What Is Dynamic Programming With Python Examples
Autumn
Posted on June 27, 2019
This is the ultimate guide to Dynamic Programming.
Refined over many months to deliver you the best knowledge in the shortest amount of time.
Designed to be read by people with ZERO knowledge on algorithmic design. Or who fell asleep in algorithm classes (come on, we all did š)
Dynamic programming (DP) is breaking down an optimisation problem into smaller sub-problems, and storing the solution to each sub-problems so that each sub-problem is only solved once.
It is both a mathematical optimisation method and a computer programming method.
Optimisation problems seek the maximum or minimum solution. Dynamic programming is often used for optimisation problems. The general rule is that if you encounter a problem where the initial algorithm is solved in 2n time, it might be better solved using DP.
Why Is Dynamic Programming Called Dynamic Programming?
Richard Bellman invented DP in the 1950s. Bellman named it Dynamic Programming because at the time, RAND (his employer) disliked mathematical research and didn't want to fund it. He named it Dynamic Programming to hide the fact he was really doing mathematical research.
Bellman explains the reasoning behind the term dynamic programming in his autobiography, Eye of the Hurricane: An Autobiography (1984, page 159). He explains:
"I spent the Fall quarter (of 1950) at RAND. My first task was to find a name for multistage decision processes. An interesting question is, Where did the name, dynamic programming, come from? The 1950s were not good years for mathematical research. We had a very interesting gentleman in Washington named Wilson. He was Secretary of Defense, and he actually had a pathological fear and hatred of the word research. Iām not using the term lightly; Iām using it precisely. His face would suffuse, he would turn red, and he would get violent if people used the term research in his presence. You can imagine how he felt, then, about the term mathematical. The RAND Corporation was employed by the Air Force, and the Air Force had Wilson as its boss, essentially. Hence, I felt I had to do something to shield Wilson and the Air Force from the fact that I was really doing mathematics inside the RAND Corporation. What title, what name, could I choose? In the first place I was interested in planning, in decision making, in thinking. But planning, is not a good word for various reasons. I decided therefore to use the word āprogrammingā. I wanted to get across the idea that this was dynamic, this was multistage, this was time-varying. I thought, let's kill two birds with one stone. Let's take a word that has an absolutely precise meaning, namely dynamic, in the classical physical sense. It also has a very interesting property as an adjective, and that is it's impossible to use the word dynamic in a pejorative sense. Try thinking of some combination that will possibly give it a pejorative meaning. It's impossible. Thus, I thought dynamic programming was a good name. It was something not even a Congressman could object to. So I used it as an umbrella for my activities."
What are Sub-Problems?
Sub-problems are smaller versions of the original problem. Let's see an example. With the equation below:
1 + 2 + 3 + 4
We can break this down to:
1 + 2
3 + 4
Once we solve these two smaller problems, we can add the solutions to these problems to find the solution to the overall problem.
Notice how this sub-problem breaks down the original problem into components that build up the solution. While this is a small example, it illustrates the beauty of DP well. If we expand the problem to adding 100's of numbers it becomes clearer as to why we need DP. Take this example:
6 + 5 + 3 + 3 + 2 + 4 + 6 + 5
We have 6 + 5 twice. We work out what 6 + 5 is the first time. When we see it the second time we think to ourselves:
"Ah, 6 + 5. I've seen this before. It's 11!"
In DP we store the solution to the problem in memory so we do not need to recalculate it. By finding the solutions for every single sub-problem, we can tackle the original problem itself.
The act of storing a solution is called memoisation.
What is Memoisation in Dynamic Programming?
First, let's see why storing answers to solutions make sense. We're going to look at a famous divide and conquer problem, Fibonacci sequence. Divide and conquer is dynamic programming, but without storing the solution.
There are 3 main parts to divide and conquer:
- Divide the problem into smaller sub-problems of the same type.
- Conquer - solve the sub-problems recursively.
- Combine - Combine all the sub-problems to create a solution to the original problem.
Dynamic programming has one extra step added to step 2. This is memoisation.
The Fibonacci sequence is a sequence of numbers. It's the last number + the current number. We start at 1.
1 + 0 = 1
1 + 1 = 2
2 + 1 = 3
3 + 2 = 5
5 + 3 = 8
In Python, this is common programmed as:
def F(n):
if n == 0 or n == 1:
return n
else:
return F(n-1)+F(n-2)
If you're not familiar with recursion I have a blog post written for you that you should read first.
Let's calculate F(4). In an execution tree, this looks like:
We calculate F(2) twice. This may be a small example, but on bigger inputs (such as F(10)) the repetition builds up. The purpose of dynamic programming is to not calculate the same thing twice.
Instead of calculating F(2) twice, we store the solution somewhere and only calculate it once.
We'll store the solution in an array. F(2) = 1. Our array will then look like memo[2] = 1. Below is some Python code to calculate the Fibbonacci sequence using DP.
def fibonacciVal(n):
memo[0], memo[1] = 0, 1
for i in range(2, n+1):
memo[i] = memo[i-1] + memo[i-2]
return memo[n]
The examples set out here are in Python. Iāll do my best to keep the code agnostic. Meaning that if you want to program this in Java, it shouldnāt be too hard to convert it over.
How to Identify Dynamic Programming Problems
In theory, every problem can be solved dynamically. The question is then:
"When should I solve this problem with dynamic programming?"
We should use dynamic programming for problems that are on the border between tractable problems and intracable problems.
Tractable problems are those that can be solved in polynomial time. That's just a fancy way of saying we can solve it in a fast manner. Binary search and sorting,are all fast. Intractable problems are those that run in exponential time. They're slow. Generally speaking, intractable problems are those that can only be solved by bruteforcing through every single combination (NP hard).
When we see terms such as:
"shortest/longest, minimized/maximized, least/most, fewest/greatest, biggest/smallest"
We know it's an optimisation problem.
Another cool thing with DP algorithms is that their proof of correctness is usually self-evident. Other algorithmic strategies are often much harder to prove correct, and therefore more error-prone.
For instance, greedy algorithms may seem conceptually simpler, and usually, run faster, but theyāre much harder to prove correct because they require making a lot of implicit assumptions about the structure of the input.
When we see these kinds of terms, the problem may ask for a specific number ( "find the minimum number of edit operations") or it may ask for a result ( "find the longest common subsequence"). The latter type of problem is harder to recognize as a dynamic programming problem. If something sounds like optimisation, it could be solved by DP.
Now, imagine we've found a problem that's an optimisation problem, but we're not sure if it can be solved with DP. First, identify what we're optimising for. Once we realize what we're optimising for, we have to decide how easy it is to perform that optimisation. Sometimes, the greedy approach is sufficient for an optimal solution.
Dynamic programming takes the brute force approach. It Identifies repeated work, and eliminates the repetition.
Before we even start to formulate the problem as a dynamic programming problem, we think about what the brute force solution might look like. Could there possibly be repeated substeps in the brute force solution? If so, we try to formulate the problem as a dynamic programming problem.
Mastering dynamic programming is all about understanding the problem. List all the inputs that can affect the answers. Once we've identified all the inputs and outputs, try to identify whether the problem can be broken into subproblems. If we can identify subproblems, we can probably use DP.
List all inputs that affect the answer, and worry about reducing the size of that set later. Once we have identified the inputs and outputs, we try to identify whether the problem can be broken into smaller subproblems. If we can identify smaller subproblems, then we can probably apply dynamic programming to solve the problem. Then, figure out what the recurrence is and solve it. When we're trying to figure out the recurrence, remember that whatever recurrence we write has to help us find the answer. Sometimes the answer will be the result of the recurrence, and sometimes we will have to obtain the result by looking at a few results from the recurrence
Just because a problem can be solved with dynamic programming does not mean there isn't a more efficient solution out there. Solving a problem with dynamic programming feels like magic, but remember that dynamic programming is merely a clever brute force. Sometimes it pays off well, and sometimes it helps only a little.
How to Solve Problems using Dynamic Programming
Now we have an understanding of what dynamic programming is and how it generally works, let's look at how we'll create a dynamic programming solution to a problem. We're going to explore the process of dynamic programming using the Weighted Interval Scheduling Problem.
Pretend you're the owner of a dry cleaner. You have n customers come in and give you clothes to clean. You can only clean one customers pile of clothes (PoC) at a time. Each pile of clothes, i, must be cleaned at some pre-determined start time s_i and some predetermined finish time f_i.
Each pile of clothes has an assiocated value, v_i, based on how important it is to your business. For example, some customers may pay more to have their clothes cleaned faster. Or some may be repeating customers and you want them to be happy.
As the owner of this dry cleaners you must determine the optimal schedule of clothes that maximises the total value of this day. This problem is a re-wording of the Weighted Interval scheduling problem.
You will now see 4 steps to solving a DP problem. Sometimes, you can skip a step. Sometimes, your problem is already well defined and you don't need to worry about the first few steps.
Step 1. Write the Problem out
Grab a piece of paper. Write out the problem. Specifically:
- What is the problem?
- What are the subproblems?
- What would the solution roughly look like?
In the dry cleaner problem, let's put down into words the subproblems. What we want to determine is the maximum value schedule for each pile of clothes such that the clothes are sorted by start time.
Why sorted by start time? Good question! We want to keep track of processes which are currently running. If we sort by finish time, it doesn't make much sense in our heads. We could have 2 with similar finish times, but entirely different start times. Time moves in a linear fashion. If we have piles of clothes that start at 1 pm, we know that. If we have a pile of clothes that finishes at 3 pm, it's kind of seeing it backwards. Doesn't make so much sense.
We can find the maximum value schedule for piles n-1 through to n. And then for n - 2 through to n. And so on. By finding the solution to every single sub-problem, we can tackle the original problem itself. The maximum value schedule for piles 1 through n. Since the sub-problems are smaller versions of the original problem, sub-problems can be used to solve the original problem.
With the interval scheduling problem, the only way we can solve it is by brute-forcing all subsets of the problem until we find an optimal one. What we're saying is that instead of brute-forcing one by one, we divide it up. We brute force from n-1 through to n. Then we do the same for n-2 through to n. Eventually, we have loads of smaller problems, which we can solve dynamically. We want to build the solutions to our sub-problems such that each sub-problem builds on the previous problems.
2. Mathematical Recurrences
I know, mathematics sucks. If you'll bare with me here you'll find that this isn't that hard. Mathematical recurrences are used to:
Define the running time of a divide and conquer (dynamic programming) technique
But, between you and me, they can also be used to define a problem. If it's difficult to turn your subproblems into maths, then it may be the wrong subproblem.
There are 2 steps to creating a mathematicla recurrence:
1: Define the Base Case
Base cases are the smallest possible denomination of a problem.
When creating a recurrence, ask yourself these questions:
"What decision do I make at step 0?"
It doesn't have to be 0. The base case is the smallest possible denomination of a problem. We saw this with the Fibonacci sequence. The base was was:
- If n == 0 or n == 1, return 1
It's important to know where the base case lies, so we can create the recurrence. In our problem, we have one decision to make:
- Put that pile of clothes on to be washed
or
- Donāt wash that pile of clothes today
If n is 0, that is, if we have 0 PoC then we do nothing. Our base case is then:
if n == 0, return 0
2: What Decision Do I Make at Step n?
Now we know what the base case is, if we're at step n what do we do? For each pile of clothes that is compatible with the schedule so far (compatible means that the start time is after the finish time of the pile of clothes currently being washed), the algorithm chooses two options.
Now we know what happens at the base case, and what happens else. We now need to find out what information the algorithm needs to go backwards (or forwards).
"If my algorithm is at step i, what information would it need to decide what to do in step i+1?"
To decide between the two options, the algorithm needs to know the next compatible PoC (pile of clothes). The next compatible PoC for a given pile, p, is the PoC, n, such that s_n (the start time for PoC n) happens after f_p (the finish time for PoC p). The difference between s_n and f_p should be minimised.
In English, imagine we have one washing machine. We put in a pile of clothes at 13:00. Our next pile of clothes starts at 13:01. We can't just open the washing machine and put them in. Our next compatible pile of clothes is the one that starts after the finish time of the one currently being washed.
"If my algorithm is at step i, what information did it need to decide what to do in step i-1?"
The algorithm needs to know about future decisions. The ones made for PoC i through n in order to decide to run or not to run PoC i-1.
Now that weāve answered these questions, perhaps weāve started to form a recurring mathematical decision in our mind. If not, thatās also okay, it becomes easier to write recurrences as we get exposed to more problems.
Hereās our recurrence:
Let's explore in detail what makes this mathematical recurrence. OPT(i) represents the maximum value schedule for PoC i through to n such that PoC are sorted by start times. OPT(i) is our subproblem from earlier.
We start with the base case. All recurrences need somewhere to stop. If we call OPT(0) we'll be returned with 0.
To determine the value of OPT(i), we consider two options. We want to take the maximum of these options to meet our goal. Our goal is the maximum value schedule for all piles of clothes. Once we choose the option that gives the maximum result at step i, we memoize its value as OPT(i).
The two optionsāāāto run or not to run PoC iāāāare represented mathematically as follows:
v_i + OPT(next[n])
This represents the decision to run PoC i. It adds the value gained from PoC i to OPT(next[n]), where next[n] represents the next compatible pile of clothing following PoC i. When we add these two values together, we get the maximum value schedule from i through to n such that they are sorted by start time if i is ran.
Sorted by start time here because next[n] is the one immediately after v_i, so by default, they are sorted by start time.
OPT(i + 1)
If we decide not to run i, our value is then OPT(i + 1). The value is not gained. OPT(i + 1) gives the maximum value schedule for i+1 through to n, such that they are sorted by start times.
3. Determine the Dimensions of the Memoization Array and the Direction in Which It Should Be Filled
The solution to our DP problem is OPT(1). We can write out the solution as the maximum value schedule for PoC 1 through n such that PoC are sorted by start time. This goes hand in hand with "maximum value schedule for PoC i through to n". Our solution can be written as OPT(1).
From step 2:
Going back to our Fibonacci numbers earlier, our DP solution relied on the fact that the Fibonacci numbers for 0 through to n - 1 were already memoised. That is, to find F(5) we already memoised F(0), F(1), F(2), F(3), F(4). We want to do the same thing here.
The problem we have is figuring out how to fill out a memoisation table. In the scheduling problem, we know that OPT(1) relies on the solutions to OPT(2) and OPT(next[1]). PoC 2 and next[1] have start times after PoC 1 due to sorting. We need to fill our memoisation table from OPT(n) to OPT(1).
We can clearly see our array is one dimensional, from 1 to n. But, if we couldn't clearly see that we can work it out another way. The dimensions of the array are equal to the number and size of the variables on which OPT(x) relies. In our algorithm, we have OPT(i) - one variable, i. This means our array will be 1-dimensional and its size will be n, as there are n piles of clothes.
If we know that n = 5, then our memoization array might look like this:
memo = [0, OPT(1), OPT(2), OPT(3), OPT(4), OPT(5)]
0 is also the base case. memo[0] = 0, per our recurrence from earlier.
4. Coding Our Solution
Personally, when I am coding a Dynamic Programming solution, I like to read the recurrence and try to recreate it. Our first step is to initialise the array to size (n + 1). In Python, we don't need to do this. But you may need to do it if you're using a different language.
Our second step is to set the base case.
To find the profit with the inclusion of job[i]. we need to find the latest job that doesnāt conflict with job[i]. The idea is to use Binary Search to find the latest non-conflicting job. I've copied the code from herebut edited slightly.
First, let's define what a "job" is. As we saw, a job consists of 3 things:
# Class to represent a job
class Job:
def __init__ (self, start, finish, profit):
self.start = start
self.finish = finish
self.profit = profit
Start time, finish time, and the total profit (benefit) of running that job.
The next step we want to program is the schedule.
# The main function that returns the maximum possible
# profit from given array of jobs
def schedule(job):
# Sort jobs according to start time
job = sorted(job, key = lambda j: j.start)
# Create an array to store solutions of subproblems. table[i]
# stores the profit for jobs till arr[i] (including arr[i])
n = len(job)
table = [0 for _ in range(n)]
table[0] = job[0].profit;
Earlier, we learnt that the table is 1 dimensional. We sort the jobs by start time, create this empty table and set table[0] to be the profit of job[0]. Since we've sorted by start times, the first compatiable job is always job[0].
Our next step is to fill in the entries using the recurrence we learnt earlier. To find the next compatiable job, we're using Binary Search. In the full code posted later, it'll include this. For now, let's worry about understanding the algorithm.
If the next compatiable job returns -1, that means that all jobs before index, i, conflict with it (so cannot be used). Inclprof means we're including that item in the maximum value set. We then store it in table[i], so we can use this calculation again later.
# Fill entries in table[] using recursive property
for i in range(1, n):
# Find profit including the current job
inclProf = job[i].profit
l = binarySearch(job, i)
if (l != -1):
inclProf += table[l];
# Store maximum of including and excluding
table[i] = max(inclProf, table[i - 1])
Our final step is then to return the profit of all items up to n-1.
return table[n-1]
The full code can be seen below:
# Python program for weighted job scheduling using Dynamic
# Programming and Binary Search
# Class to represent a job
class Job:
def __init__ (self, start, finish, profit):
self.start = start
self.finish = finish
self.profit = profit
# A Binary Search based function to find the latest job
# (before current job) that doesn't conflict with current
# job. "index" is index of the current job. This function
# returns -1 if all jobs before index conflict with it.
def binarySearch(job, start_index):
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_search_algorithm
# Initialize 'lo' and 'hi' for Binary Search
lo = 0
hi = start_index - 1
# Perform binary Search iteratively
while lo <= hi:
mid = (lo + hi) // 2
if job[mid].finish <= job[start_index].start:
if job[mid + 1].finish <= job[start_index].start:
lo = mid + 1
else:
return mid
else:
hi = mid - 1
return -1
# The main function that returns the maximum possible
# profit from given array of jobs
def schedule(job):
# Sort jobs according to start time
job = sorted(job, key = lambda j: j.start)
# Create an array to store solutions of subproblems. table[i]
# stores the profit for jobs till arr[i] (including arr[i])
n = len(job)
table = [0 for _ in range(n)]
table[0] = job[0].profit;
# Fill entries in table[] using recursive property
for i in range(1, n):
# Find profit including the current job
inclProf = job[i].profit
l = binarySearch(job, i)
if (l != -1):
inclProf += table[l];
# Store maximum of including and excluding
table[i] = max(inclProf, table[i - 1])
return table[n-1]
# Driver code to test above function
job = [Job(1, 2, 50), Job(3, 5, 20),
Job(6, 19, 100), Job(2, 100, 200)]
print("Optimal profit is"),
print(schedule(job))
Congrats! š„³ We've just written our first dynamic program! Now that weāve wet our feet, lets walk through a different type of dynamic programming problem.
Knapsack Problem
Imagine you are a criminal. Dastardly smart. You break into Bill Gateās mansion. Wow, okay!?!? How many rooms is this? His washing machine room is larger than my entire house??? Ok, time to stop getting distracted. You brought a small bag with you. A knapsack - if you will.
You can only fit so much into it. Letās give this an arbitrary number. The bag will support weight 15, but no more. What we want to do is maximise how much money we'll make, b.
The greedy approach is to pick the item with the highest value which can fit into the bag. Let's try that. We're going to steal Bill Gate's TV. Ā£4000? Nice. But his TV weighs 15. So... We leave with Ā£4000.
Bill Gate's has a lot of watches. Let's say he has 2 watches. Each watch weighs 5 and each one is worth Ā£2250. When we steal both, we get Ā£4500 with a weight of 10.
In the greedy approach, we wouldn't choose these watches first. But to us as humans, it makes sense to go for smaller items which have higher values. The Greedy approach cannot optimally solve the {0,1} Knapsack problem. The {0, 1} means we either take the item whole {1} or we don't {0}. Dynamic programming can however optimally solve the {0, 1} knapsack problem.
The simple solution to this problem is to consider all the subsets of all items. For every single combination of Bill Gate's stuff, we calculate the total weight and value of this combination.
We consider only those with weight less than W_max. We then pick the combination which has the highest value. This is a disaster! How long would this take? Bill Gate's would come back home far before you're even 1/3rd of the way there! In Big O, this algorithm takes O(n^2) time.
You can see we already have a rough idea of the solution and what the problem is, without having to write it down in maths!
Maths
Imagine we had a listing of every single thing in Bill Gate's house. Maybe we stole it from some insurance papers. Now, think about the future. What is the optimal solution to this problem?
We have a subset, L, which is the optimal solution. L is a subset of S, the set containing all of Bill Gate's stuff.
Let's pick a random item, N. L either contains N or it doesn't. If it doesn't use N, the optimal solution for the problem is the same as {1, 2, ..., N-1}. This is assuming that Bill Gate's stuff is sorted by value / weight.
Suppose that the optimum of the original problem is not optimum of the sub-problem. if we have sub-optimum of the smaller problem then we have a contradiction - we should have an optimum of the whole problem.
If L contains N, then the optimal solution for the problem is the same as {1, 2, 3, ..., N-1}. We know the item is in, so L already contains N. To complete the computation we focus on the remaining items. We find the optimal solution to the remaining items.
But, we now have a new maximum allowed weight of W_max - W_n. If item N is contained in the solution, the total weight is now the max weight take away item N (which is already in the knapsack).
These are the 2 cases. Either item N is in the optimal solution or it isn't.
If the weight of item N is greater than W_max, then it cannot be included so case 1 is the only possibility.
To more precisely define this recursive solution, let S_k = {1, 2, ..., k} and S_0 = ā
Let B[k, w] be the maximum total benefit obtained using a subset of S_k. Having total weight at most w.
Then we define B[0, w] = 0 for each w \le W_max, and:
Our desired solution is then B[n, W_max].
Tabulation of Knapsack Problem
Okay, pull out some pen and paper. No, really. Things are about to get confusing real fast. This memoisation table is 2-dimensional. We have these items:
(1, 1), (3, 4), (4, 5), (5, 7)
Where the tuples are (weight, value)
.
We have 2 variables, so our array is 2-dimensional. The first dimension is from 0 to 7. Our second dimension is the values.
And we want a weight of 7 with maximum benefit.
The weight is 7. We start counting at 0 (not a DP thing, just a programming thing). We put each tuple on the left-hand side. Ok. Now to fill out the table!
The columns are weight. At weight 0, we have a total weight of 0. At weight 1, we have a total weight of 1. Obvious, I know. But this is an important distinction to make which will be useful later on.
When our weight is 0, we can't carry anything no matter what. The total weight of everything at 0 is 0.
If our total weight is 1, the best item we can take is (1, 1). As we go down through this array, we can take more items. At the row for (4, 3) we can either take (1, 1) or (4, 3). But for now, we can only take (1, 1). Our maximum benefit for this row then is 1.
If our total weight is 2, the best we can do is 1. We only have 1 of each item. We cannot duplicate items. So no matter where we are in row 1, the absolute best we can do is (1, 1).
Let's start using (4, 3) now. If the total weight is 1, but the weight of (4, 3) is 3 we cannot take the item yet until we have a weight of at least 3.
Now we have a weight of 3. Let's compare some things. We want to take the max of:
MAX(4 + T[0][0], 1)
If we're at 2, 3 we can either take the value from the last row or use the item on that row. We go up one row and count back 3 (since the weight of this item is 3).
Actually, the formula is whatever weight is remaining when we minus the weight of the item on that row. The weight of (4, 3) is 3 and we're at weight 3. 3 - 3 = 0. Therefore, we're at T[0][0]. T[previous row's number][current total weight - item weight].
MAX(4 + T[0][0], 1)
The 1 is because of the previous item. The max here is 4.
max(4 + t[0][1], 1)
Total weight is 4, item weight is 3. 4 - 3 = 1. Previous row is 0. t[0][1].
I won't bore you with the rest of this row, as nothing exciting happens. We have 2 items. And we've used both of them to make 5. Since there are no new items, the maximum value is 5.
Onto our next row:
Here's a little secret. Our tuples are ordered by weight! That means that we can fill in the previous rows of data up to the next weight point. We know that 4 is already the maximum, so we can just fill it in. This is where memoisation comes into play! We already have the data, why bother re-calculating it?
We go up one row and head 4 steps back. That gives us:
max(4 + T[2][0], 5).
Now we calculate it for total weight 5.
max(5 + T[2][1], 5) = 6
We just do the same thing again:
max(5 + T[2][2], 5) = 6
Now we have total weight 7. We choose the max of:
max(5 + T[2][3], 5) = max(5 + 4, 5) = 9
If we had total weight 7 and we had the 3 items (1, 1), (4, 3), (5, 4) the best we can do is 9.
Since our new item starts at weight 5, we can just copy from the previous row until we get to weight 5.
We then do another max.
Total weight - new item's weight. This is 5 - 5 = 0. We want previous row at position 0.
max(7 + T[3][0], 6)
The 6 comes from the best on the previous row for that total weight.
max(7 + 0, 6) = 7
max(7 + T[3][1], 6) = 8
max(7+T[3][2], 9) = 9
9 is the maximum value we can get by picking items from the set of items such that the total weight is \le 7.
Finding the Optimal Set for {0, 1} Knapsack Problem Using Dynamic Programming
Now, what items do we actually pick for the optimal set? We start from this item:
We want to know where the 9 comes from. It's coming from the top because the number directly above 9 on the 4th row is 9. Since it's coming from the top, the item (7, 5) is not used in the optimal set.
Where does this 9 come from?
This 9 is not coming from the row above it. Item (5, 4) must be in the optimal set.
We now go up one row, and go back 4 steps. 4 steps because the item, (5, 4), has weight 4.
4 does not come from the row above. The item (4, 3) must be in the optimal set.
The weight of item (4, 3) is 3. We go up and we go back 3 steps and reach:
As soon as we reach a point where the weight is 0, we're done. Our two selected items are (5, 4) and (4, 3). The total weight is 7 and our total benefit is 9. We just add the two tuples together to find this out.
Let's begin coding this.
Coding It
Now we kn0w how it works, and we've derived the recurrence for it - it shouldn't be too hard to code it. If our two-dimensional array is i (row) and j (column) then we have:
if j < wt[i]:
If our weight j is less than the weight of item i (i does not contribute to j) then:
if j < wt[i]:
T[i][j] = T[i - 1][j]
else:
// weight of i >= j
T[i][j] = max(val[i] + t[i - 1][j-wt(i), t[i-1][j])
// previous row, subtracting the weight of the item from the total weight or without including ths item
This is what the core heart of the program does. I've copied some code from hereto help explain this. I'm not going to explain this code much, as there isn't much more to it than what I've already explained. If you're confused by it, leave a comment (can be left anonymously) below or email me š
# Returns the maximum value that can be put in a knapsack of
# capacity W
def knapSack(W , wt , val , n):
# Base Case
if n == 0 or W == 0:
return 0
# If weight of the nth item is more than Knapsack of capacity
# W, then this item cannot be included in the optimal solution
if (wt[n-1] > W):
return knapSack(W , wt , val , n-1)
# return the maximum of two cases:
# (1) nth item included
# (2) not included
else:
return max(val[n-1] + knapSack(W-wt[n-1] , wt , val , n-1),
knapSack(W , wt , val , n-1))
# To test above function
val = [60, 100, 120]
wt = [10, 20, 30]
W = 50
n = len(val)
print(knapSack(W , wt , val , n))
# output 220
Time Complexity of a Dynamic Programming Problem
In DP, time complexity is calculated as:
Number of unique states * time taken per state
For our original problem, the Weighted Interval Scheduling Problem, we had n piles of clothes. Each pile of clothes is solved in constant time. The time complexity is:
O(n) + O(1) = O(n)
I've written a post about Big O notationif you want to learn more about time complexities.
With our Knapsack problem, we had n number of items. The table grows depending on the total capacity of the knapsack, our time complexity is:
O(nw)
Where n is the number of items, and w is the capactity of the knapsack.
I'm going to let you in on a little secret. It's possible to work out the time complexity of an algorithm from its recurrence. You can use something called the Master Theorem to work it out. This is the theorem in a nutshell:
Now, I'll be honest. The master therom deserves a blog post of its own. For now, I've found this video to be excellent:
Dynamic Programming vs Divide & Conquer vs Greedy
Dynamic Programming & Divide and Conquer are incredibly similar. Dynamic Programming is based on Divide and Conquer, except we memoise the results.
Greedy, on the other hand, is different. It aims to optimise by making the best choice at that moment. Sometimes, this doesn't optimse for the whole problem. Take this question as an example. We have 3 coins:
1p, 15p, 25p
And someones wants us to give change of 30p. With Greedy, it would select 25, then 5 * 1 for a total of 6 coins. The optimal solution is 2 * 15. Greedy works from largest to smallest. At the point where it was at 25, the best choice would be to pick 25.
Tabulation (Bottom-Up) vs Memoisation (Top-Down)
There are 2 types of dynamic programming. Tabulation and Memoisation.
Memoisation (Top-Down)
We've computed all the subproblems but have no idea what the optimal evaluation order is. We would then perform a recursive call from the root, and hope we get close to the optimal solution or obtain a proof that we will arrive at the optimal solution. Memoisation ensures you never recompute a subproblem because we cache the results, thus duplicate sub-trees are not recomputed.
From our Fibonacci sequence earlier, we start at the root node. The subtree F(2) isn't calculated twice.
This starts at the top of the tree and evaluates the subproblems from the leaves/subtrees back up towards the root. Memoisation is a top-down approach.
Tabulation (Bottom-Up)
We've also seen Dynamic Programming being used as a 'table-filling' algorithm. Usually, this table is multidimensional. This is like memoisation, but with one major difference. We have to pick the exact order in which we will do our computations. The knapsack problem we saw, we filled in the table from left to right - top to bottom. We knew the exact order of which to fill the table.
Sometimes the 'table' is not like the tables we've seen. It can be a more complicated structure such as trees. Or specific to the problem domain, such as cities within flying distance on a map.
Tabulation & Memosation - Advantages and Disadvantages
Generally speaking, memoisation is easier to code than tabulation. Wecan write a 'memoriser' wrapper function that automatically does it for we. With tabulation, we have to come up with an ordering.
Memoisation has memory concerns. If we're computing something large such as F(10^8), each computation will be delayed as we have to place them into the array. And the array will grow in size very quickly.
Either approach may not be time-optimal if the order we happen (or try to) visit subproblems is not optimal, specifically if there is more than one way to calculate a subproblem (normally caching would resolve this, but it's theoretically possible that caching might not in some exotic cases). Memoization will usually add on our time-complexity to our space-complexity (e.g. with tabulation we have more liberty to throw away calculations, like using tabulation with Fib lets us use O(1) space, but memoization with Fib uses O(N) stack space).
Conclusion
Most of the problems you'll encounter within Dynamic Programmg already exist in one shape or another. Often, your problem will build on from the answers for previous problems. Here's a list of common problems that use Dynamic Programming.
I hope that whenever you encounter a problem, you think to yourself "can this problem be solved with DP?" and try it.
Posted on June 27, 2019
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October 24, 2019