grsm
Find the constrained minima of a real multi-objective function.
Syntax
x = grsm(@func,x0)
x = grsm(@func,x0,A,b)
x = grsm(@func,x0,A,b,Aeq,beq)
x = grsm(@func,x0,A,b,Aeq,beq,lb,ub)
x = grsm(@func,x0,A,b,Aeq,beq,lb,ub,nonlcon)
x = grsm(@func,x0,A,b,Aeq,beq,lb,ub,nonlcon,options)
[x,fval,info,output] = grsm(...)
Inputs
- func
- The function to minimize.
- x0
- An estimate of the location of a minimum.
- A
- A matrix used to compute
A*x
for inequality contraints. - b
- The upper bound of the inequality constraints
A*x<=b
. - Aeq
- A matrix used to compute
Aeq*x
for equality contraints. - beq
- The upper bound of the equality constraints
Aeq*x=beq
. - lb
- The design variable lower bounds.
- ub
- The design variable upper bounds.
- nonlcon
- The non-linear constraints function.
- options
- A struct containing options settings.
Outputs
- x
- The locations of the multi-objective minima.
- fval
- The multi-objective function minima.
- info
- The convergence status flag.
- output
- A struct containing iteration details. The members are as follows.
- Pareto
- A logical matrix indicating which samples belong to the Pareto Front. Each column contains the front information for an iteration.
- nfev
- The number of function evaluations.
- xiter
- The candidate solution at each iteration.
- fvaliter
- The objective function values at each iteration.
- coniter
- The constraint values at each iteration. The columns will contain the constraint
function values in the following order:
- linear inequality contraints
- linear equality constraints
- nonlinear inequality contraints
- nonlinear equality constraints
Example
function obj = ObjFunc(x)
obj = zeros(2,1);
obj(1) = 2*(x(1)-3)^2 + 4*(x(2)-2)^2 + 6;
obj(2) = 2*(x(1)-3)^2 + 4*(x(2)+2)^2 + 6;
end
init = [2; 0];
lowerBound = [1, -5];
upperBound = [5, 5];
options = grsmoptimset('MaxIter', 50);
[x,fval,info,output] = grsm(@ObjFunc,init,[],[],[],[],lowerBound,upperBound,[],options);
obj1 = output.fvaliter(:,1);
obj2 = output.fvaliter(:,2);
scatter(obj1, obj2);
hold on;
obj1P = fval(:,1);
obj2P = fval(:,2);
scatter(obj1P, obj2P);
legend('Iteration History','Pareto Front');
Comments
grsm uses a Global Response Surface Method.
To pass additional parameters to a function argument, use an anonymous function.
See the fmincon optimization tutorial, Activate-4030: Optimization Algorithms in OML, for an example with nonlinear constraints.
- Display: 'off'
- InitSamPnts: min(20,n+2)
- MaxFail: 20000
- MaxIter: 50
- PntsPerIter: 2
- Seed: 0
- StopNoImpr: 1000
- TolCon: 0.5 (%)