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pyVolutionary is a package collecting metaheuristic algorithms, available for free usage and able to solve a wide range of optimization problems.

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pyVolutionary

pyVolutionary

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Introduction

pyVolutionary stands as a versatile Python library dedicated to metaheuristic algorithms within the realm of evolutionary computation. Engineered for ease of use, flexibility, and speed, it exhibits robustness and efficiency, having undergone rigorous testing on large-scale problem instances. The primary objectives encompass the implementation of both classical and cutting-edge nature-inspired algorithms. The library is conceived as a user-friendly resource facilitating rapid access to optimization algorithms for researchers, fostering the dissemination of optimization knowledge to a broad audience without financial barriers.

Nature-inspired algorithms constitute a widely embraced tool for addressing optimization challenges. Over the course of their evolution, a plethora of variants have emerged (paper 1, paper 2), showcasing their adaptability and versatility across diverse domains and applications. Noteworthy advancements have been achieved through hybridization, modification, and adaptation of these algorithms. However, the implementation of nature-inspired algorithms can often pose a formidable challenge, characterized by complexity and tedium. pyVolutionary is specifically crafted to surmount this challenge, offering a streamlined and expedited approach to leveraging these algorithms without the need for arduous, time-consuming implementations from scratch.

The list of algorithms currently implemented in pyVolutionary can be consulted in the Algorithms section, where you can also find the corresponding references to the scientific papers as well as the corresponding demo for each algorithm.

A number of practical examples are provided in the Practical examples section.

The library is continuously updated with new algorithms and problems, and contributions are welcome.

Installation

pyVolutionary is available on PyPI, and can be installed via pip:

pip install pyvolutionary

Usage

Once installed, pyVolutionary can be imported into your Python scripts as follows:

import pyvolutionary

Now, you can access the algorithms and problems included in the library. With pyVolutionary, you can solve both continuous and discrete optimization problems. It is also possible to solve mixed problems, i.e., problems with both continuous and discrete variables. In order to do so, you need to define a Task class, which inherits from the Task class of the library. The list of variables in the problem must be specified in the constructor of the class inheriting from Task. The following table describes the types of variables currently implemented in the library.

Variable type Class name Description Example
Continuous ContinuousVariable A continuous variable ContinuousVariable(name="x0", lower_bound=-100.0, upper_bound=100.0)
Continuous (set) ContinuousMultiVariable A set of continuous variables ContinuousMultiVariable(name="x0", lower_bounds=[-100.0, -200.0], upper_bounds=[100.0, 50.0])
Discrete DiscreteVariable A discrete variable DiscreteVariable(choices=["scale", "auto", 0.01, 0.1, 0.5, 1.0], name="gamma")
Discrete (set) DiscreteMultiVariable A set of discrete variables DiscreteMultiVariable(choices=[[0.1, 10, 100], ["scale", "auto", 0.01, 0.1, 0.5, 1.0]], name="params")
Permutation PermutationVariable A permutation of the specified choices PermutationVariable(items=[[60, 200], [180, 200], [80, 180]], name="routes")
Binary BinaryVariable A type of variable used for problems where the data are binary BinaryVariable(name="x", n_vars=10)
Multi-objective MultiObjectiveVariable A type of variable used for multi-objective problems MultiObjectiveVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=(-10, -10), upper_bounds=(10, 10))

An example of a custom Task class is the following:

from pyvolutionary import ContinuousVariable, Task

class Sphere(Task):
    def objective_function(self, x: list[float]) -> float:
        x1, x2 = x
        f1 = x1 - 2 * x2 + 3
        f2 = 2 * x1 + x2 - 8
        return f1 ** 2 + f2 ** 2


# Define the task with the bounds and the configuration of the optimizer
task = Sphere(
    variables=[
        ContinuousVariable(name="x1", lower_bound=-100.0, upper_bound=100.0),
        ContinuousVariable(name="x2", lower_bound=-100.0, upper_bound=100.0),
    ],
)

You can pass the minmax parameter to the Task class to specify whether you want to minimize or maximize the function. Therefore, if you want to maximize the function, you can write:

from pyvolutionary import ContinuousVariable, Task

class Sphere(Task):
    def objective_function(self, x: list[float]) -> float:
        x1, x2 = x
        f1 = x1 - 2 * x2 + 3
        f2 = 2 * x1 + x2 - 8
        return -(f1 ** 2 + f2 ** 2)

task = Sphere(
    variables=[
        ContinuousVariable(name="x1", lower_bound=-100.0, upper_bound=100.0),
        ContinuousVariable(name="x2", lower_bound=-100.0, upper_bound=100.0),
    ],
    minmax="max",
)

By default, the minmax parameter is set to min. If necessary (e.g., in the implementation of the objective function), additional data can be injected into the Task class by using the data parameter of the constructor. This data can be accessed by using the data attribute of the Task class (see combinatorial example below).

Finally, you can also specify the seed of the random number generator by using the seed parameter of the definition of the Task:

from pyvolutionary import ContinuousVariable, Task

class Sphere(Task):
    def objective_function(self, x: list[float]) -> float:
        x1, x2 = x
        f1 = x1 - 2 * x2 + 3
        f2 = 2 * x1 + x2 - 8
        return -(f1 ** 2 + f2 ** 2)

task = Sphere(
    variables=[
        ContinuousVariable(name="x1", lower_bound=-100.0, upper_bound=100.0),
        ContinuousVariable(name="x2", lower_bound=-100.0, upper_bound=100.0),
    ],
    minmax="max",
    seed=42,
)

Continuous problems

For example, let us inspect how you can solve the continuous sphere problem with the Particle Swarm Optimization algorithm.

from pyvolutionary import ContinuousMultiVariable, ParticleSwarmOptimization, ParticleSwarmOptimizationConfig, Task

# Define the problem, you can replace the following class with your custom problem to optimize
class Sphere(Task):
    def objective_function(self, x: list[float]) -> float:
        x1, x2 = x
        f1 = x1 - 2 * x2 + 3
        f2 = 2 * x1 + x2 - 8
        return f1 ** 2 + f2 ** 2


# Define the task with the bounds and the configuration of the optimizer
task = Sphere(
    variables=[ContinuousMultiVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=[-100.0, -100.0], upper_bound=[100.0, 100.0])],
)

configuration = ParticleSwarmOptimizationConfig(
    population_size=200,
    fitness_error=10e-4,
    max_cycles=400,
    c1=0.1,
    c2=0.1,
    w=[0.35, 1],
)
optimization_result = ParticleSwarmOptimization(configuration).optimize(task)

You can also specify the mode of the solver by using the mode argument of the optimize method. For instance, if you want to run the Particle Swarm Optimization algorithm in parallel with threads, you can write:

optimization_result = ParticleSwarmOptimization(configuration).optimize(task, mode="thread")

The possible values of the mode parameter are:

  • serial: the algorithm is run in serial mode;
  • process: the algorithm is run in parallel with processes;
  • thread: the algorithm is run in parallel with threads.

In case of process and thread modes, you can also specify the number of processes or threads to use by using the n_jobs argument of the optimize method:

optimization_result = ParticleSwarmOptimization(configuration).optimize(task, mode="thread", jobs=4)

The optimization result is a dictionary containing the following keys:

  • evolution: a list of the agents found at each generation
  • rates: a list of the fitness values of the agents found at each generation
  • best_solution: the best agent found by the algorithm

Explicitly, the evolution key contains a list of Population, i.e. a dictionary which agents key contains a list of Agent. The latter is a dictionary composed by the following basic keys:

  • position: the position of the agent
  • fitness: the fitness value of the agent
  • cost: the cost of the agent
from pydantic import BaseModel

class Agent(BaseModel):
    position: list[float]
    cost: float
    fitness: float

These are the basic information, but each algorithm can add more information to the agent, such as the velocity in the case of PSO.

Discrete problems

A typical problem involving discrete variables is the optimization of the hyperparameters of a Machine Learning model, such as a Support Vector Classifier (SVC). You can use pyVolutionary to accomplish this task. In the following, we provide an example using the Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) as the optimizer.

from typing import Any
from sklearn.svm import SVC
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler
from sklearn import datasets, metrics

from pyvolutionary import (
    best_agent,
    ContinuousVariable,
    DiscreteVariable,
    ParticleSwarmOptimization,
    ParticleSwarmOptimizationConfig,
    Task,
)

# Load the data set; In this example, the breast cancer dataset is loaded.
X, y = datasets.load_breast_cancer(return_X_y=True)

# Create training and test split
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(X, y, test_size=0.3, random_state=1, stratify=y)

sc = StandardScaler()
X_train_std = sc.fit_transform(X_train)
X_test_std = sc.transform(X_test)


class SvmOptimizedProblem(Task):
    def objective_function(self, x: list[Any]):
        x_transformed = self.transform_solution(x)
        C, kernel = x_transformed["C"], x_transformed["kernel"]
        degree, gamma = x_transformed["degree"], x_transformed["gamma"]

        svc = SVC(C=C, kernel=kernel, degree=degree, gamma=gamma, probability=True, random_state=1)
        svc.fit(X_train_std, y_train)
        y_predict = svc.predict(X_test_std)
        return metrics.accuracy_score(y_test, y_predict)


task = SvmOptimizedProblem(
    variables=[
        ContinuousVariable(lower_bound=0.01, upper_bound=1000., name="C"),
        DiscreteVariable(choices=["linear", "poly", "rbf", "sigmoid"], name="kernel"),
        DiscreteVariable(choices=[*range(1, 6)], name="degree"),
        DiscreteVariable(choices=["scale", "auto", 0.01, 0.05, 0.1, 0.5, 1.0], name="gamma"),
    ],
    minmax="max",
)

configuration = ParticleSwarmOptimizationConfig(
    population_size=200,
    fitness_error=10e-4,
    max_cycles=100,
    c1=0.1,
    c2=0.1,
    w=[0.35, 1],
)

result = ParticleSwarmOptimization(configuration).optimize(task)
best = best_agent(result.evolution[-1].agents, task.minmax)

print(f"Best parameters: {task.transform_solution(best.position)}")
print(f"Best accuracy: {best.cost}")

You can replace the PSO with any other algorithm implemented in the library.

Combinatorial problems

Within the framework of pyVolutionary for addressing the Traveling Salesman Problem (TSP), a solution is a plausible route signifying a tour that encompasses visiting all cities precisely once and returning to the initial city. Typically, this solution is articulated as a permutation of the cities, wherein each city features exactly once in the permutation.

As an illustration, consider a TSP scenario involving 5 cities denoted as A, B, C, D, and E. A potential solution might be denoted by the permutation [A, B, D, E, C], illustrating the order in which the cities are visited. This interpretation indicates that the tour initiates at city A, proceeds to city B, then D, E, and ultimately C before looping back to city A.

The following code snippet illustrates how to solve the TSP with the Virus Colony Search Optimization algorithm.

from typing import Any
import numpy as np
from pyvolutionary import (
    best_agent,
    Task,
    PermutationVariable,
    VirusColonySearchOptimization,
    VirusColonySearchOptimizationConfig,
)
from pyvolutionary.helpers import distance


class TspProblem(Task):
    def objective_function(self, x: list[Any]) -> float:
        x_transformed = self.transform_solution(x)
        routes = x_transformed["routes"]
        city_pos = self.data["city_positions"]
        n_routes = len(routes)
        return np.sum([distance(
            city_pos[route], city_pos[routes[(idx + 1) % n_routes]]
        ) for idx, route in enumerate(routes)])


city_positions = [
    [60, 200], [180, 200], [80, 180], [140, 180], [20, 160],
    [100, 160], [200, 160], [140, 140], [40, 120], [100, 120],
    [180, 100], [60, 80], [120, 80], [180, 60], [20, 40],
    [100, 40], [200, 40], [20, 20], [60, 20], [160, 20]
]
task = TspProblem(
    variables=[PermutationVariable(name="routes", items=list(range(0, len(city_positions))))],
    data={"city_positions": city_positions},
)
configuration = VirusColonySearchOptimizationConfig(
    population_size=10,
    fitness_error=0.01,
    max_cycles=100,
    lamda=0.1,
    sigma=2.5,
)
result = VirusColonySearchOptimization(configuration).optimize(task)
best = best_agent(result.evolution[-1].agents, task.minmax)

print(f"Best real scheduling: {task.transform_solution(best.position)}")
print(f"Best fitness: {best.cost}")

Multi-objective problems

pyVolutionary also supports multi-objective problems. A multi-objective problem is a problem with more than one objective function. All the objective functions are then "mixed" together by means of a weight vector. The latter has to be specified within the configuration of the Task class. The following problem is an example of a multi-objective problem solved by pyVolutionary with the Forest Optimization Algorithm (the latter can be replaced with any other algorithm implemented in the library):

import numpy as np
from pyvolutionary import Task, MultiObjectiveVariable, ForestOptimizationAlgorithm, ForestOptimizationAlgorithmConfig

class MultiObjectiveBenchmark(Task):
    # Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test_functions_for_optimization
    def objective_function(self, solution):
        def booth(x, y):
            return (x + 2 * y - 7) ** 2 + (2 * x + y - 5) ** 2

        def bukin(x, y):
            return 100 * np.sqrt(np.abs(y - 0.01 * x ** 2)) + 0.01 * np.abs(x + 10)

        def matyas(x, y):
            return 0.26 * (x ** 2 + y ** 2) - 0.48 * x * y

        return [booth(solution[0], solution[1]), bukin(solution[0], solution[1]), matyas(solution[0], solution[1])]


# Define the task with the bounds and the configuration of the optimizer
task = MultiObjectiveBenchmark(
    variables=[MultiObjectiveVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=(-10, -10), upper_bounds=(10, 10))],
    objective_weights=[0.4, 0.1, 0.5],
)

configuration = ForestOptimizationAlgorithmConfig(
    population_size=200,
    fitness_error=10e-4,
    max_cycles=400,
    lifetime=5,
    area_limit=50,
    local_seeding_changes=1,
    global_seeding_changes=2,
    transfer_rate=0.5,
)

optimization_result = ForestOptimizationAlgorithm(configuration).optimize(task)

Constrained problems

pyVolutionary also supports constrained problems. They are implemented as usual, but the objective function has to specify the constraints, thus returning the cost of the constrained solution. Here is an example of a constrained problem solved by pyVolutionary with the Ant Lion Optimization algorithm (the latter can be replaced with any other algorithm implemented in the library):

import numpy as np
from pyvolutionary import Task, ContinuousMultiVariable, AntLionOptimization, AntLionOptimizationConfig

## Link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/9781119136507.app2
class ConstrainedBenchmark(Task):
    def objective_function(self, solution):
        def g1(x):
            return 2 * x[0] + 2 * x[1] + x[9] + x[10] - 10

        def g2(x):
            return 2 * x[0] + 2 * x[2] + x[9] + x[10] - 10

        def g3(x):
            return 2 * x[1] + 2 * x[2] + x[10] + x[11] - 10

        def g4(x):
            return -8 * x[0] + x[9]

        def g5(x):
            return -8 * x[1] + x[10]

        def g6(x):
            return -8 * x[2] + x[11]

        def g7(x):
            return -2 * x[3] - x[4] + x[9]

        def g8(x):
            return -2 * x[5] - x[6] + x[10]

        def g9(x):
            return -2 * x[7] - x[8] + x[11]

        def violate(value):
            return 0 if value <= 0 else value

        fx = 5 * np.sum(solution[:4]) - 5 * np.sum(solution[:4] ** 2) - np.sum(solution[4:])

        fx += violate(g1(solution)) ** 2 + violate(g2(solution)) + violate(g3(solution)) + (
            2 * violate(g4(solution)) + violate(g5(solution)) + violate(g6(solution))
        ) + violate(g7(solution)) + violate(g8(solution)) + violate(g9(solution))
        return fx


# Define the task with the bounds and the configuration of the optimizer
lower_bounds = [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
upper_bounds = [1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 100, 100, 100, 1]
task = ConstrainedBenchmark(
    variables=([ContinuousMultiVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=lower_bounds, upper_bounds=upper_bounds)])
)

configuration = AntLionOptimizationConfig(population_size=200, fitness_error=10e-4, max_cycles=400)
optimization_result = AntLionOptimization(configuration).optimize(task)

A multi-objective constrained problem can be also managed by pyVolutionary. In this case, the objective function must return a list of costs, and the constraints must be specified in the objective function of the Task class as well.

Extending the library

pyVolutionary is designed to be easily extensible. You can add your own algorithms and problems to the library by following the instructions below.

Adding a new algorithm

To add a new algorithm, you need to create a new class that inherits from the OptimizationAbstract class. The new class must implement the optimization_step method, where you can implement your new metaheuristic algorithm.

The constructor of the new class must accept a config parameter, which is a Pydantic model extending the BaseOptimizationConfig class. This class contains the parameters of the algorithm, such as the population size, the number of generations, etc.

from pydantic import BaseModel

class BaseOptimizationConfig(BaseModel):
    population_size: int
    fitness_error: float | None = None
    max_cycles: int

The examples listed in the following section can be used as a reference for the implementation of a new algorithm.

Once you created your new classes, you can run the algorithm by calling the optimize method, which takes as input a Task object and returns a dictionary as above described.

Utilities

pyVolutionary provides a set of utilities to facilitate the use of the library.

GridSearchCV Hyper-parameter tuning

pyVolutionary provides a GridSearchCV class to perform hyperparameter tuning of a model. The class is similar to the one provided by scikit-learn, but it uses the algorithms implemented in the library to perform the search. The class can be used as follows:

from opfunu.cec_based.cec2017 import F52017

from pyvolutionary import ContinuousMultiVariable, Task, BiogeographyBasedOptimization, GridSearchCV

f1 = F52017(30, f_bias=0)


class Problem(Task):
    # Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test_functions_for_optimization
    def objective_function(self, solution):
        return f1.evaluate(solution)


# Define the task with the bounds and the configuration of the optimizer
task = Problem(
    variables=[ContinuousMultiVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=f1.lb, upper_bounds=f1.ub)],
)

params_bbo_grid = {
    "max_cycles": [10, 20, 30, 40],
    "population_size": [50, 100, 150],
    "n_elites": [3, 4, 5, 6],
    "p_m": [0.01, 0.02, 0.05]
}


model = BiogeographyBasedOptimization()
tuner = GridSearchCV(model, params_bbo_grid)

tuner.execute(task=task)

print(f"Best row {tuner.best_row}")
print(f"Best score {tuner.best_score}")
print(f"Best parameters {tuner.best_parameters}")

best_result = tuner.resolve()
print(f"Best solution after tuning {best_result.best_solution}")

tuner.export_results("csv")
tuner.export_results("dataframe")
tuner.export_results("json")

Multitasking

pyVolutionary provides a Multitask class to perform multitasking optimization. The class can become very precious when you need to optimize multiple tasks with multiple algorithms in parallel. In case, for instance, of multiple tasks with the same algorithm, you can use the Multitask class to run the optimization in parallel. Furthermore, the Multitask class can be used to run multiple tasks with different algorithms in parallel. Here is an example of how to use the Multitask class:

from opfunu.cec_based.cec2017 import F52017, F102017, F292017

from pyvolutionary import (
    ContinuousMultiVariable,
    Task,
    NuclearReactionOptimization,
    Multitask,
    NuclearReactionOptimizationConfig,
    MountainGazelleOptimization,
    MountainGazelleOptimizationConfig,
    GrasshopperOptimization,
    GrasshopperOptimizationConfig,
    GizaPyramidConstructionOptimization,
    GizaPyramidConstructionOptimizationConfig,
)

f1 = F52017(30, f_bias=0)
f2 = F102017(30, f_bias=0)
f3 = F292017(30, f_bias=0)


class Problem1(Task):
    def objective_function(self, solution):
        return f1.evaluate(solution)


class Problem2(Task):
    def objective_function(self, solution):
        return f3.evaluate(solution)


class Problem3(Task):
    def objective_function(self, solution):
        return f1.evaluate(solution)


task1 = Problem1(
    variables=[ContinuousMultiVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=f1.lb, upper_bounds=f1.ub)],
)
task2 = Problem2(
    variables=[ContinuousMultiVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=f2.lb, upper_bounds=f2.ub)],
)
task3 = Problem3(
    variables=[ContinuousMultiVariable(name="x", lower_bounds=f3.lb, upper_bounds=f3.ub)],
)

model1 = NuclearReactionOptimization(
    config=NuclearReactionOptimizationConfig(max_cycles=10000, population_size=50)
)
model2 = MountainGazelleOptimization(
    config=MountainGazelleOptimizationConfig(max_cycles=10000, population_size=50)
)
model3 = GrasshopperOptimization(
    config=GrasshopperOptimizationConfig(max_cycles=10000, population_size=50, c_min=0.00004, c_max=2.0,)
)
model4 = GizaPyramidConstructionOptimization(
    config=GizaPyramidConstructionOptimizationConfig(
        max_cycles=10000, population_size=50, theta=14, friction=[1, 10], prob_substitution=0.5,
    )
)

multitask = Multitask(
    algorithms=(model1, model2, model3, model4), tasks=(task1, task2, task3), modes=("thread", ), n_workers=4
)

multitask.execute(n_trials=2, n_jobs=2, debug=True)

multitask.export_results("csv")
multitask.export_results("dataframe")
multitask.export_results("json")

Agent characteristics

The characteristics of an agent can be extracted by using two functions:

  • agent_trend: it returns the trend of the agent at each iteration
  • agent_position: it returns the position of the agent at each iteration
agent_trend(optimization_result: OptimizationResult, idx: int, iters: list[int] | None = None) -> list[float]
agent_position(optimization_result: OptimizationResult, idx: int, iters: list[int] | None = None) -> list[list[float]]

where:

  • optimization_result: the result from the optimization algorithm
  • idx: the index of the agent to consider
  • iters: a list of the iterations to consider. If None, all the iterations are considered.

The two methods return a list of the cost or location in the space search, respectively, of the considered agent at each of the specified iterations.

Best agent characteristics

Specifically for the best agent, you can use two functions in order to locate its position in the space search and to extract the trend of its cost, at each iteration:

best_agent_trend(optimization_result: OptimizationResult, iters: list[int] | None = None) -> list[float]
best_agent_position(optimization_result: OptimizationResult, iters: list[int] | None = None) -> list[list[float]]

Algorithms

The following algorithms are currently implemented in pyVolutionary:

Algorithm Class Year Paper Example
African Vulture Optimization AfricanVultureOptimization 2022 paper example
Ant Colony Optimization AntColonyOptimization 2008 paper example
Ant Lion Optimization AntLionOptimization 2015 paper example
Aquila Optimization AquilaOptimization 2021 paper example
Archimede Optimization ArchimedeOptimization 2021 paper example
Artificial Bee Colony Optimization BeeColonyOptimization 2007 paper example
Bacterial Foraging Optimization BacterialForagingOptimization 2002 paper example
Bat Optimization BatOptimization 2010 paper example
Battle Royale Optimization BattleRoyaleOptimization 2021 paper example
Biogeography-Based Optimization BiogeographyBasedOptimization 2008 paper example
Brain Storm Optimization (Original) BrainStormOptimization 2011 paper example
Brain Storm Optimization (Improved) ImprovedBrainStormOptimization 2017 paper example
Brown-Bear Optimization BrownBearOptimization 2023 paper example
Camel Caravan Optimization CamelCaravanOptimization 2016 paper example
Cat Swarm Optimization CatSwarmOptimization 2006 paper example
Chaos Game Optimization ChaosGameOptimization 2021 paper example
Chernobyl Disaster Optimization ChernobylDisasterOptimization 2023 paper example
Coati Optimization CoatiOptimization 2023 paper example
Coral Reef Optimization CoralReefOptimization 2014 paper example
Coyotes Optimization CoyotesOptimization 2018 paper example
Coronavirus Herd Immunity Optimization CoronavirusHerdImmunityOptimization 2021 paper example
Cuckoo Search Optimization CuckooSearchOptimization 2009 paper example
Dragonfly Optimization DragonflyOptimization 2016 paper example
Dwarf Mongoose Optimization DwarfMongooseOptimization 2022 paper example
Earthworms Optimization EarthwormsOptimization 2015 paper example
Egret Swarm Optimization EgretSwarmOptimization 2022 paper example
Electromagnetic Field Optimization ElectromagneticFieldOptimization 2016 paper example
Elephant Herd Optimization ElephantHerdOptimization 2015 paper example
Energy Valley Optimization EnergyValleyOptimization 2023 paper example
Fick's Law Optimization FicksLawOptimization 2023 paper example
Firefly Swarm Optimization FireflySwarmOptimization 2009 paper example
Fire Hawk Optimization FireHawkOptimization 2022 paper example
Fireworks Optimization FireworksOptimization 2010 paper example
Fish School Search Optimization FishSchoolSearchOptimization 2008 paper example
Flower Pollination Algorithm Optimization FlowerPollinationAlgorithmOptimization 2012 paper example
Forensic Based Investigation Optimization ForensicBasedInvestigationOptimization 2020 paper example
Forest Optimization Algorithm ForestOptimizationAlgorithm 2014 paper example
Fox Optimization FoxOptimization 2023 paper example
Gaining Sharing Knowledge-based Algorithm Optimization GainingSharingKnowledgeOptimization 2020 paper example
Genetic Algorithm Optimization GeneticAlgorithmOptimization 1989 paper example
Germinal Center Optimization GerminalCenterOptimization 2018 paper example
Giant Trevally Optimization GiantTrevallyOptimization 2022 paper example
Giza Pyramid Construction Optimization GizaPyramidConstructionOptimization 2021 paper example
Golden Jackal Optimization GoldenJackalOptimization 2022 paper example
Grasshopper Optimization Algorithm GrasshopperOptimization 2017 paper example
Grey Wolf Optimization GreyWolfOptimization 2014 paper example
Harmony Search Optimization HarmonySearchOptimization 2001 paper example
Heap Based Optimization HeapBasedOptimization 2020 paper example
Henry Gas Solubility Optimization HenryGasSolubilityOptimization 2019 paper example
Hunger Games Search Optimization HungerGamesSearchOptimization 2021 paper example
Imperialist Competitive Optimization ImperialistCompetitiveOptimization 2013 paper example
Invasive Weed Optimization InvasiveWeedOptimization 2006 paper example
Krill Herd Optimization KrillHerdOptimization 2012 paper example
Levy Flight Jaya Swarm Optimization LeviFlightJayaSwarmOptimization 2021 paper example
Marine Predators Optimization MarinePredatorsOptimization 2020 paper example
Monarch Butterfly Optimization MonarchButterflyOptimization 2019 paper example
Moth-Flame Optimization MothFlameOptimization 2015 paper example
Mountain Gazelle Optimization MountainGazelleOptimization 2022 paper example
Multi-verse Optimization MultiverseOptimization 2016 paper example
Nuclear Reaction Optimization NuclearReactionOptimization 2019 paper example
Osprey Optimization OspreyOptimization 2023 paper example
Particle Swarm Optimization ParticleSwarmOptimization 1995 paper example
Pathfinder Algorithm Optimization PathfinderAlgorithmOptimization 2019 paper example
Pelican Optimization PelicanOptimization 2022 paper example
Runge Kutta Optimization RungeKuttaOptimization 2021 paper example
Salp Swarm Optimization SalpSwarmOptimization 2017 paper example
Seagull Optimization SeagullOptimization 2019 paper example
Serval Optimization ServalOptimization 2022 paper example
Siberian Tiger Optimization SiberianTigerOptimization 2022 paper example
Sine Cosine Algorithm SineCosineAlgorithmOptimization 2016 paper example
(Q-learning embedded) Sine Cosine Algorithm QleSineCosineAlgorithmOptimization 2016 paper example
Spotted Hyena Optimization SpottedHyenaOptimization 2017 paper example
Success History Intelligent Optimization SuccessHistoryIntelligentOptimization 2022 paper example
Swarm Hill Climbing Optimization SwarmHillClimbingOptimization 1993 paper example
Tasmanian Devil Optimization TasmanianDevilOptimization 2022 paper example
Tuna Swarm Optimization TunaSwarmOptimization 2021 paper example
Virus Colony Search Optimization VirusColonySearchOptimization 2016 paper example
Walrus Optimization WalrusOptimization 2022 paper example
War Strategy Optimization WarStrategyOptimization 2022 paper example
Water Cycle Optimization WaterCycleOptimization 2012 paper example
Whales Optimization WhalesOptimization 2016 paper example
Wildebeest Herd Optimization WildebeestHerdOptimization 2019 paper example
Wind Driven Optimization WindDrivenOptimization 2013 paper example
Zebra Optimization ZebraOptimization 2022 paper example

Practical examples

The following examples show how to use pyVolutionary to solve some practical problems.

Problem Example
Employee Rostering Problem example
Healthcare Workflow Optimization Problem example
Job Shop Scheduling Problem example
Location Optimization Problem example
Maintenance Scheduling Problem example
Production Optimization Problem example
Shortest Path Problem example
Supply Chain Problem example

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