5 research outputs found

    Production Scheduling

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    Generally speaking, scheduling is the procedure of mapping a set of tasks or jobs (studied objects) to a set of target resources efficiently. More specifically, as a part of a larger planning and scheduling process, production scheduling is essential for the proper functioning of a manufacturing enterprise. This book presents ten chapters divided into five sections. Section 1 discusses rescheduling strategies, policies, and methods for production scheduling. Section 2 presents two chapters about flow shop scheduling. Section 3 describes heuristic and metaheuristic methods for treating the scheduling problem in an efficient manner. In addition, two test cases are presented in Section 4. The first uses simulation, while the second shows a real implementation of a production scheduling system. Finally, Section 5 presents some modeling strategies for building production scheduling systems. This book will be of interest to those working in the decision-making branches of production, in various operational research areas, as well as computational methods design. People from a diverse background ranging from academia and research to those working in industry, can take advantage of this volume

    Scheduling incompatible tasks on two machines

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    The paper studies the problem of scheduling tasks on two machines to minimize the makespan. The tasks are assigned to the machine in advance. An incompatibility relation is defined over the tasks which forbids any two incompatible tasks to be processed at the same time. The problem can serve as a mathematical model for some batching problems in which the jobs are grouped in pairs on two machines. A linear-time algorithm is presented.Two machine scheduling Incompatibility graph Max-batch Polynomial algorithm
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