This is based on an article I read about puzzles and interview questions asked by large software companies, but it has a twist...
General question:
What is an algorithm to seat people in a movie theater so that they sit directly beside their friends but not beside their enemies.
Technical question:
Given an N by M grid, fill the grid with N * M - 1 items. Each item has an association Boolean value for each of the other N * M - 2 items. In each row of N, items directly beside other items should have a positive association value for the other. Columns however do not matter, i.e. an item can be "enemies" with the item in front of it. Note: If item A has a positive association value for B, then that means B also has a positive association value for A. It works the same for negative association values. An item is guarenteed to have a positive association with atleast one other item. Also, you have access to all of the items and their association values before you start placing them in the grid.
Comments:
I have been researching this problem and thinking about it since yesterday, from what I have found it reminds me of the bin packing problem with some added requirements. In some free time I attempted to implement it, but large groups of "enemies" were sitting next to each other. I am sure that most situations will have to have atleast one pair of enemies sitting next to each other, but my solution was far from optimal. It actually looked as if I had just randomized it.
As far as my implementation went, I made N = 10, M = 10, the number of items = 99, and had an array of size 99 for EACH item that had a randomized Boolean value that referred to the friendship of the corresponding item number. This means that each item had a friendship value that corresponded with their self as well, I just ignored that value.
I plan on trying to reimplement this again later and I will post the code. Can anyone figure out a "good" way to do this to minimize seating clashes between enemies?