graphshortestpath function visiting all nodes

5 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Jason
Jason le 6 Mar 2018
Commenté : Steven Lord le 19 Mar 2018
Hi,
Is there a way I can manipulate this function in order to force the path include all nodes? I mean, how can I change the code in order to include each node to find the shortest path , but with the constrain that we must visit all nodes?
Thank you in advance
  3 commentaires
Jason
Jason le 6 Mar 2018
Modifié(e) : Walter Roberson le 6 Mar 2018
W
= [5 1 5 4 6 1 1 4 7 2 6 7 3 2 1 2 3 8 2 8];
DG = sparse([1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 6 6],[2 3 1 3 4 5 1 2 4 5 2 3 5 6 2 3 4 6 4 5],W)
h = view(biograph(DG,[],'ShowWeights','on'))
[dist,path,pred] = graphshortestpath(DG,1,6)
set(h.Nodes(path),'Color',[0 1 1])
edges = getedgesbynodeid(h,get(h.Nodes(path),'ID'));
set(edges,'LineColor',[0 0 1])
set(edges,'LineWidth',2)
I am implementing the above code, as I understand this function examines the shortest path among all the nodes.
I want to manipulate the code in order to visit all the nodes and outputs a graph that has visited all the nodes with the minimum distance.
Jason
Jason le 6 Mar 2018
Plus, I cannot visit the same node twice for example 1-2-3-1-4.

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Réponse acceptée

Jason
Jason le 19 Mar 2018
Modifié(e) : Walter Roberson le 19 Mar 2018

Plus de réponses (2)

Christine Tobler
Christine Tobler le 6 Mar 2018
As Steve Lord has said, in general this is an NP-complete problem, so could become quite expensive. For the 6-node graph you are looking at, this is easy to compute using an exhaustive search (I will use the graph object instead of the bioinfo variants here):
W = [5 1 5 4 6 1 1 4 7 2 6 7 3 2 1 2 3 8 2 8];
DG = sparse([1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 6 6],...
[2 3 1 3 4 5 1 2 4 5 2 3 5 6 2 3 4 6 4 5],W);
g = graph(DG);
% Construct all possible ways that we could traverse all nodes, starting at
% node 1 and ending at node 6:
paths = perms(2:5);
paths = [ones(size(paths, 1), 1) paths 6*ones(size(paths, 1), 1)];
% Check if a path is feasible (edges exist between all node pairs), and how
% long it is
dist = NaN(size(paths, 1), 1);
for ii=1:size(paths, 1)
path = paths(ii, :);
edgeID = findedge(g, path(1:end-1), path(2:end));
if all(edgeID ~= 0)
dist(ii) = sum(g.Edges.Weight(edgeID));
end
end
[~, id] = min(dist)
paths(id, :)
p = plot(g, 'EdgeLabel', g.Edges.Weight);
highlight(p, paths(id, :), 'EdgeColor', 'red')
  28 commentaires
Jason
Jason le 19 Mar 2018
Modifié(e) : Jason le 19 Mar 2018
Anyway, can you at least show me how to create a matrix with ones in the last column, something like
paths = [ones(size(paths, 1), 1) paths];
but not in the first column. Namely, add ones in the last column of this matrix.
thank you
Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 19 Mar 2018
Move the ones call after the paths variable rather than before.

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Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 6 Mar 2018
So you want the shortest Hamiltonian path? That may be very hard.

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