AbstractWe explore the natural question of whether all NP-complete problems have a common restriction under which they are polynomially solvable. More precisely, we study what languages are universally easy in that their intersection with any NP-complete problem is in P (universally polynomial) or at least no longer NP-complete (universally simplifying). In particular, we give a polynomial-time algorithm to determine whether a regular language is universally easy. While our approach is language-theoretic, the results bear directly on finding polynomial-time solutions to very broad and useful classes of problems
NP Complete (abbreviated as NPC) problems, standing at the crux of deciding whether P=NP, are among ...
AbstractFor every known NP-complete problem, the number of solutions of its instances varies over a ...
AbstractLog space reducibility allows a meaningful study of complexity and completeness for the clas...
AbstractWe explore the natural question of whether all NP-complete problems have a common restrictio...
P versus NP is considered as one of the most important open problems in computer science. This consi...
P versus NP is considered as one of the most important open problems in computer science. This consi...
AbstractHertrampf et al. (1993) looked at complexity classes which are characterized (say accepted) ...
We examine the class of "uniformly hard languages," where a language is just not merely in...
A problem is in the class NP when it is possible to compute in polynomial time that a given solution...
This work is specifically about an interesting class of problems called the NP-complete problems, wh...
AbstractAgrawal and Biswas (1992) define a notion stronger than NP-completeness. With every language...
This paper proves that the complexity class Ef)P, parity polynomial time [PZ83], contains the class ...
AbstractTwo notions which have been introduced with the aim of classifying NP-complete optimization ...
Madhu Sudan ¡ In 1978, Schaefer [12] considered a subclass of languages in NP and proved a “dichotom...
Introduction One of the important questions in computational complexity theory is whether every NP ...
NP Complete (abbreviated as NPC) problems, standing at the crux of deciding whether P=NP, are among ...
AbstractFor every known NP-complete problem, the number of solutions of its instances varies over a ...
AbstractLog space reducibility allows a meaningful study of complexity and completeness for the clas...
AbstractWe explore the natural question of whether all NP-complete problems have a common restrictio...
P versus NP is considered as one of the most important open problems in computer science. This consi...
P versus NP is considered as one of the most important open problems in computer science. This consi...
AbstractHertrampf et al. (1993) looked at complexity classes which are characterized (say accepted) ...
We examine the class of "uniformly hard languages," where a language is just not merely in...
A problem is in the class NP when it is possible to compute in polynomial time that a given solution...
This work is specifically about an interesting class of problems called the NP-complete problems, wh...
AbstractAgrawal and Biswas (1992) define a notion stronger than NP-completeness. With every language...
This paper proves that the complexity class Ef)P, parity polynomial time [PZ83], contains the class ...
AbstractTwo notions which have been introduced with the aim of classifying NP-complete optimization ...
Madhu Sudan ¡ In 1978, Schaefer [12] considered a subclass of languages in NP and proved a “dichotom...
Introduction One of the important questions in computational complexity theory is whether every NP ...
NP Complete (abbreviated as NPC) problems, standing at the crux of deciding whether P=NP, are among ...
AbstractFor every known NP-complete problem, the number of solutions of its instances varies over a ...
AbstractLog space reducibility allows a meaningful study of complexity and completeness for the clas...