cities
    
    
    
      cities,
      a C++ code which 
      works with problems involving the distance between a set of cities
      on a map.
    
    
      Such problems include:
      
        - 
          traveling salesman problems (connected path through every city);
        
 
        - 
          K-means calculations (find M spots that minimize total of the
          distance from each city to its nearest spot);
        
 
        - 
          K-medians calculations (make M of the cities "special", to minimize
          the total distance from each city to its nearest special city);
        
 
        - 
          Weighted K-means or K-medians (let the population of each city
          be used as a weight, which makes some cities more important);
        
 
        - 
          Minimal spanning trees (construct the shortest highway
          system that connects all the cities, using only straight paths
          from one city to another (ignore the possibility that two roads
          could cross, or that a Y-shaped connector between three cities
          might be cheaper);
        
 
        - 
          Voronoi diagrams (assign each spot of land to the nearest city,
          making "provinces");
        
 
      
    
    
      Licensing:
    
    
      The information on this web page is distributed under the MIT license.
    
    
      Languages:
    
    
    
      cities is available in
      a C++ version and
      a Fortran90 version and
      a MATLAB version and
      an Octave version.
    
    
    
      Related Data and Programs:
    
    
      
      cities_test
    
    
      
      asa058, 
      a C++ code which
      contains the original text of the Sparks clustering algorithm.
    
    
      
      asa136, 
      a C++ code which
      implements the K-Means algorithm.
    
    
      
      cities, 
      a dataset directory which 
      contains a number of city distance datasets.
    
    
      
      floyd, 
      a C++ code which
      implements Floyd's algorithm for finding the shortest distance between 
      pairs of nodes on a directed graph.
    
    
      
      kmeans, 
      a C++ code which
      treats the K-means
      problem of grouping a discrete set of N points into K clusters.
    
    
      
      point_merge, 
      a C++ code which
      considers N points in M dimensional space, and counts or indexes
      the unique or "tolerably unique" items.
    
    
      
      spaeth,
      a dataset collection which
      contains a set of test data.
    
    
      
      spaeth2,  
      a dataset collection which
      contains a set of test data.
    
    
      
      tsp, 
      a dataset directory which 
      contains test data for the traveling salesperson problem;
    
    
      Reference:
    
    
      
        - 
          Franz Aurenhammer,
          Voronoi diagrams - 
          a study of a fundamental geometric data structure,
          ACM Computing Surveys,
          Volume 23, Number 3, pages 345-405, September 1991.
         
        - 
          John Burkardt, Max Gunzburger, Janet Peterson, Rebecca Brannon,
          User Manual and Supporting Information for Library of Codes
          for Centroidal Voronoi Placement and Associated Zeroth,
          First, and Second Moment Determination,
          Sandia National Laboratories Technical Report SAND2002-0099,
          February 2002.
         
        - 
          Marc de Berg, Marc Krevald, Mark Overmars, 
          Otfried Schwarzkopf,
          Computational Geometry,
          Springer, 2000.
         
        - 
          Qiang Du, Vance Faber, Max Gunzburger,
          Centroidal Voronoi Tessellations: Applications and Algorithms,
          SIAM Review, Volume 41, 1999, pages 637-676.
         
        - 
          Alan Gibbons,
          Algorithmic Graph Theory,
          Cambridge University Press, 1985.
         
        - 
          John Hartigan, M A Wong,
          Algorithm AS 136: A K-Means Clustering Algorithm,
          Applied Statistics,
          Volume 28, Number 1, 1979, pages 100-108.
         
        - 
          Barry Joe, 
          GEOMPACK - a software package for the generation of meshes
          using geometric algorithms, 
          Advances in Engineering Software,
          Volume 13, pages 325-331, 1991.
         
        - 
          Hang Tong Lau,
          Algorithms on Graphs,
          Tab Books, 1989.
         
        - 
          Atsuyuki Okabe, Barry Boots, Kokichi Sugihara, Sung Nok Chiu,
          Spatial Tesselations: 
          Concepts and Applications of Voronoi Diagrams,
          Second Edition,
          Wiley, 2000.
         
        - 
          Joseph O'Rourke,
          Computational Geometry,
          Cambridge University Press,
          Second Edition, 1998.
         
        - 
          Helmut Spaeth,
          Cluster Analysis Algorithms
          for Data Reduction and Classification of Objects,
          Ellis Horwood, 1980.
         
        - 
          David Sparks,
          Algorithm AS 58: Euclidean Cluster Analysis,
          Applied Statistics,
          Volume 22, Number 1, 1973,
          pages 126-130.
         
      
    
    
      Source Code:
    
    
      
    
    
    
      Last revised on 19 February 2020.