matroid
This library provides typeclasses and basic functionality that revolves around the combinatorial structures
known as matroids.
Language features
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, MultiParamTypeClasses #-}
Installation
Download and extract the sources to a directory of your liking. Then run
cabal install --lib matroid
Usage
Quick demo
For instance, download and extract the sources to a directory of your liking, then run
cabal repl
Then you get a prompt where you can start hacking. Let's see the groundset of the implementation
of the famous M(K_4) matroid, and mess around a bit:
*Data.Matroid> groundset $ mK 4
fromList [(1,2),(1,3),(1,4),(2,3),(2,4),(3,4)]
*Data.Matroid> import qualified Data.Set as S
*Data.Matroid S> rk (mK 4) $ S.fromList [(1,2),(1,3),(2,3)]
2
*Data.Matroid S> basis (mK 4) $ S.fromList [(1,2),(1,3),(2,3)]
fromList [(1,2),(1,3)]
*Data.Matroid S> cl (mK 4) $ S.fromList [(1,2),(1,3),(2,3)]
fromList [(1,2),(1,3),(2,3)]
*Data.Matroid S> rk (dual $ mK 4) $ S.fromList [(1,2),(1,3),(2,3)]
3
*Data.Matroid S> coRk (dual $ mK 4) $ S.fromList [(1,2),(1,3),(2,3)]
2
Of course, we got U_{4,2}, too:
*Data.Matroid S> uniform 4 2
uniformOn (fromList [1,2,3,4]) 2
User-defined matroids
This library is most useful for implementing your own matroid types and make them an instance of Matroid m a
.
Here, the type m
corresponds to a class of matroids, and the type a
corresponds to the type of the matroid
elements. Thus a matroid always has a type of the form m a
. This makes sense because matroids arise in a lot of very
different situations, and it is important to be able to distinguish a graphic matroid where the edges are of type (Int,Int)
,
from a linear matroid with the same edge type. In the graphic case, we would interpret the matroid elements as edges in a graph,
in the latter we might interpret the elements as vectors over a finite field.
In Data.Matroid.Ops
we define a parametrized type AMatroid a
that represents the notion of an abstract matroid,
which hides away the internals of the different matroid types from us, but also provides us with a way to accept any matroid
with elements of a given type as a parameter. You can convert any Matroid m a
to AMatroid a
with the abstract
method. The instance definiton Matroid AMatroid a
can be found in the Data.Matroid.Typeclass
module. We would
like to mention that the default implementations of the various methods offered by the matroid typeclass Matroid m a
are bounced back to AMatroid a
where they are defined.
Writing a new Matroid m a
instance is quite simple: you have to implement the groundset :: (m a) -> Set a
routine
which returns the set of all elements of your matroid, and at least one of the following methods:
a) rk :: (m a) -> Set a -> Int
which should return the rank of a set of matroid elements,
b) indep :: (m a) -> Set a -> Bool
which should determine whether a set of matroid elements is independent,
c) basis :: (m a) -> Set a -> Set a
which should determine an independent subset with maximal cardinality.
Once you have done this, all the other methods are provided by the library. It is advisable to also use one or more
of the test suites provided in the Test.Matroid
module to verify that your implementation is indeed a matroid.
The matroidSuite
also needs your matroid instance to be an instance of Show (m a)
.
Here is a minimal implementation of a rank 3 uniform matroid on the characters 'a' to 'g':
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, MultiParamTypeClasses #-}
import Data.Matroid
import qualified Data.Set as S
import Test.Hspec
import Test.QuickCheck
import Test.Matroid
data MyMatroid a = MyMatroid
instance Matroid MyMatroid Char where
groundset m = S.fromList "abcdefg"
rk MyMatroid x = min 3 $ length x
instance Show (MyMatroid Char) where
show MyMatroid = "MyMatroid"
{- end of minimal implementation -}
m :: MyMatroid Char
m = MyMatroid
main :: IO ()
main = hspec (matroidSuite $ return m)
How to run the library tests
Download and extract the sources to a directory of your liking. Then run
stack clean && stack build --test --coverage
Browse the docs
Download and extract the sources to a directory of your liking. Then run
stack haddock --open .
Contributing
Upload your changes and create a pull request on the github repo.