![](https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/uploaded_files/313976/image.png)
Fmincon does not even try other points other than initial x0
13 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Conrado Neto
am 10 Jun. 2020
Kommentiert: Conrado Neto
am 11 Jun. 2020
I am running into a problem I cannot understand,
I have an objective function that uses some external .exe programs to obtain its value, thus I believe a complex one
I ask matlab to provide the x values being used in the objective function at each iteration, and for some reason, fmincon always uses the exact same values of x0 several times, and then it says it found that the initial point is the local optimal.
wasn't fmincon supposed to try other values of x before getting to that final result? what could I be doing wrong?
- I tried the same code using ga and it does try different x and gives different results at each iteration, for that reason I believe the code I used for fmincon should not have any basic mistake (such as the objective function being constant).
thanks,
0 Kommentare
Akzeptierte Antwort
Matt J
am 11 Jun. 2020
Bearbeitet: Matt J
am 11 Jun. 2020
wasn't fmincon supposed to try other values of x before getting to that final result?
No, fmincon is a gradient-based solver (unlike ga) so if x0 is feasible and the gradient there is already zero, then fmincon has no reason to try other points. Often this happens because you have discretization operations like round() or ceil() in your objective function, which make it locally flat almost everwhere. For example, this 1D function is locally flat at all points except the integers:
fun=@(x) floor(x);
opts=optimoptions('fmincon','Display','none');
fplot(fun,[0,5]); xlabel 'x', ylabel 'Objective'
![](https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/uploaded_files/313976/image.png)
and therefore almost any initial point you choose will be locally optimal,
>> fmincon(fun,1.5,[],[],[],[],0,5,[],opts)
ans =
1.5000
>> fmincon(fun,2.7,[],[],[],[],0,5,[],opts)
ans =
2.7000
>> fmincon(fun,3.99,[],[],[],[],0,5,[],opts)
ans =
3.9900
4 Kommentare
Matt J
am 11 Jun. 2020
Yes, some people manage to address the problem by increasing the DiffMinChange parameter. That way, the finite differencing operations used to calculate gradients will take larger steps. However, I think it is better to trace the cause of the local plateaus in the objective function and remove them.
Weitere Antworten (1)
Alan Weiss
am 11 Jun. 2020
The documentation has some suggestions about this type of thing.
Alan Weiss
MATLAB mathematical toolbox documentation
Siehe auch
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!