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Journal ArticleDOI

Decomposition Principle for Linear Programs

George B. Dantzig, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1960 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 1, pp 101-111
TLDR
A technique is presented for the decomposition of a linear program that permits the problem to be solved by alternate solutions of linear sub-programs representing its several parts and a coordinating program that is obtained from the parts by linear transformations.
Abstract
A technique is presented for the decomposition of a linear program that permits the problem to be solved by alternate solutions of linear sub-programs representing its several parts and a coordinating program that is obtained from the parts by linear transformations. The coordinating program generates at each cycle new objective forms for each part, and each part generates in turn from its optimal basic feasible solutions new activities columns for the interconnecting program. Viewed as an instance of a “generalized programming problem” whose columns are drawn freely from given convex sets, such a problem can be studied by an appropriate generalization of the duality theorem for linear programming, which permits a sharp distinction to be made between those constraints that pertain only to a part of the problem and those that connect its parts. This leads to a generalization of the Simplex Algorithm, for which the decomposition procedure becomes a special case. Besides holding promise for the efficient computation of large-scale systems, the principle yields a certain rationale for the “decentralized decision process” in the theory of the firm. Formally the prices generated by the coordinating program cause the manager of each part to look for a “pure” sub-program analogue of pure strategy in game theory, which he proposes to the coordinator as best he can do. The coordinator finds the optimum “mix” of pure sub-programs using new proposals and earlier ones consistent with over-all demands and supply, and thereby generates new prices that again generates new proposals by each of the parts, etc. The iterative process is finite.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mixed second order partial derivatives decomposition method for large scale optimization

TL;DR: A theoretical analysis of the interaction between variables in decomposition strategies for large-scale optimization problems is provided and one enhanced version of differential grouping is proposed to deal with problems which the original differential grouping method is unable to resolve.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experiments with primal - dual decomposition and subgradient methods for the uncapacitatied facility location problem

Kaj Holmberg
- 01 Jan 2001 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a primal-dual solution approach based on decomposition principles is proposed to solve the facility location problem, which does not include the difficult Benders or Dantzig-Wolfe master problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal design of a multi‐item, multi‐location, multi‐repair type repair and supply system

TL;DR: The optimal design minimizes expected shortages within a budget constraint, which covers both procurement of spares and procurement of equipment and manning levels for the repair facilities.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Path Generation for a Class of Survivable Network Design Problems

TL;DR: The paper presents and compares three different approaches and evaluates their usefulness for solving problem instances of practical size and discusses the applicability of this method on the basis of the theory of duality of LP.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Resource Directive Decomposition in Mathematical Programming

TL;DR: A review of the speczahzed literature is presented in thin paper, where the features and drawbacks of the most representative resource-drrectlve methods are analyzed.