P (complexity)
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In computational complexity theory, P is the complexity class containing decision problems which can be solved by a deterministic Turing machine using a polynomial amount of computation time, or polynomial time.
P is often taken to be the class of computational problems which are "efficiently solvable" or "tractable", although there are potentially larger classes that are also considered tractable such as RP and BPP. Also, there exist problems in P which are intractable in practical terms; for example, some require at least n1000000 operations. See even harder problems of complexity classes for further discussion.
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[edit] Notable problems in P
P is known to contain many natural problems, including the decision versions of linear programming, calculating the greatest common divisor, and finding a maximum matching. In 2002, it was shown that the problem of determining if a number is prime is in P.[1] The related class of function problems is FP.
Several natural problems are complete for P, including reachability on alternating graphs [2]. The article on [[P-complete problems]] lists further relevant problems in P.
[edit] Relationships to other classes
A generalization of P is NP, which is the class of languages decidable in polynomial time on a non-deterministic Turing machine. We then trivially have P is a subset of NP. Though unproven, most experts believe this is a strict subset.[3]
P is also known to be at least as large as L, the class of problems decidable in a logarithmic amount of memory space. A decider using O(log n) space cannot use more than 2O(log n)=nO(1) time, because this is the total number of possible configurations; thus, L is a subset of P. Another important problem is whether L = P. We do know that P = AL, the set of problems solvable in logarithmic memory by alternating Turing machines. P is also known to be no larger than PSPACE, the class of problems decidable in polynomial space. Again, whether P = PSPACE is an open problem. To summarize:
Here, EXPTIME is the class of problems solvable in exponential time. Of all the classes shown above, only two strict containments are known:
- P is strictly contained in EXPTIME. Consequently, all EXPTIME-hard problems lie outside P, and at least one of the containments to the right of P above is strict (in fact, it is widely believed that all three are strict).
- L is strictly contained in PSPACE.
The most difficult problems in P are P-complete problems.
Another generalization of P is P/poly, or Nonuniform Polynomial-Time. If a problem is in P/poly, then it can be solved in deterministic polynomial time provided that an advice string is given that depends only on the length of the input. Unlike for NP, however, the polynomial-time machine doesn't need to detect fraudulent advice strings; it is not a verifier. P/poly is a large class containing nearly all practical algorithms, including all of BPP. If it contains NP, then the polynomial hierarchy collapses to the second level. On the other hand, it also contains some impractical algorithms, including some undecidable problems such as the unary version of any undecidable problem.
[edit] Properties
Polynomial-time algorithms are closed under composition. Intuitively, this says that if I write a function which is polynomial-time assuming that function calls are constant-time, and if those called functions themselves require polynomial time, then the entire algorithm takes polynomial time. One consequence of this is that P is low for itself. This is also one of the main reasons that P is considered to be a machine-independent class; any machine "feature", such as random access, which can be simulated in polynomial time can simply be composed with the main polynomial-time algorithm to reduce it to a polynomial-time algorithm on a more basic machine.
[edit] History
Kozen[4] states that Cobham and Edmonds are "generally credited with the invention of the notion of polynomial time".
[edit] References
- ^ Manindra Agrawal, Neeraj Kayal, Nitin Saxena, "PRIMES is in P", Annals of Mathematics 160 (2004), no. 2, pp. 781–793.
- ^ Immerman, Neil (1999). Descriptive Complexity. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-98600-6.
- ^ Johnsonbaugh, Richard; Schaefer, Marcus, Algorithms, 2004 Pearson Education, page 458, ISBN 0-02-360692-4
- ^ Kozen, Dexter C. (2006). Theory of Computation. Springer, 4. ISBN 1-84628-297-7.
- C. Papadimitriou. Computational Complexity. Addison-Wesley, 1994. ISBN 0-201-53082-1.
- Complexity Zoo: P, P/poly
- Thomas H. Cormen, Charles E. Leiserson, Ronald L. Rivest, and Clifford Stein. Introduction to Algorithms, Second Edition. MIT Press and McGraw-Hill, 2001. ISBN 0-262-03293-7. Section 34.1: Polynomial time, pp.971–979.
- Michael Sipser (1997). Introduction to the Theory of Computation. PWS Publishing. ISBN 0-534-94728-X. Section 7.2: The Class P, pp.234–241.
Important complexity classes (more) |
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P • NP • co-NP • NP-C • co-NP-C • NP-hard • UP • #P • #P-C • L • NL • NC • P-C • PSPACE • PSPACE-C • EXPTIME • EXPSPACE • PR • RE • Co-RE • RE-C • Co-RE-C • R • BQP • BPP • RP • ZPP • PCP • IP • PH |