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CSP

This is a Chicken Scheme egg which solves constraint satisfaction problems.

A CSP is compsoed of a number of domain-variables that have a domain, a set of bindings they can assume, along with a number of constraints. This egg supports 5 kinds of constraints: efd (early failure detection), fc (forward checking), vp (value propagation), gfc (generalized forward checking) and ac (arc consistency).

High-level

[procedure] (csp-solution domain-variables select)

Given a list of domain variables and a function to select which one to try to bind next, one can simply pass in first, this produces a solution to the CSP.

[procedure] (create-domain-variable domain)

Create a domain variable whose domain is domain.

[procedure] (assert-constraint! constraint domain-variables)

Assert a constraint, constraint is a function that returns a boolean, amongst a number of domain variables. The kind of constraint is determined by inspecting *strategy*. Valid types are: efd (early failure detection), fc (forward checking), vp (value propagation), gfc (generalized forward checking) and ac (arc consistency).

[procedure] (bound? domain-variable)
[procedure] (binding domain-variable)

Determine if the domain variable is bound and what its binding is.

Constraints

[procedure] (assert-unary-constraint-gfc! constraint x)
[procedure] (assert-binary-constraint-gfc! constraint x y)
[procedure] (assert-ternary-constraint-gfc! constraint x y z)
[procedure] (assert-unary-constraint-ac! constraint x)
[procedure] (assert-binary-constraint-ac! constraint x y)
[procedure] (assert-ternary-constraint-ac! constraint x y z)
[procedure] (assert-unary-constraint-efd! constraint x)
[procedure] (assert-binary-constraint-efd! constraint x y)
[procedure] (assert-ternary-constraint-efd! constraint x y z)
[procedure] (assert-unary-constraint-fc! constraint x)
[procedure] (assert-binary-constraint-fc! constraint x y)
[procedure] (assert-ternary-constraint-fc! constraint x y z)
[procedure] (assert-unary-constraint-vp! constraint x)
[procedure] (assert-binary-constraint-vp! constraint x y)
[procedure] (assert-ternary-constraint-vp! constraint x y z)

Assert each of the 5 kinds of constraints between domain-variables x, y and z.

[procedure] (assert-constraint-ac! constraint ds)

Assert an arc consistency constraint between all domain-variables in the list ds.

Low-level

[procedure] (attach-before-demon! demon x)
[procedure] (attach-after-demon! demon x)
[procedure] (restrict-domain! x domain)

Only of interest to implementors.

Examples

This solves http://projecteuler.net/problem=43.

 (use traversal nondeterminism csp)
 (let* ((ds (map-n (lambda _ (create-domain-variable (map-n identity 10))) 10))
 	(d3 (lambda (ns) (+ (* (first ns) 100) (* (second ns) 10) (third ns))))
 	(div (lambda (n) (lambda ns (= (modulo (d3 ns) n) 0))))
 	(nthd (lambda (a b) (sublist ds (- a 1) b))))
   (assert-constraint! (div 17) (nthd 8 10))
   (assert-constraint! (div 13) (nthd 7 9))
   (assert-constraint! (div 11) (nthd 6 8))
   (assert-constraint! (div 7) (nthd 5 7))
   (assert-constraint! (div 5) (nthd 4 6))
   (assert-constraint! (div 3) (nthd 3 5))
   (assert-constraint! (div 2) (nthd 2 4))
   (map-all-pairs (lambda l (assert-constraint! (lambda (a b) (not (= a b))) l)) ds)
   (foldl + 0
          (map (lambda (l) (foldl (lambda (a b) (+ (* a 10) b)) 0 l))
               (all-values (csp-solution ds last)))))

License

  Copyright 1993-1995 University of Toronto. All rights reserved.
  Copyright 1996 Technion. All rights reserved.
  Copyright 1996 and 1997 University of Vermont. All rights reserved.
  Copyright 1997-2001 NEC Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
  Copyright 2002-2013 Purdue University. All rights reserved.
  Contact Andrei Barbu, andrei@0xab.com. Originally written by Jeff Siskind.
  This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
  the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  (at your option) any later version.
  This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
  GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
  You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
  along with this program.  If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses.