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The first description of a generalized backtrack search algorithm was in
[35]. Let us first define a restricted version of the search
problem.
Search problem:
Given a collection of sets of candidates
and
a boolean compatibility function
defined for all
and
, find an m-tuple
with
such that
is true for all
.
The m-tuple satisfying the above condition is called a solution.
The term compatibility was first introduced by Carter in 1974
[9]. This version is restricted because the compatibility
function is only defined on ordered pairs rather than on all k-tuples,
.
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For example, if we take
and let
be the set of all
candidates for column i of the incidence matrix of a projective plane,
then
can be defined as

where
denotes the inner product of columns x and
y. A solution is then a complete incidence matrix.
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In a backtrack approach, we generate k-tuples with
. A
k-tuples
is a partial solution at level k
if
is true for all
. The basic idea of the
backtrack approach is to extend a partial solution at level k to
one at level k+1, and if this extension is impossible, then to go back
to the partial solution at level k-1 and attempt to generate a different
partial solution at level k.
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A nice way to organize the information inherent in the partial solutions
is the backtrack search tree. Here, the empty partial solution
is
taken as the root, and the partial solution
is
represented as the child of the partial solution
.
Following the computer science terminology, we often called a partial
solution a node. It is often true that the computing cost of
processing a node is independent of its level k. Under this assumption,
the total computing cost of a search is equal to the number of nodes in
the search tree times the cost of processing a node.
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The number of nodes in the search tree can often be reduced by using the
symmetry or property-preserving operations. If A is the
incidence matrix of a projective plane, then the operations of permuting
the rows and permuting the columns of A correspond only to reordering
the lines and points of the plane. These operations preserve the property
of being a projective plane. To see how they reduce the size of a search
tree, consider the plane of order 10. There are
choices for the first column, corresponding to the number of ways of
placing 11 ones in the 111 rows. By using the row permutations, we can
assume that all these ones are placed on the first 11 rows, reducing the
number of partial solutions
from
to 1.
Mathematicians love to use the phrase ``without loss of generality'' to
indicate a simplification by symmetry operations. So without loss of
generality, the second column has only one choice --- with a one in the
first row and the remaining 10 ones in rows 12 to 21. Now, row 1 has nine
remaining ones. By permuting columns, we can assume that these remaining
ones of row 1 are in columns 3 to 11. Next, by row permutation, the
remaining 10 ones of column 3 can be placed in rows 22 to 31. Continuing
in this manner, it is not difficult to show that there is only one choice
up to column 21. Beyond this point, symmetry operations are difficult to
visualize, because they often involve combinations of row and column
permutations.
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This process of reducing the search tree by using symmetry operations is
called isomorph rejection. Two partial solutions are said to be
isomorphic if there is a symmetry operation mapping one to the other. To
determine whether a solution exists, it is only necessary to extend the
non-isomorphic partial solutions, because if a partial solution can be
extended to a complete solution, then every other isomorphic partial
solution can also be so extended. The testing of whether two partial
solutions are isomorphic is called isomorphism testing. The set of
symmetry operations mapping a partial solution to itself forms an
automorphism group. In the context of projective planes, an automorphism
of a complete solution is also called a collineation.
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The efficient use of the symmetry operations is one of the most difficult
problem in a backtrack search. It is both a blessing and a curse --- a
blessing because there is always hope of further optimization and a curse
because it is the source of many programming errors. However, following
the method of MacWilliams et al., it is clear that the existence
question of the plane of order 10 is headed towards a computer-based
solution and that symmetry consideration is a necessary tool for
efficiency reasons.
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In his 1974 Ph. D. thesis, Carter picked up where MacWilliams et al.
had left off. He showed that there are six possible starting
configurations associated with a codeword of weight 16. By using the
computer, he managed to eliminate four of the cases, as well as one
subcase of the fifth. He used a total of about 100 hours of computer time,
mostly on a CDC 6600 at the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) in
Princeton, New Jersey, and also on a CDC 7600 at the Lawrence Radiation
Laboratories in Berkeley, California. His search investigated about
nodes, or about
nodes per second.
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This was the situation when we entered the picture. While we knew
, the search for weight 16 codewords was about three-quarter
done and the search for weight 12 codewords was presumed to be too
difficult. The person who suggested the problem to us was John Thompson.

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