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1 About Prolog Lu Han Written at 2007-08 Modified at 2008-02.

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Presentation on theme: "1 About Prolog Lu Han Written at 2007-08 Modified at 2008-02."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 About Prolog Lu Han Written at 2007-08 Modified at 2008-02

2 2 Index Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Part 3. Programming Interface ( for C & C++ )

3 3 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial What is Prolog ? Prolog stands for PROgramming in LOGic Prolog is based on First Order Predict Logic. Prolog is declarative rather than procedural.

4 4 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Logic Programming Sample 1. In classical logic we might say "All people are mortal," or, rephrased for Prolog, "For all X, X is mortal if X is a person." mortal(X) :- person(X).

5 5 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Similarly, we can assert the simple fact that Socrates is a person. person(socrates). From these two logical assertions, Prolog can now prove whether or not Socrates is mortal. ?- mortal(socrates). The listener responds yes

6 6 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial First Order Predicate Logic ( FOPL ) First order predicate logic implies the existence of a set of predicate symbols along with a set of connectives. First order predicate logic implies that there is no means provided for “ talking about ” the predicates themselves. Sample 2.

7 7 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Procedural programming requires that the programmer tell the computer what to do. That is, how to get the output for the given inputs. Declarative programming requires a more descriptive style. The programmer must know what relationships hold between various entities.

8 8 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Prolog Constants A constant is an atom or a number. Atom include: Quoted item Word ( lower case letter followed by any letter , digit or _ ) Symbol ( +, -, *, /, ^ …… ) Special item ( [], {}, ;, !, % ) A number is an integer or a real number. Sample 3. a, b_1, ‘ Hello ’, ‘ 常识组 ’, 2008, 3.14

9 9 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial The Logical Variables A logical variable is a name starting with a capital letter or a single _. Sample 4. X, Person, _

10 10 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Predicates Predicate means the relation or the property of a number of entities. All predicate names must be constants, but not numbers. No predicate may be a variable. Prolog use /num to indicate the number of arguments Sample 5. likes(bill,ice_cream) —— right. likes/2

11 11 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Clauses A clause is the syntactic entity expressing a relationship. A clause must terminate with a ‘. ’ Sample 6. loves(jane,jim) —— a goal loves(jane,jim). —— a clause

12 12 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Multiple Clauses A predicate may be defined by a set of clauses with the same predicate name and the same number of arguments. Sample 7. The logical statement large_than(2,1) ∧ large_than(3,2) Prolog clauses large_than(2,1). large_than(3,2).

13 13 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Facts A fact is a unit clause. Sample 8 likes(bill,cake). even(2).

14 14 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Rule A rule is a non-unit clause. A rule consists of two parts: the head and the body. No more than one goal is allowed in the head. The head and the body are connected with “ :- ”. The semantics of goal(X) :- p(X). is for all X, p(X)  goal(X) Sample 9. father(X, Y) :- son(Y, X).

15 15 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Conjunctions Prolog uses ‘, ’ to indicate the conjunction, which equivalent to the ∧ of predicate calculus. Sample 10. happy(Person) :- rich(Person), healthy(Person). The rule means a person is happy if he/she is rich and healthy.

16 16 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Disjunctions Prolog uses ‘ ; ’ to indicate the conjunction, which equivalent to the ∨ of predicate calculus. Sample 11. happy(Person) :- rich(Person); healthy(Person). Or happy(Person) :- rich(Person). happy(Person) :- healthy(Person). The rule means a person is happy if he/she is rich or healthy.

17 17 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Recursion in rule ancestor(P, A) :- ancestor(P, X), ancestor(X, A). —— Wrong! This rule should be written as follow. ancestor(P, A) :- parent(P, A). ancestor(P, A) :- parent(P, P1), ancestor(P1, A).

18 18 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Search Strategy Prolog adopts depth first search as its search strategy. A query is a goal which is submitted to Prolog in order to determine whether this goal is true or false. Prolog uses the prompt ‘ ?- ’ to expect the input queries.

19 19 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Unifications The predicate names and arities must be the same for unification to succeed. Sample 12 man(bill). woman(jean). ?-woman(jean). yes —— unify with woman(jean) ?-women(mary). no —— a failed match

20 20 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Subgoals A top level goal can be divided into several subgoals. Sample 13 woman(jean). man(fred). wealthy(fred). happy(Person) :- woman(Person), wealthy(Person). ?-happy(jean). no

21 21 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial happy(jean) :- woman(jean), wealthy(jean). Then there are two subgoals, woman(jean) wealthy(jean) Prolog solves the two subgoals in order. The former subgoal is successful. But we cannot unify wealthy(fred) with wealthy(jean), so happy(jean) is failed.

22 22 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Backtracking When one goal failed, Prolog moves back (backtracking) to next goal. Sample 14. man(john). woman(jean). ?-woman(Person). Person = jean

23 23 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Predicates for control true/0 —— always true father(jim,fred). Is logically equivalent to father(jim,fred) :- true. fail/0 —— always false live_forever(Person) :- fail. repeat/0 —— redo test :- repeat, write(test), fail.

24 24 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Negation Prolog uses predicate \+/1 to indicate not (equivalent to ┐ ) The predicate \+/1 takes a Prolog goal as its argument. It will succeed when the goal fails. Sample 15 man(jim). ?-\+man(jim). no

25 25 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial \+/1 is not at all like logical negation. \+(\+goal) is not identical to goal. Sample 16 man(jim). woman(X) :- \+(man(X)). ?-woman(jane). yes ?-woman(Person).//zsd 似乎所有的常量都代入成功才 行。 no

26 26 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Using Negation in Case selection Sample 17 goal_1 :- odd(X). goal_2 :- \+odd(X).

27 27 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Condition Prolog uses test-process to guarantee that some process will be done only when conditions are satisfied. test_process(Cond, X, Y) :- test(Cond), process(Cond, X, Y).

28 28 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Sample 18 p(Person, Age) :- Age < 20, write(Person), write( ‘ is young ’ ); Age == 20, write(Person), write( ‘ is 20 ’ ); Age >=60, write(Person), write( ‘ is old ’ ).

29 29 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial If _then_else Prolog uses (test)->process1;process2 as if_then_else. Sample 19 P2(Person) :- (man(Person)-> write(Person), write( ‘ is male ’ ); write(Person), write( ‘ is female ’ )).

30 30 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Failure-Driven Loop//???zsd The idea of failure-driven loop is deliberately generate a term and then fail. failure_drivern_loop(Info) :- generate(Info,Term), fail. failure_drivern_loop(Info).

31 31 Part 1. Prolog Quick Tutorial Sample 20 int(1). int(2). int(3). print_int :- int(X), write(X), fail. print_int. ?-print_int. 123 yes

32 32 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Amzi! Prolog consists of Amzi! Prolog and logic server. It is provided by Amzi! Inc. www.amzi.com Editions: Free, Personal/Student, Developer, Professional, Enterprise

33 33 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Amzi! Prolog IDE

34 34 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview New a Project File -> new -> Project … -> Prolog project -> Project name -> Create a new Prolog project New a File File -> new -> File -> Direction select -> File name(*.pro) -> Create a new file

35 35 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Document composition Logical Layer —— rule files Data Layer —— fact files Control layer —— main function, input/output etc.

36 36 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Debug Run -> Debug As … Run Run -> Run As -> 1 Compiled Project (xpl) 2 Interpreted Project (pro) 3 Interpreted Single File (pro)

37 37 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Listener The Prolog listener is an interactive environment that allows a programmer to query any part of the Prolog logic base, or program.

38 38 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Adding and Removing Clauses Assert can be used to directly add clauses. ?- assert( likes(ella, crackers) ). yes Retractall ca be used to remove clauses. ?- retractall( likes(ella, crackers) ). yes

39 39 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview The listener attempts to prove the goal, returning values of any variables. You can then enter: ; - request backtracking to look for more answers. Enter key - to return to the listener prompt.

40 40 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Consulting Prolog Source Files consult(File) - the specified file is consulted. If no extension is provided, then '.pro' is assumed. consult( [File1, File2,..., FileN] ) - consults each of the files in the list.

41 41 Part 2. Amzi! Prolog Overview Listing Clauses The listing predicate displays a listing of your clauses. ?-listing. Exits the current listener. ?-quit.

42 42 Part 3. Programming Interface 1. Install Amzi Prolog Inference Engine (PIE) in your machine. 2. Include amzi.h and logicserver.h in your VC project. (..\amzi\amzi_7-6-6\include\) 3. Include amzi.lib in your VC project. (..\amzi\amzi_7-6-6\lib\) Project -> settings … -> Link -> Object/library modules -> add amzi.lib

43 43 Part 3. Programming Interface 4. Include prolog.h (my VC Interface Class) in your VC project. class Prolog Prolog( string filename ); void Load( string filename); void Assert( string str ); void Retract( string filename); VSTR Prolog::Call( string command ); VSTR GetPar( string command, int n_Par);

44 44 Part 3. Programming Interface 5. Generate.xpl in your PIE. Run -> Run As … -> 1 Compiled Project (xpl) 6. Copy the xpl file to your VC project. 7. Call Prolog via class Prolog. 8. Run your project.

45 45 Part 3. Programming Interface Another way for call Prolog main.xpl cmd -> main Rule, Data, Query, Output

46 46 Thank You! Question and discussion are welcome.


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