elx {adana} | R Documentation |
Extended-Line Crossover (ELX)
Description
With the Extended-Line Crossover (ELX) operator, offspring are generated on a line determined by the variable values in the parental chromosomes. ELX identifies the possible line from which offspring can be generated.
Usage
elx(x1, x2, lb, ub, cxon, cxealfa, ...)
Arguments
x1 |
A vector. It contains the chromosomal information of parent-1. |
x2 |
A vector. It contains the chromosomal information of parent-2. |
lb |
A vector. Lower bounds of each gene in the chromosomes. |
ub |
A vector. Upper bounds of each gene in the chromosomes. |
cxon |
Number of offspring to be generated as a result of crossover |
cxealfa |
A number. Expansion rate |
... |
Further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
Value
A matrix containing the generated offsprings.
Author(s)
Zeynel Cebeci & Erkut Tekeli
See Also
cross
,
px1
,
kpx
,
sc
,
rsc
,
hux
,
ux
,
ux2
,
mx
,
rrc
,
disc
,
atc
,
cpc
,
eclc
,
raoc
,
dc
,
ax
,
hc
,
sax
,
wax
,
lax
,
bx
,
ebx
,
blxa
,
blxab
,
lapx
,
geomx
,
spherex
,
pmx
,
mpmx
,
upmx
,
ox
,
ox2
,
mpx
,
erx
,
pbx
,
pbx2
,
cx
,
icx
,
smc
Examples
lb = c(0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0)
ub = c(2, 3, 1, 2, 4, 3)
parent1 = c(1.1, 1.6, 0.0, 1.1, 1.4, 1.2)
parent2 = c(1.2, 0.0, 0.0, 1.5, 1.2, 1.4)
elx(parent1, parent2, lb, ub, cxealfa=1000)