, n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
return np.array(list(timed))


def array_combinations(arr, n):
timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
for i in range(n):
timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
return np.array(list(timed))


def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
for i in range(m):
td_answer = sum(matr[i] * x)
if sym_comb[i] == '>':
if td_answer <= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
if td_answer < arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
if td_answer >= arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
if td_answer > arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
if td_answer != arr[i]:
return 0
elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
if td_answer == arr[i]:
return 0
else:
return 0
return 1


def extreme_points(m, n, A, b, sym_comb):
# Input
A = np.array(A).reshape(m, n)
b = np.array(b).reshape(m, 1)
# Process
ans_comb = np.zeros((1, n))
arr_comb = array_combinations(b, n)
matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A, n)
for i in range(int(permutation(n, m))):
if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i], arr_comb[i])
ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb, x])
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, 0, axis=0)
j = 0
for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
ans_comb = ans_comb
j = j + 1
else:
ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, j, axis=0)
# Output
return ans_comb


This is a first cut mainly for PEP8 compliance, and doesn't solve the bigger issue that you should replace 99% of this with a call to scipy. I'll do that separately (I suspect that @vnp is, as well).






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    $begingroup$

    I created a rudimentary pull request to your GitHub repo. I won't show all of the content here except for the main file:



    import numpy as np
    import itertools as it
    import math
    import re


    def permutation(m, n):
    return math.factorial(n) / (math.factorial(n - m) * math.factorial(m))


    def matrix_combinations(matr, n):
    timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
    for i in range(n):
    timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
    return np.array(list(timed))


    def array_combinations(arr, n):
    timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
    for i in range(n):
    timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
    return np.array(list(timed))


    def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
    sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
    sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
    sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
    for i in range(m):
    td_answer = sum(matr[i] * x)
    if sym_comb[i] == '>':
    if td_answer <= arr[i]:
    return 0
    elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
    if td_answer < arr[i]:
    return 0
    elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
    if td_answer >= arr[i]:
    return 0
    elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
    if td_answer > arr[i]:
    return 0
    elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
    if td_answer != arr[i]:
    return 0
    elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
    if td_answer == arr[i]:
    return 0
    else:
    return 0
    return 1


    def extreme_points(m, n, A, b, sym_comb):
    # Input
    A = np.array(A).reshape(m, n)
    b = np.array(b).reshape(m, 1)
    # Process
    ans_comb = np.zeros((1, n))
    arr_comb = array_combinations(b, n)
    matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A, n)
    for i in range(int(permutation(n, m))):
    if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
    x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i], arr_comb[i])
    ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb, x])
    ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, 0, axis=0)
    j = 0
    for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
    if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
    ans_comb = ans_comb
    j = j + 1
    else:
    ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, j, axis=0)
    # Output
    return ans_comb


    This is a first cut mainly for PEP8 compliance, and doesn't solve the bigger issue that you should replace 99% of this with a call to scipy. I'll do that separately (I suspect that @vnp is, as well).






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$


















      1












      $begingroup$

      I created a rudimentary pull request to your GitHub repo. I won't show all of the content here except for the main file:



      import numpy as np
      import itertools as it
      import math
      import re


      def permutation(m, n):
      return math.factorial(n) / (math.factorial(n - m) * math.factorial(m))


      def matrix_combinations(matr, n):
      timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
      for i in range(n):
      timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
      return np.array(list(timed))


      def array_combinations(arr, n):
      timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
      for i in range(n):
      timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
      return np.array(list(timed))


      def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
      sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
      sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
      sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
      for i in range(m):
      td_answer = sum(matr[i] * x)
      if sym_comb[i] == '>':
      if td_answer <= arr[i]:
      return 0
      elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
      if td_answer < arr[i]:
      return 0
      elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
      if td_answer >= arr[i]:
      return 0
      elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
      if td_answer > arr[i]:
      return 0
      elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
      if td_answer != arr[i]:
      return 0
      elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
      if td_answer == arr[i]:
      return 0
      else:
      return 0
      return 1


      def extreme_points(m, n, A, b, sym_comb):
      # Input
      A = np.array(A).reshape(m, n)
      b = np.array(b).reshape(m, 1)
      # Process
      ans_comb = np.zeros((1, n))
      arr_comb = array_combinations(b, n)
      matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A, n)
      for i in range(int(permutation(n, m))):
      if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
      x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i], arr_comb[i])
      ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb, x])
      ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, 0, axis=0)
      j = 0
      for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
      if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
      ans_comb = ans_comb
      j = j + 1
      else:
      ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, j, axis=0)
      # Output
      return ans_comb


      This is a first cut mainly for PEP8 compliance, and doesn't solve the bigger issue that you should replace 99% of this with a call to scipy. I'll do that separately (I suspect that @vnp is, as well).






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$
















        1












        1








        1





        $begingroup$

        I created a rudimentary pull request to your GitHub repo. I won't show all of the content here except for the main file:



        import numpy as np
        import itertools as it
        import math
        import re


        def permutation(m, n):
        return math.factorial(n) / (math.factorial(n - m) * math.factorial(m))


        def matrix_combinations(matr, n):
        timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
        for i in range(n):
        timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
        return np.array(list(timed))


        def array_combinations(arr, n):
        timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
        for i in range(n):
        timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
        return np.array(list(timed))


        def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
        sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
        sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
        sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
        for i in range(m):
        td_answer = sum(matr[i] * x)
        if sym_comb[i] == '>':
        if td_answer <= arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
        if td_answer < arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
        if td_answer >= arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
        if td_answer > arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
        if td_answer != arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
        if td_answer == arr[i]:
        return 0
        else:
        return 0
        return 1


        def extreme_points(m, n, A, b, sym_comb):
        # Input
        A = np.array(A).reshape(m, n)
        b = np.array(b).reshape(m, 1)
        # Process
        ans_comb = np.zeros((1, n))
        arr_comb = array_combinations(b, n)
        matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A, n)
        for i in range(int(permutation(n, m))):
        if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
        x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i], arr_comb[i])
        ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb, x])
        ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, 0, axis=0)
        j = 0
        for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
        if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
        ans_comb = ans_comb
        j = j + 1
        else:
        ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, j, axis=0)
        # Output
        return ans_comb


        This is a first cut mainly for PEP8 compliance, and doesn't solve the bigger issue that you should replace 99% of this with a call to scipy. I'll do that separately (I suspect that @vnp is, as well).






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        I created a rudimentary pull request to your GitHub repo. I won't show all of the content here except for the main file:



        import numpy as np
        import itertools as it
        import math
        import re


        def permutation(m, n):
        return math.factorial(n) / (math.factorial(n - m) * math.factorial(m))


        def matrix_combinations(matr, n):
        timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(matr, n)))
        for i in range(n):
        timed[i][i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i][i])
        return np.array(list(timed))


        def array_combinations(arr, n):
        timed = list(map(list, it.combinations(arr, n)))
        for i in range(n):
        timed[i][i] = np.asscalar(timed[i][i])
        return np.array(list(timed))


        def check_extreme(matr, arr, x, sym_comb, m):
        sym_comb = sym_comb.replace(']', '')
        sym_comb = sym_comb.replace('[', '')
        sym_comb = re.split("[ ,]", sym_comb)
        for i in range(m):
        td_answer = sum(matr[i] * x)
        if sym_comb[i] == '>':
        if td_answer <= arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '>=':
        if td_answer < arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '<':
        if td_answer >= arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '<=':
        if td_answer > arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '=':
        if td_answer != arr[i]:
        return 0
        elif sym_comb[i] == '!=':
        if td_answer == arr[i]:
        return 0
        else:
        return 0
        return 1


        def extreme_points(m, n, A, b, sym_comb):
        # Input
        A = np.array(A).reshape(m, n)
        b = np.array(b).reshape(m, 1)
        # Process
        ans_comb = np.zeros((1, n))
        arr_comb = array_combinations(b, n)
        matr_comb = matrix_combinations(A, n)
        for i in range(int(permutation(n, m))):
        if np.linalg.det(matr_comb[i]) != 0:
        x = np.linalg.solve(matr_comb[i], arr_comb[i])
        ans_comb = np.vstack([ans_comb, x])
        ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, 0, axis=0)
        j = 0
        for i in range(len(ans_comb)):
        if check_extreme(A, b, ans_comb[j], sym_comb, m):
        ans_comb = ans_comb
        j = j + 1
        else:
        ans_comb = np.delete(ans_comb, j, axis=0)
        # Output
        return ans_comb


        This is a first cut mainly for PEP8 compliance, and doesn't solve the bigger issue that you should replace 99% of this with a call to scipy. I'll do that separately (I suspect that @vnp is, as well).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        ReinderienReinderien

        5,474928




        5,474928






















            Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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            Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.













            Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












            Andrey Lovyagin is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
















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