English

Arithmetic Expression Construction

Computational Complexity 2020-11-25 v1

Abstract

When can nn given numbers be combined using arithmetic operators from a given subset of {+,,×,÷}\{+, -, \times, \div\} to obtain a given target number? We study three variations of this problem of Arithmetic Expression Construction: when the expression (1) is unconstrained; (2) has a specified pattern of parentheses and operators (and only the numbers need to be assigned to blanks); or (3) must match a specified ordering of the numbers (but the operators and parenthesization are free). For each of these variants, and many of the subsets of {+,,×,÷}\{+,-,\times,\div\}, we prove the problem NP-complete, sometimes in the weak sense and sometimes in the strong sense. Most of these proofs make use of a "rational function framework" which proves equivalence of these problems for values in rational functions with values in positive integers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2011.11767,
  title  = {Arithmetic Expression Construction},
  author = {Leo Alcock and Sualeh Asif and Jeffrey Bosboom and Josh Brunner and Charlotte Chen and Erik D. Demaine and Rogers Epstein and Adam Hesterberg and Lior Hirschfeld and William Hu and Jayson Lynch and Sarah Scheffler and Lillian Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2011.11767},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

36 pages, 5 figures. Full version of paper accepted to 31st International Symposium on Algorithms and Computation (ISAAC 2020)