This package contains a series of utilities to work with the utility functions produced by this utility function extractor.
yarn add utility-tools
then in your file:
import { mergeSort, findPaths, aggregatePaths } from "utility-tools";
You can find an example how to use and concatenate these functions in /src/example.js
, as well as an example of the input format needed in the input
folder.
Given a list of elements and a list of utilitity comparisons, sort the list. If there are not enough comparisons to implement the merge sort algorithm, return one of the missing comparisons.
Gotcha: The list of elements has to be the same list, and in the same order, as that produced when initially doing the comparisons. This is because the merge-sort algorithm depends on the initial order of the list.
Given an (ordered) list of elements and a list of utility comparisons, find all possible monotonous paths from each element to each other. A monotonous path is a path that is either all increasing or all decreasing, relative to the ordering given.
Note: Some elements will have many more paths than others.
Note: The findPaths.js
file has a few un-used functions which should make it easier to understand the code.
Given a list of path, aggregate them to finally produce an estimate of the relative utility of each element.
There are two ways of doing this:
-
- Aggregate the means (expected values) for each path.
- This method is fast
- But has the disadvantage the expected value aggregation is tricky, particularly if one of the elements is positive and the other one negative (because then one can't)
-
- Aggregate the distributions given for each path.
I don't have any additions planned for this repository.
Feel free to shoot me any questions at nuno.semperelh@protonmail.com