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by seanmcdirmid
4194 days ago
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Sticking to Newtonian rather than using quantum physics can avoid the spooky action at a distance problem (I know this isn't what you meant, but I couldn't resist). Actually, constraints are quite explicit compared to imperative assignments. |
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I believe that constraints are explicit, but their cumulative effect is difficult to predict. A constraint which wipes out some part of the feasible space with lots of vertices can have sudden and dramatic (non-local) impact on the solution. If your solver is approximate or your solution non-linear it might be incredibly difficult to figure out where the solver will ultimately land.