Tiling with Squares and Packing Dominos in Polynomial Time

11/22/2020
by   Anders Aamand, et al.
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We consider planar tiling and packing problems with polyomino pieces and a polyomino container P. A polyomino is a polygonal region with axis parallel edges and corners of integral coordinates, which may have holes. We give two polynomial time algorithms, one for deciding if P can be tiled with 2× 2 squares (that is, deciding if P is the union of a set of non-overlapping copies of the 2× 2 square) and one for packing P with a maximum number of non-overlapping and axis-parallel 2× 1 dominos, allowing rotations of 90^∘. As packing is more general than tiling, the latter algorithm can also be used to decide if P can be tiled by 2× 1 dominos. These are classical problems with important applications in VLSI design, and the related problem of finding a maximum packing of 2× 2 squares is known to be NP-Hard [J. Algorithms 1990]. For our three problems there are known pseudo-polynomial time algorithms, that is, algorithms with running times polynomial in the area of P. However, the standard, compact way to represent a polygon is by listing the coordinates of the corners in binary. We use this representation, and thus present the first polynomial time algorithms for the problems. Concretely, we give a simple O(nlog n) algorithm for tiling with squares, and a more involved O(n^4) algorithm for packing and tiling with dominos.

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