You can use the m.Array
function in gekko. I don't recommend that you use the np.triu()
with the Gekko array because the eliminated variables will still solve but potentially be hidden from the results. Here is a solution:
import numpy as np
import scipy.optimize as opt
from gekko import GEKKO
p= np.array([4, 5, 6.65, 12]) #p = prices
pmx = np.triu(p - p[:, np.newaxis]) #pmx = price matrix, upper triangular
m = GEKKO(remote=False)
q = m.Array(m.Var,(4,4),lb=0,ub=10)
# only upper triangular can change
for i in range(4):
for j in range(4):
if j<=i:
q[i,j].upper=0 # set upper bound = 0
def profit(q):
profit = np.sum(q.flatten() * pmx.flatten())
return profit
for i in range(4):
m.Equation(np.sum(q[i,:])<=10)
m.Equation(np.sum(q[:,i])<=8)
m.Maximize(profit(q))
m.solve()
print(q)
This gives the solution:
[[[0.0] [2.5432017412] [3.7228765674] [3.7339217013]]
[[0.0] [0.0] [4.2771234426] [4.2660783187]]
[[0.0] [0.0] [0.0] [0.0]]
[[0.0] [0.0] [0.0] [0.0]]]
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