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At a gross level, the problem is simple: schedule an army of staff for one-person-per-day coverage, at any given day the staff is split into 3 pools, each staff has a vacation requirement, each staff has at most 2 shifts per week, etc.

I'd hate to do this manually as it has been done at my organization for centuries. I'd love to do something cool like genetic algorithms (eg [1] http://www.sersc.org/journals/IJAST/vol14/1.pdf).

Are there any reliable Open source / free alternatives out there? This also sounds like an optimization problem, can I fire up C++, R, etc to plug into some optimization library for this?

thanks

4 Answers 4

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This is an optimisation problem. It's known as a Scheduling problem, strangely. :-D Depending on the size of the data, you may have to go for Metaheuristics like genetic algorithms, ant swarm optimisation etc, but I would start here by rolling your own rule based heuristic.

Basically, define rules as associations between things (person A cannot be simultaneously on vacation and at work), or conditions on the schedule (only three people at any given time). Then create a schedule, and insert all your staff one by one. If on insertion a rule is broken, then don't insert and pick another staff.

This should, if you do it right, come up with a valid, but less-than-optimal schedule, and you can then do cool stuff like defining operators (swap, move, 3-swap), which will give you a neighbourhood (all the valid schedules which can be reached by application of an operator). You can then choose the best schedule in the neighbourhood, and repeat. This is neighbourhood descent. But there are lots of neighbourhood-based methods to choose from. I believe Simulated Annealing is good when applied to scheduling problems.

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  • Looking at Drools Planner, appears just a few months ago they have moved their simulated annealing algorithm off beta.
    – Ming K
    Mar 5, 2011 at 16:39
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You could try OptaPlanner (was previously called Drools Planner), it's based on Java and open source.

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  • Drools Planner looks like the perfect tool, thanks! It seem highly complex to install however. At the moment having some difficulty trying to put it together, but gosh there are so many components unknown to me here.
    – Ming K
    Mar 5, 2011 at 16:34
  • @Ming What kind of problems are you encountering? I 'd like to know, so we can improve the experience. The easiest way to try it out is to download the planner zip and to run runExamples.bat/.sh. Take a look at the reference manual how to use it from maven etc. Mar 7, 2011 at 8:02
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You might be also interested in constraint programming frameworks, many of which are open source such as Choco (Java), Gecode (C++) and others which have been used for these types of problems too, though I agree with ravloony that it might be worthwhile checking if an algorithm in the style he mentioned might do the trick for the problem you described.

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As there is only one person per day, this seems like it could be setup as a integer/binary programming problem. There are many packages that do integer programming. The tricky part of these problems, regardless of what method you decide to use to solve them, is finding a concise way of specifying the constraints of the problem. In this case, what exactly are the vacation requirements, etc.

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