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LING 388: Language and Computers Sandiway Fong Lecture 2: 8/24.

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Presentation on theme: "LING 388: Language and Computers Sandiway Fong Lecture 2: 8/24."— Presentation transcript:

1 LING 388: Language and Computers Sandiway Fong Lecture 2: 8/24

2 Slides on Homepage http://dingo.sbs.arizona.edu/~sandiway/ Courses LING 388

3 Administrivia LING 388 Homework #1 –handed out today –submit homework by email sandiway@email.arizona.edu –arrive in my mailbox by midnight Thursday August 31st –see lecture 1 slides for general policy about write-ups –you should collect all your answers to the homework exercises into one file put your name on the homework use Microsoft Word or plain text (something I can easily read) Adobe PDF is also acceptable

4 Today’s Topic first hands-on experience using SWI-Prolog –SWI-Prolog is already installed on all the lab machines –via Program menu

5 Today’s Topic Gentle hands-on introduction to Prolog –a powerful tool for writing grammars –grammars that can also be run on a computer

6 Some Background Prolog = Programming in Logic –Horn clause logic (subset of first-order predicate calculus) –roots in Mechanical Theorem Proving Resolution Rule (Robinson, 65) –invented in the early 1970s –designed to support natural language processing … has grammar rules –has been taught to schoolkids

7 Prolog is a Database Prolog can be used to store a list of facts –facts are things that are true in Prolog’s world –initially Prolog’s world is empty We can look up facts just like in a database –mechanism is a Prolog database query Usage –We can store facts in the database by using assert –e.g. assert(bird(tweety)). adds fact bird(tweety). to the Prolog world Example Facts in the database bird(tweety). “tweety is a bird” bird(woody). “woody is a bird” Database queries ?- bird(tweety).Yes ?- bird(daffy).No Jargon –bird is a predicate –the predicate bird has one argument –e.g. tweety and woody are arguments of the predicate bird –bird(tweety) is a fact meaning bird(tweety) is true in the database –?- bird(tweety). is a query meaning we want to know if bird(tweety) is true in the database

8 SWI-Prolog how to start it? –from the Windows Program menu –interpreter window pops up and –is ready to accept database queries ( ?- ) how to see what’s in the Prolog database? –?- listing. Other useful commands –once we start storing facts in files instead of entering them using assert. how to see what the current working directory is? –(the working directory is where your files are stored) –important: every machine in the lab is different –?- working_directory(X,Y). –X : current working directory, Y : new working directory how to change to a new working directory? –?- working_directory(X,NEW).

9 Exercise 1 1.Let’s start Prolog 2.Enter the bird facts into the database –using assert 3.Query the database 4.List the database –using listing. Note: all facts and queries must end in a period. Prolog is case-sensitive –don’t mix upper and lower case –use lower case for symbols Facts in the database bird(tweety). bird(woody). Database queries ?- bird(tweety). ?- bird(daffy). To remove a fact from the database use retract (the counterpart of assert ) e.g. ?- retract(bird(tweety)). would leave just woody

10 Exercise 2: Variables Database –bird(tweety). –bird(woody). Query containing a variable X –?- bird(X). –X = tweety ; –X = woody ; –No Query with a variable –?- bird(X). means –tell me if bird(X). is true in Prolog’s world. Closed World Assumption –In general, Prolog obeys the closed world assumption: things aren’t true unless explicitly stated to be true –e.g. our database might be incomplete, for example, daffy might be a bird –but unless we explicitly tell Prolog daffy is a bird, Prolog assumes it’s not. Notation: variables and symbols –X (capitalized 1st letter) is a variable –tweety, woody (beginning with a lowercase letter) are simple symbols (not variables) semicolon (;) represents disjunction (or) in the context of a Prolog query, it means “give me the next answer”

11 Exercise 3: Negation Prolog negation –“failure to prove” –a limited form of logical negation denoted by \+ –used in queries and bodies (not head) of rules –negative facts are not permitted, can’t put them in the database –can’t do ?- assert(\+ bird(mickey)). Example ?- \+ bird(tweety). No ?- \+ bird(mickey). Yes Reasoning \+ bird(tweety) is true –if bird(tweety) is false, i.e. can’t be proved from the database –but bird(tweety) is true –so \+ bird(tweety) is false \+ bird(mickey) is true –if bird(mickey) is false, i.e. can’t be proved from the database –bird(mickey) is not in the database, so it’s false –so \+ bird(mickey) is true ERROR: assert/1: No permission to modify static_procedure

12 Homework Question Use database bird(tweety). “tweety is a bird” bird(woody). “woody is a bird” (2pts) What do the following queries return as an answer? The queries ?- \+ \+ bird(tweety). ?- \+ bird(X). (6pts) Give the logical reasoning for each answer –(in the form given in Exercise 3)

13 Exercise 4: Rules Database bird(tweety). “tweety is a bird” bird(woody). “woody is a bird” Rules (to be asserted) has_feathers(Y) :- bird(Y). “Y has feathers if Y is a bird” can_fly(X) :- has_feathers(X). “X can fly if X has feathers” Run Queries –?- has_feathers(tweety).Yes if bird(tweety) is true –?- can_fly(tweety). Yes (can chain inferences) ?- has_feathers(tweety). –?- bird(tweety). »bird(tweety) true Notation –:- means “if”

14 SWI-Prolog Getting stuck? –Type -C –Type a (for abort) –gets you back to the Prolog interpreter prompt ( ?- )

15 SWI-Prolog How to enter facts and rules into the database? –Method 2: Use your favorite text editor Create a file in the current working directory containing database facts and rules. Load the file at the Prolog prompt using: ?- consult(FILE). or ?- [FILE ]. –(comma-delimited list notation) or file are loaded from Prolog’s working directory see slide 7 for working directory queries

16 SWI-Prolog How to enter facts and rules into the database? –consult/edit/new under the File menu

17 SWI-Prolog A note on filenames –Convention: Prolog files normally have extension.pl e.g. mydb.pl (.pl is also used by Perl) –FILE above should be the filename without the extension e.g. ?- [mydb]. –The period (.) is a special symbol in Prolog. If you wish to specify the full name, you must enclose it in single quotes e.g. ?- [’mydb.pl’].

18 Prolog Resources SWI-Prolog manual and help system Useful Online Tutorials –An introduction to Prolog (Michel Loiseleur & Nicolas Vigier) http://invaders.mars- attacks.org/~boklm/prolog/http://invaders.mars- attacks.org/~boklm/prolog/ –Learn Prolog Now! (Patrick Blackburn, Johan Bos & Kristina Striegnitz) http://www.coli.uni- saarland.de/~kris/learn-prolog- now/lpnpage.php?pageid=onlinehttp://www.coli.uni- saarland.de/~kris/learn-prolog- now/lpnpage.php?pageid=online


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