A hybrid DP-CP approach for the partial shop scheduling problem that supports arbitrary precedence graphs, anytime column search, and large neighborhood search while reusing the DP model across restarts.
Domain-Independent Dynamic Programming with Constraint Propagation
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abstract
There are two prevalent model-based paradigms for combinatorial problems: 1) state-based representations, such as heuristic search, dynamic programming (DP), and decision diagrams, and 2) constraint and domain-based representations, such as constraint programming (CP), (mixed-)integer programming, and Boolean satisfiability. In this paper, we bridge the gap between the DP and CP paradigms by integrating constraint propagation into DP, enabling a DP solver to prune states and transitions using constraint propagation. To this end, we implement constraint propagation using a general-purpose CP solver in the Domain-Independent Dynamic Programming framework and evaluate using heuristic search on three combinatorial optimisation problems: Single Machine Scheduling with Time Windows, the Resource Constrained Project Scheduling Problem (RCPSP), and the Travelling Salesperson Problem with Time Windows (TSPTW). Our evaluation shows that constraint propagation significantly reduces the number of state expansions, causing our approach to solve more instances than a DP solver for Single Machine Scheduling and RCPSP, and showing similar improvements for tightly constrained TSPTW instances. The runtime performance indicates that the benefits of propagation outweigh the overhead for constrained instances, but that further work into reducing propagation overhead could improve performance further. Our work is a key step in understanding the value of constraint propagation in DP solvers, providing a model-based approach to integrating DP and CP.
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cs.AI 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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CP or DP? Why Not Both: A Case Study in the Partial Shop Scheduling Problem
A hybrid DP-CP approach for the partial shop scheduling problem that supports arbitrary precedence graphs, anytime column search, and large neighborhood search while reusing the DP model across restarts.