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Thanks for filling this gap! I have three suggestions:


You're welcome. Of your three bullets, I'd have no problem with the first and third. Feel free to implement those.

For the second bullet, I had said NP-complete problems are the hardest in NP in the first sentence of my article, but wanted to give some caveats to that near the end. I was trying to address a misconception I've seen before. Some people think that the definition of NP-complete is "the most difficult problems in NP". They are then confused when they learn that there might be NP problems with the same time complexity that aren't in NP-complete. They are even more confused when they learn that there may be an NP problem that is not in NP-complete, but that is more difficult than a given NP-complete problem by a factor of O(n^1000).

If we want an intuitive description of NP-complete, I'd recommend "the NP problems most likely to be superpolynomial" rather than "the hardest problems in NP". Yes, I do sometimes use the phrase "the hardest problems in NP" with my students, but I then go on to give the caveats that I gave in that article. I then say "most likely to be difficult" rather than "the most difficult". That seems to work well. YMMV. -LC


I see. Yes, we explain in what sense the NP-complete problems are the "toughest" and that there may non-complete problems with even longer running times.

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Last edited August 24, 2001 12:52 pm by LC (diff)
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