Criss-cross methods: A fresh view on pivot algorithms

Criss-cross methods: A fresh view on pivot algorithms

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Article ID: iaor1999972
Country: Netherlands
Volume: 79
Issue: 1/3
Start Page Number: 369
End Page Number: 395
Publication Date: Oct 1997
Journal: Mathematical Programming
Authors: ,
Keywords: programming: linear
Abstract:

Criss-cross methods are pivot algorithms that solve linear programming problems in one phase starting with any basic solution. The first finite criss-cross method was invented by Chang, Terlaky and Wang independently. Unlike the simplex method that follows a monotonic edge path on the feasible region, the trace of a criss-cross method is neither monotonic (with respect to the objective function) nor feasibility preserving. The main purpose of this paper is to present mathematical ideas and proof techniques behind finite criss-cross pivot methods. A recent result on the existence of a short admissible pivot path to an optimal basis is given, indicating shortest pivot paths from any basis might be indeed short for criss-cross type algorithms. The origins and the history of criss-cross methods are also touched upon.

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