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钟尚武
dlib
Commits
3bfece9a
Commit
3bfece9a
authored
Aug 09, 2013
by
Davis King
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Added a max_cost_assignment python example
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c9bdb9b2
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#!/usr/bin/python
# The contents of this file are in the public domain. See LICENSE_FOR_EXAMPLE_PROGRAMS.txt
#
#
# This simple example shows how to call dlib's optimal linear assignment problem solver.
# It is an implementation of the famous Hungarian algorithm and is quite fast, operating in
# O(N^3) time.
#
# COMPILING THE DLIB PYTHON INTERFACE
# Dlib comes with a compiled python interface for python 2.7 on MS Windows. If
# you are using another python version or operating system then you need to
# compile the dlib python interface before you can use this file. To do this,
# run compile_dlib_python_module.bat. This should work on any operating system
# so long as you have CMake and boost-python installed. On Ubuntu, this can be
# done easily by running the command: sudo apt-get install libboost-python-dev cmake
import
dlib
# Lets imagine you need to assign N people to N jobs. Additionally, each person will make
# your company a certain amount of money at each job, but each person has different skills
# so they are better at some jobs and worse at others. You would like to find the best way
# to assign people to these jobs. In particular, you would like to maximize the amount of
# money the group makes as a whole. This is an example of an assignment problem and is
# what is solved by the dlib.max_cost_assignment() routine.
# So in this example, lets imagine we have 3 people and 3 jobs. We represent the amount of
# money each person will produce at each job with a cost matrix. Each row corresponds to a
# person and each column corresponds to a job. So for example, below we are saying that
# person 0 will make $1 at job 0, $2 at job 1, and $6 at job 2.
cost
=
dlib
.
matrix
([[
1
,
2
,
6
],
[
5
,
3
,
6
],
[
4
,
5
,
0
]])
# To find out the best assignment of people to jobs we just need to call this function.
assignment
=
dlib
.
max_cost_assignment
(
cost
)
# This prints optimal assignments: [2, 0, 1]
# which indicates that we should assign the person from the first row of the cost matrix to
# job 2, the middle row person to job 0, and the bottom row person to job 1.
print
"optimal assignments: "
,
assignment
# This prints optimal cost: 16.0
# which is correct since our optimal assignment is 6+5+5.
print
"optimal cost: "
,
dlib
.
assignment_cost
(
cost
,
assignment
)
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