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Let $P\subset\mathbb{R}^n$ be a convex polyhedron described as an intersection of hyperspaces, that is, $$P:=\{\boldsymbol{x}: A\boldsymbol{x} \leq \boldsymbol{b}\}$$

Let $\boldsymbol{x} \in P$. We know from Caratheodory theorem that $\boldsymbol{x}$ can be written as a convex combination of at most $n+1$ extreme points of $P$. Is there an efficient algorithm, possibly already implemented in mathematical software such as MATLAB or SCIPY, that performs this decomposition ? That is, an algorithm that finds extreme points $\boldsymbol{p}_1,\ldots,\boldsymbol{p}_{n+1}$ of $P$ together with weights $\boldsymbol{w} \in \mathbb{R}_+^{n+1}$ satisfying $$\boldsymbol{x} = \sum_{i=1}^{n+1} w_i \boldsymbol{p}_i,\quad \sum_{i=1}^{n+1} w_i = 1.$$

Note 1

Intuitvely I think that the construction of such an algorithm is not very complicated. We can start by expressing $\boldsymbol{x}$ as a barycenter of one extreme point of $P$ (say $\boldsymbol{p}_1$), and one point situated on a face of $P$ (say $\boldsymbol{p}_2$). Then, we can continue inductively, by doing the same with $\boldsymbol{p}_2$ which lives in a face of dimension at most $(n-1)$. I wonder if such operations could be done by some kind of pivoting operations on the matrix $A$, like in the simplex algorithm ?

Note 2

For simplicity I assumed that $P$ is bounded, but the same question is of course valid for a unbounded polyhedron, with a description of $\mathbb{x}$ as "convex combination of extreme points" plus "conic combination of extreme rays".

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    $\begingroup$ It seems that proofs of Caratheodory's theorem are constructive. E.g., this one from RadhaKrishna Ganti's blog. Perhaps it could be turned into an algorithm? $\endgroup$ Aug 25, 2015 at 12:19
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    $\begingroup$ This proof is constructive, but it assumes that $P$ is given by its extreme points, not as an intersection of hyperspaces. $\endgroup$
    – guigux
    Aug 26, 2015 at 14:25
  • $\begingroup$ I realized this question is related to ( mathoverflow.net/questions/88457), although it is not clearly stated there whether $P$ is given by a $H-$ or a $V-$description. The answer of Gerhard Paseman to this question seems to be the same idea as what I described in the **Note 1**, but I think it involves solving a sequence of $O(n)$ LPs, can't we do better ? $\endgroup$
    – guigux
    Aug 26, 2015 at 14:35

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