Popular recipes tagged "complete"http://code.activestate.com/recipes/tags/complete/2009-10-27T00:27:14-07:00ActiveState Code RecipesPartition Problem and natural selection (Python)
2009-10-27T00:27:14-07:00Jai Vikram Singh Vermahttp://code.activestate.com/recipes/users/4171450/http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576937-partition-problem-and-natural-selection/
<p style="color: grey">
Python
recipe 576937
by <a href="/recipes/users/4171450/">Jai Vikram Singh Verma</a>
(<a href="/recipes/tags/approximate_solution/">approximate_solution</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/complete/">complete</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/crossover/">crossover</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/easiest_hard_problem/">easiest_hard_problem</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/generations/">generations</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/genetic_algorithms/">genetic_algorithms</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/natural_selection/">natural_selection</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/np/">np</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/np_complete/">np_complete</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/np_hard/">np_hard</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/optimal_solution/">optimal_solution</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/partition_problem/">partition_problem</a>).
Revision 4.
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<p>Partition problem
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</p>
<p>In computer science, the partition problem is an NP-complete problem. The problem is to decide whether a given multiset of integers can be partitioned into two "halves" that have the same sum. More precisely, given a multiset S of integers, is there a way to partition S into two subsets S1 and S2 such that the sum of the numbers in S1 equals the sum of the numbers in S2? The subsets S1 and S2 must form a partition in the sense that they are disjoint and they cover S. The optimization version asks for the "best" partition, and can be stated as: Find a partition into two subsets S1,S2 such that max(sum(S_1), sum(S_2)) is minimized (sometimes with the additional constraint that the sizes of the two sets in the partition must be equal, or differ by at most 1).</p>
<p>The partition problem is equivalent to the following special case of the subset sum problem: given a set S of integers, is there a subset S1 of S that sums to exactly t /2 where t is the sum of all elements of S? (The equivalence can be seen by defining S2 to be the difference S − S1.) Therefore, the pseudo-polynomial time dynamic programming solution to subset sum applies to the partition problem as well.</p>
<p>Although the partition problem is NP-complete, there are heuristics that solve the problem in many instances, either optimally or approximately. For this reason, it has been called the "The Easiest Hard Problem" by Brian Hayes.</p>
sane tab completion in pdb (Python)
2009-07-06T04:35:33-07:00Stephen Emsliehttp://code.activestate.com/recipes/users/4004606/http://code.activestate.com/recipes/498182-sane-tab-completion-in-pdb/
<p style="color: grey">
Python
recipe 498182
by <a href="/recipes/users/4004606/">Stephen Emslie</a>
(<a href="/recipes/tags/complete/">complete</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/debugging/">debugging</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/pdb/">pdb</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/tab/">tab</a>).
Revision 6.
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<p>I make frequent use of python's built-in debugger, but one obvious feature seems to be missing - the bash-like tab completion that you can add to the interpreter. Fortunately pdb's interactive prompt is an instance of Cmd, so we can write our own completion function.</p>
<p>Note: this uses rlcompleter, which isn't available on windows</p>
<p>Edit (6 Jul 2009): import rlcompleter early and force output to stdout to ensure monkeypatch sticks
Edit: updated to handle changes in local scope
Edit: Fixed start via 'python -m pdb ...'. Check the comments for details.</p>