By default, given a training set of instantes, MIPLearn trains a fixed set of ML classifiers and regressors, then selects the best one based on cross-validation performance. Alternatively, the user may specify which ML model a component should use through the `classifier` or `regressor` contructor parameters. Scikit-learn classifiers and regressors are currently supported. A future version of the package will add compatibility with Keras models.
By default, given a training set of instantes, MIPLearn trains a fixed set of ML classifiers and regressors, then selects the best one based on cross-validation performance. Alternatively, the user may specify which ML model a component should use through the `classifier` or `regressor` contructor parameters. Scikit-learn classifiers and regressors are currently supported. A future version of the package will add compatibility with Keras models.
The example below shows how to construct a `PrimalSolutionComponent` which internally uses scikit-learn's `KNeighborsClassifiers`. Any other scikit-learn classifier or pipeline can be used. The classifier needs to be provided as a lambda function because the component may need to create multiple copies of it. It needs to be wrapped in `ScikitLearnClassifier` to ensure that all the proper data transformations are applied.
The example below shows how to construct a `PrimalSolutionComponent` which internally uses scikit-learn's `KNeighborsClassifiers`. Any other scikit-learn classifier or pipeline can be used. It needs to be wrapped in `ScikitLearnClassifier` to ensure that all the proper data transformations are applied.
```python
```python
from miplearn import PrimalSolutionComponent, ScikitLearnClassifier
from miplearn import PrimalSolutionComponent, ScikitLearnClassifier
from sklearn.neighbors import KNeighborsClassifier
from sklearn.neighbors import KNeighborsClassifier