Set splitting problem

In computational complexity theory, the set splitting problem is the following decision problem: given a family F of subsets of a finite set S, decide whether there exists a partition of S into two subsets S1, S2 such that all elements of F are split by this partition, i.e., none of the elements of F is completely in S1 or S2. Set Splitting is one of Garey & Johnson's classical NP-complete problems. The problem is sometimes called hypergraph 2-colorability.

Variants
The optimization version of this problem is called max set splitting and requires finding the partition which maximizes the number of split elements of F. It is an APX-complete problem and hence in NPO.

The set k-splitting problem is stated as follows: given S, F, and an integer k, does there exist a partition of S which splits at least k subsets of F? The original formulation is the restricted case with k equal to the cardinality of F. The Set k-Splitting is fixed-parameter tractable, i.e., if k taken to be a fixed parameter, rather than a part of the input, then a polynomial algorithm exists for any fixed k. Dehne, Fellows and Rosamond presented an algorithm that solves it in time $$O(f(k) n^c)$$ for some function f and constant c.

When each element of F is restricted to be of cardinality exactly k, the decision variant is called Ek-set splitting and the optimization version max Ek-set splitting. For k > 2 the former remains NP complete, and for k ≥ 2 the latter remains APX complete. For k ≥ 4, Ek-Set Splitting is approximation resistant. That is, unless P=NP, there is no polynomial-time (factor) approximation algorithm which does essentially better than a random partition.

The weighted set splitting is a variant in which the subsets in F have weights and the objective is to maximize the total weight of the split subsets.

Connection to other problems
Set splitting is special case of the not-all-equal satisfiability problem without negated variables. Additionally, Ek-set splitting equals non-monochromatic graph coloring of k-uniform hypergraphs. For k=2, the optimization variant reduces to the well-known maximum cut.