One-Hot to Integer Conversion
A one-hot vector is a binary vector in which exactly one element is 1 and all others are 0. The position of the 1 encodes an integer value. For example, ${0,0,1,0}$ represents the integer 2.
The global function qbpp::onehot_to_int() decodes one-hot encoded rows in an integer array and returns an array of integers indicating the positions of the 1s.
Basic Usage (2D Array)
For a 2D array of size $n \times m$, onehot_to_int() decodes each row and returns a 1D array of $n$ integers, each in the range $[0, m-1]$. If a row is not a valid one-hot vector (i.e., it does not contain exactly one 1), the function returns $-1$ for that row.
#include <qbpp/qbpp.hpp>
#include <qbpp/easy_solver.hpp>
int main() {
const size_t n = 5, m = 5;
auto x = qbpp::var("x", n, m);
// One-hot constraint: each row has exactly one 1
auto onehot = qbpp::sum(qbpp::sqr(qbpp::vector_sum(x) - 1));
// All-different constraint: each column has exactly one 1
auto alldiff = qbpp::sum(qbpp::sqr(qbpp::vector_sum(x, 0) - 1));
auto f = onehot + alldiff;
f.simplify_as_binary();
auto solver = qbpp::easy_solver::EasySolver(f);
auto sol = solver.search({{"target_energy", 0}});
std::cout << "x =\n" << sol(x) << std::endl;
auto result = qbpp::onehot_to_int(sol(x));
std::cout << "onehot_to_int = " << result << std::endl;
}
This program defines a $5 \times 5$ permutation matrix and decodes it into a permutation:
x =
{{0,0,0,1,0},{1,0,0,0,0},{0,0,1,0,0},{0,1,0,0,0},{0,0,0,0,1}}
onehot_to_int = {3,0,2,1,4}
Specifying the Axis
By default, onehot_to_int() decodes along the last axis (axis=-1). You can specify any axis using onehot_to_int(arr, axis). Negative indices are also supported: axis -1 refers to the last axis, -2 to the second-to-last, and so on.
For a 2D array of size $n \times m$:
onehot_to_int(arr)oronehot_to_int(arr, 1): decodes each row, returns $n$ integers in $[0, m-1]$.onehot_to_int(arr, 0): decodes each column, returns $m$ integers in $[0, n-1]$.
auto row_result = qbpp::onehot_to_int(sol(x)); // {3,0,2,1,4}
auto col_result = qbpp::onehot_to_int(sol(x), 0); // {1,3,2,0,4}
When x is a permutation matrix, onehot_to_int(sol(x)) gives the permutation $\sigma$, and onehot_to_int(sol(x), 0) gives its inverse $\sigma^{-1}$.
1D Input
For a 1D array of size $m$, onehot_to_int() returns a single integer (the position of the 1), or $-1$ if the input is not a valid one-hot vector.
auto v = qbpp::var("v", 4);
// ... solve so that v = {0, 0, 1, 0} ...
auto idx = qbpp::onehot_to_int(sol(v)); // returns 2
Higher-Dimensional Arrays
For arrays with dimension $d \geq 3$, onehot_to_int() decodes along the specified axis and returns an array with dimension $d - 1$. For example, for a $2 \times 3 \times 4$ array:
onehot_to_int(arr)oronehot_to_int(arr, 2): decode along axis 2 (last), result shape $2 \times 3$.onehot_to_int(arr, 1): decode along axis 1, result shape $2 \times 4$.onehot_to_int(arr, 0): decode along axis 0, result shape $3 \times 4$.
Summary
| Input Shape | Axis | Output Shape | Value Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| $(m)$ | — | scalar | $[0, m-1]$ or $-1$ |
| $(d_0 \times \cdots \times d_{n-1})$ | $k$ | all dims except $d_k$ | $[0, d_k-1]$ or $-1$ |