Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!uhog.mit.edu!nntp.club.cc.cmu.edu!cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!mkant From: mkant+@cs.cmu.edu (Mark Kantrowitz) Newsgroups: comp.lang.prolog,comp.object.logic,news.answers,comp.answers Subject: FAQ: Prolog Resource Guide 1/2 [Monthly posting] Supersedes: Followup-To: poster Date: 13 Mar 1995 08:02:50 GMT Organization: School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University Lines: 1700 Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu Distribution: world Expires: 24 Apr 1995 08:00:33 GMT Message-ID: Reply-To: mkant+prg@cs.cmu.edu NNTP-Posting-Host: glinda.oz.cs.cmu.edu Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.lang.prolog:12370 comp.object.logic:388 news.answers:39806 comp.answers:10628 Archive-name: prolog/resource-guide/part1 Last-Modified: Fri Mar 10 16:35:04 1995 by Mark Kantrowitz Version: 1.27 Maintainer: Mark Kantrowitz URL: http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/Web/Groups/AI/html/faqs/lang/prolog/prg/top.html Size: 81042 bytes, 1708 lines ;;; **************************************************************** ;;; Prolog Resource Guide ****************************************** ;;; **************************************************************** ;;; prg_1.faq This post contains the Prolog Resource Guide. Contributions, corrections, suggestions, and comments should be sent to Mark Kantrowitz . This guide lists a variety of resources for the Prolog community, including books, magazines, ftp archives, and products. It is posted on the 13th of every month to the newsgroups comp.lang.prolog and comp.object.logic. The PRG is also posted to the newsgroups news.answers and comp.answers where they should be available at any time (ask your local news manager). *** Copyright: Copyright (c) 1992-94 by Mark Kantrowitz. All rights reserved. This FAQ may be freely redistributed in its entirety without modification provided that this copyright notice is not removed. It may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial documents (e.g., published for sale on CD-ROM, floppy disks, books, magazines, or other print form) without the prior written permission of the copyright holder. Permission is expressly granted for this document to be made available for file transfer from installations offering unrestricted anonymous file transfer on the Internet. If this FAQ is reproduced in offline media (e.g., CD-ROM, print form, etc.), a complimentary copy should be sent to Mark Kantrowitz, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, 5000 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3891 USA. This article is provided AS IS without any express or implied warranty. *** Recent Changes: ;;; 1.24: ;;; 13-OCT-94 mk Added Hdrug to [1-5]. ;;; 13-OCT-94 mk Added FW_Rules to [1-5]. ;;; 14-OCT-94 mk Added KLIC entry and removed PDSS entry in [2-3]. ;;; 14-OCT-94 mk Updated Quintus entry in [2-2]. ;;; 20-OCT-94 mk Updated prices for books by Dennis Merritt of Amzi! Inc. ;;; 20-OCT-94 mk Added entry on GT-Prolog (prolog for Amiga) to [2-2]. ;;; 28-OCT-94 mk WWW archive of articles from the LP Newsletter. ;;; 28-OCT-94 mk WWW page for ILOG. ;;; 10-NOV-94 mk Updated ESL Prolog-2 entry. ;;; ;;; 1.25: ;;; 7-DEC-94 mk Updated LIFE entry in part 2. ;;; ;;; 1.26: ;;; 16-JAN-95 mk Added [1-18] History of Prolog. ;;; 16-JAN-95 mk Updated IF/Prolog entry in part 2. ;;; 17-JAN-95 mk Updated PNLA ftp address. ;;; 26-JAN-95 mk Added DFKI Oz to [2-5]. ;;; ;;; 1.27: ;;; 20-FEB-95 mk Added LogTalk entry to [1-6]. *** Topics Covered: There are currently two parts to the PRG: 1. Introductory Matter and General Questions 2. Prolog Implementations Table of Contents (Part 1): [1-0] Introduction [1-1] Sources of information about Prolog [1-2] Prolog-related Mailing Lists [1-3] Books and Magazine Articles [1-4] Prolog and Logic Programming Associations and Journals [1-5] FTP Archives and Other Resources [1-6] Free Object-Oriented Systems for Prolog [1-7] Commercial Object-Oriented Systems for Prolog [1-8] The Prolog 1000 Database [1-9] X-Windows Interfaces [1-10] Is there a straight-forward way of compiling Prolog to C? [1-11] WAM emulators and tracers [1-12] What is the Basic Andorra Model and AKL? [1-13] What is Constraint Logic Programming? [1-14] How do you write portable programs in Prolog? [1-15] World-Wide Web (WWW) Resources [1-16] Prolog Job Postings [1-17] Is Prolog really used in Windows NT? [1-18] History of Prolog [1-A] Acknowledgements Prolog Implementations (Part 2): [2-0] General information about Prolog Implementations [2-1] Free Prolog Implementations [2-2] Commercial Prolog Implementations [2-3] Free Parallel Prolog Implementations [2-4] Commercial Parallel Prolog Implementations [2-5] Free Constraint Systems [2-6] Commercial Constraint Systems [2-7] Free Logic Programming Systems [2-8] Commercial Logic Programming Systems [2-9] Other Commercial Prolog Products [2-10] Prolog extensions, meta-interpreters, and pre-processors Search for [#] to get to topic number # quickly. In newsreaders which support digests (such as rn), [CTRL]-G will page through the answers. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-0] Introduction Certain questions and topics come up frequently in the various network discussion groups devoted to and related to Prolog and logic programming. This file/article is an attempt to gather these questions and their answers into a convenient reference for Prolog programmers. It (or a reference to it) is posted periodically. The hope is that this will cut down on the user time and network bandwidth used to post, read and respond to the same questions over and over, as well as providing education by answering questions some readers may not even have thought to ask. This guide lists Prolog and logic programming resources: archives, newsgroups, books, magazines, compilers, interpreters and anything else you can think of which has to do with the proliferation of Prolog and logic programming. Also included is a list of suppliers of products and a list of publishers. Topics can also include unification, backtracking search, and other aspects of logic programming. As Prolog has a strong historical tradition in Europe, we've tried to ensure that the information is relevant to all readers, including European and North American. This is not a Prolog tutorial, nor is it an exhaustive list of all Prolog intricacies. Prolog is a very powerful and expressive language, but with that power comes many complexities. This list attempts to address the ones that average Prolog programmers are likely to encounter. If you are new to Prolog, read one of the introductions listed in the answer to question [1-3]. Please do not post homework questions to the comp.lang.prolog newsgroup. You won't learn anything if somebody else does the problem for you, and won't get any credit for your answer if your instructor reads the newsgroup. Please also avoid starting the debate on which language is better; Prolog or Lisp, Prolog or C, and so on. Such discussions are rarely productive, and nobody will change their opinion as a result of the debate. The usual conclusion of such debates is that the languages are Turing equivalent, but some languages are better suited for particular tasks. For Prolog, the consensus is that it is a good choice for problems involving logic and problems whose solution can be represented or characterized succinctly in logical form. Some folks feel Prolog is the best language for natural language processing; others disagree. This guide is posted regularly to comp.lang.prolog and comp.object.logic. It may also be obtained by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/pubs/faqs/prolog/ [128.2.206.173] using username "anonymous" and password "name@host" (substitute your email address) or via AFS in the Andrew File System directory /afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/ai-repository/ai/pubs/faqs/prolog/ as the files prg_1.faq and prg_2.faq. You can also obtain a copy of the FAQ by sending a message to ai+query@cs.cmu.edu with Send PRG in the message body. The FAQ postings are also archived in the periodic posting archive on rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/news.answers/prolog/ [18.181.0.24] If you do not have anonymous ftp access, you can access the archive by mail server as well. Send an E-mail message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "help" and "index" in the body on separate lines for more information. An automatically generated HTML version of the PRG is accessible by WWW as part of the AI-related FAQs Mosaic page. The URL for this resource is http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/Web/Groups/AI/html/faqs/top.html The direct URL for the PRG is http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/Web/Groups/AI/html/faqs/lang/prolog/prg/top.html If you need to cite the FAQ for some reason, use the following format: Mark Kantrowitz, "Prolog Resource Guide", comp.lang.prolog, , , ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/pubs/faqs/prolog/prg_?.faq, mkant+prg@cs.cmu.edu. Disclaimer: We have taken great care in making the information in this document as accurate as possible. However we are not responsible for any problems which might occur from using information supplied in this guide. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-1] Sources of Information about Prolog The newsgroups comp.lang.prolog, comp.object.logic, and (to a lesser extent) comp.ai are a source of information and discussion about Prolog. See also sci.logic. The newsgroup comp.constraints is for information about constraint processing languages and related topics. A "Frequently Asked Questions" posting is posted to comp.lang.prolog twice a month by Jamie Andrews . The Prolog FAQ and this Prolog Resource Guide are intended to complement one another. The draft ISO standard for Prolog is available by anonymous ftp from ai.uga.edu:/pub/prolog.standard/ [128.192.12.9] An unofficial summary of the draft ISO Prolog standard is available from the same location as isoprolog.tex or isoprolog.ps.Z. Send mail to Michael Covington for more information about his summary of the standard. For more information about the ISO Prolog standard itself, write to Roger Scowen, ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG17 (Prolog) convener, DITC/93, National Physical Laboratory, TEDDINGTON, Middlesex TW11 0LW, UNITED KINGDOM, call +44-81-943-6956, fax +44-81-977-7091, or send email to rss@seg.npl.co.uk. Richard O'Keefe's 1984 Prolog standard draft is available by anonymous FTP from ftp.ecrc.de:/pub/eclipse/std/plstd.doc ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-2] Mailing Lists Prolog and Logic Programming: prolog@sushi.stanford.edu (general) prolog-hackers@sushi.stanford.edu (nitty gritty) All requests to be added to or deleted from this list, problems, questions, etc., should be sent to prolog-request@sushi.stanford.edu [The host sushi.stanford.edu no longer exists, as of 11/24/92. Does anybody know the new location of the mailing lists?] Lambda Prolog: lprolog@cis.upenn.edu To subscribe, send mail to lprolog-request@cis.upenn.edu. Electronic Journal of Functional and Logic Programming (EJFLP) EJFLP is a refereed journal that will be distributed for free via e-mail. The aim of EJFLP is to create a new medium for research investigating the integration of the functional, logic and constraint programming paradigms. For instructions on submitting a paper, send an empty mail message with Subject: Help to: submissions@ls5.informatik.uni-dortmund.de. You will receive an acknowledgment of your submission within a few hours. To subscribe to the journal, send an empty mail message to the following address: subscriptions@ls5.informatik.uni-dortmund.de You will receive an acknowledgment of your subscription within a few days. If there are any problems with the mail-server, send mail to ejflp.op@ls5.informatik.uni-dortmund.de. The editorial board is: Rita Loogen (RWTH Aachen), Herbert Kuchen (RWTH Aachen), Michael Hanus (MPI-Saarbruecken), Manuel MT Chakravarty (TU Berlin), Martin Koehler (Imperial College London), Yike Guo (Imperial College London), Mario Rodriguez-Artalejo (Univ. Madrid), Andy Krall (TU Wien), Andy Mueck (LMU Muenchen), Tetsuo Ida (Univ. Tsukuba, Japan), Hendrik C.R. Lock (IBM Heidelberg), Andreas Hallmann (Univ. Dortmund), Peter Padawitz (Univ. Dortmund), Christoph Brzoska (Univ. Karlsruhe). PDC-L: PDC-L@nic.surfnet.nl is a discussion list for PDC Prolog users. To subscribe, send mail to LISTSERV@nic.surfnet.nl with SUBSCRIBE PDC-L in the message body. Theorem Provers: theorem-provers@ai.mit.edu This (unmoderated) list is intended for announcements of interest to people interested in automated theorem proving. To subscribe, send your email address to theorem-provers-request@ai.mit.edu. Type Theory: types@dcs.gla.ac.uk Moderated mailing list about type theory. Archived on theory.lcs.mit.edu:/pub/meyer/ To subscribe, send mail to types-request@dcs.gla.ac.uk. Logic: logic@cs.cornell.edu Moderated mailing list about logic. Archived on theory.lcs.mit.edu:/pub/meyer/ To subscribe, send mail to logic-request@cs.cornell.edu ALP (French Chapter): prog-logique@irisa.fr La liste de diffusion "prog-logique" est le support electronique de communication de la section francaise de l'ALP (Association for Logic Programming), groupe de travail AFCET. Elle complete la lettre du groupe publiee trimestriellement. Pour vous abonner ou vous desabonner, il faut envoyer un "mail" au serveur de listes, a l'adresse listserv@irisa.fr sans sujet ni signature, et dont le corps du message contient SUB prog-logique Prenom Nom Un acquittement est renvoye par messagerie. Pour desabonnement, ecrit SIGNOFF prog-logique Les requetes envoyees directement a la liste ne seront pas prises en compte. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-3] Books and Magazine Articles A BiBTeX bibliography of Logic Programming Conferences is available by anonymous ftp from duck.dfki.uni-sb.de. See [1-5] below. A partially annotated bibliography of work on integrating object-oriented and logic programming is available by anonymous ftp from menaik.cs.ualberta.ca:/pub/oolog/ in PostScript and BibTeX formats. Written by Vladimir Alexiev . The following books are regarded as popular and widely used. Also included are some books about WAM. This is not intended to be a complete Prolog bibliography. Prolog Programming: Covington, Michael A.; Nute, D.; and Vellino, A. "Prolog Programming in Depth", Scott, Foresman & Co., 1987. ISBN 0-521-40984-5 (Out of print, but new edition coming soon. Copies of the 1987 edition are still available from the University of Georgia Bookstore, at 706-542-7131.) Clocksin, W.F. and Mellish, C.S: "Programming in Prolog", 3rd Ed. Springer Verlag, 1987. 281 pages, ISBN 0-387-17539-3 ($29). [Basic introduction to Prolog.] Coelho, H., and Cotta, J.C., "Prolog by Example", Springer Verlag, 1988. 381 pages, ISBN 0-387-18313-2 ($39.50). Cooke, Daniel E., "Logic: The Basis for Understanding Prolog", Ablex, Norwood, NJ, 1994. 224 pages, ISBN 1-56750-028-5 ($27.50). [Intro to Prolog with a review of the basic ideas underlying the language.] Conlon, Tom: "Programming in Parlog". Addison-Wesley, 1989, ISBN 0-201-17450-2. Dawe, C.M. and M.S. Dawe, "Prolog for Computer Science", Springer Verlag, 1994. 190 pages, ISBN 0-387-19811-3 paper ($35). [Intro to computer science using Prolog.] Dodd, Anthony, "Prolog: A logical approach", Oxford University Press, New York, 1990, 556 pages. ISBN 0-198-53822-7 (cloth), $52.50; ISBN 0-198-53821-9 (paperback), $26.00. Kluzniak and Szpakowicz: "Prolog for Programmers", Academic Press 1985 G. L. Lazarev, "Why Prolog? Justifying Logic Programming for Practical Applications", Prentice Hall, 1989. [Software engineering bent. Emphasizes advantages of declarative programming.] Le, Tu Van, "Techniques of Prolog programming, with implementation of logical negation and quantified goals", John Wiley, New York, 1993. ISBN: 0-471-57175-X (American edition), 0-471-59970-O (International edition). LnProlog, a Prolog interpreter that supports negative finding queries and quantified queries is available together with the book. Saint-Dizier, P., "An Introduction to Programming in Prolog", Springer Verlag, 1990. 184 pages, ISBN 0-387-97144-0 paper ($25). [Tutorial introduction, with simple examples of AI programs and games.] Leon Sterling, editor, "The Practice of Prolog", MIT Press, 1990. 342 pages, ISBN 0-262-19301-9, $39.95. Advanced Prolog Programming: O'Keefe, Richard A., "The Craft of PROLOG", MIT Press, 1990, 410 pages. ISBN 0-262-15039-5, $42.50. Peter Ross, "Advanced Prolog: Techniques and Examples", Addison-Wesley, 1989, ISBN 0-201-17527-4. Leon Sterling and Ehud Shapiro, "The Art of Prolog: Advanced Programming Techniques", 2nd Edition, MIT Press, 1994. 688 pages, ISBN 0-262-19338-8 ($49.95). [Source code for the book is available in ftp.cwru.edu:/ArtOfProlog/. There is a subdirectory for each chapter of the book containing the text of the programs in that chapter.] AI and Prolog: Yoav Shoham, "Artificial Intelligence Techniques in Prolog", Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 1993, 400 pages. ISBN 1-55860-167-8 (paper) $39.95. ISBN 1-55860-319-0 (cloth) $49.95. [Topics include search, backward chaining, data-driven methods, truth maintenance, constraint satisfaction, reasoning with uncertainty, planning, temporal reasoning, machine learning, and natural language processing. Prolog source for all the programs in the book is available by anonymous ftp from unix.sri.com:/pub/shoham/] Bratko, Ivan, "Programming in Prolog for Artificial Intelligence", 2nd Edition, Addison-Wesley, 1990. [Good introduction to Prolog and AI. A bit large, though, for an Intro to Prolog course. Includes discussion of the 8-queens problem.] Dennis Merritt, "Building Expert Systems in Prolog", Springer-Verlag, 1989. 358 pages, ISBN 0-387-97016-9 hardcover ($52). Explains how to build various expert system shells in Prolog, including forward/backward chaining, FOOPS, rete-network, frames, solving Rubik's cube and more. Includes complete source code listings. (Source code from the book is also sold on disk by Amzi! Inc. and is available by anonymous FTP from ftp.std.com:/ftp/vendors/amzi/programs/ ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/areas/expert/systems/amzi/programs/ as the files xsip.*) Dennis Merritt: "Adventure in Prolog", Springer-Verlag, 1990. 186 papers, ISBN 0-387-97315-X hardcover ($38). Teaches Prolog by leading the reader through the construction of an adventure game. The exercises lead the reader through three other programs: an intelligent database, an expert system and an order-entry program. While most texts teach Prolog with fragments of interesting code, this book takes a more pragmatic (as opposed to theoretical approach) and shows the reader how to assemble complete Prolog programs. Gazdar, G. and Mellish, C., "Natural Language Processing in Prolog: An Introduction to Computational Linguistics", Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts, 1989. (There are three different editions of the book, one for Lisp, one for Prolog, and one for Pop-11.) Fernando C.N. Pereira and Stuart M. Shieber, "Prolog and Natural-Language Analysis", CSLI Lecture Notes Number 10, Stanford, CA, 1987. 286 pages, ISBN 0-937073-18-0. Michael A. Covington, "Natural Language Processing for Prolog Programmers", Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1994. ISBN 0-13-629213-5. Harvey Abramson and Veronica Dahl, "Logic Grammars", Springer-Verlag, New York, 1989, 234 pages, ISBN 0-387-96961-6. Peter Flach, "Simply Logical: Intelligent Reasoning by Example", John Wiley & Sons, 1994, 256 pages. ISBN 0-471-94152-2 paper ($31.95). [Covers theoretical and practical aspects of Prolog programming as well as AI topics like knowledge representation, search, heuristics, abduction, default reasoning, and induction. Every technique is accompanied by a Prolog program that implements it. More information about the book is available from http://machtig.kub.nl:2080/Infolab/Peter/SimplyLogical.html or by email from Peter.Flach@kub.nl.] Prolog and Object-Oriented Programming: Chris Moss, "Prolog++ The Power of Object-Oriented and Logic Programming", Addison-Wesley, 1994. 312 pages, ISBN 0-201-56507-2. UK price is 21.95 pounds. [This paperback includes a special offer to obtain a Prolog++ compiler from LPA for Windows 3.1 or Macintosh. UK price is 29.95 pounds (plus 17.5 percent VAT) plus 5.00 pounds postage and handling. Elsewhere the cost is $49.95 plus $8 p&h.] Logic Programming: Hogger, Christopher J., "Introduction to Logic Programming", Academic Press, 1984. 278 pages. ISBN 0-12-352090-8 (alk. paper) ISBN 0-12-352092-4 (pbk.). Hogger, Christopher J., "Essentials of Logic Programming", Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1990. ISBN 0-19-853820-0. [Covers both foundations and more practical material, relating it all to Prolog. Takes a different approach than his first intro, dividing the book into many short "themes" instead of chapters, and including many excercises (with some answers).] Kowalski, R.A.: "Logic for Problem Solving", New York 1979, Elsevier Publ. LLoyd, John: "Foundations of Logic Programming", 2nd Edition, Springer-Verlag, 1988. (Intro to logic programming theory.) David Maier and David S. Warren: "Computing with Logic: Logic Programming with Prolog", Benjamin Cummings, Menlo Park, CA, 1989. Nilsson, Ulf and Maluszynski, Jan, "Logic, Programming and Prolog", John Wiley & Sons, 1990, ISBN 0-471-92625-6. Subrata Kumar DAS, "Deductive Databases and Logic Programming", Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, July 1992, 448 pages. ISBN 0-201-56897-7. Constraint Logic Programming and Constraint Satisfaction: Bennaceur, Hachemi and Gerard Plateau, "An exact algorithm for the constraint satisfaction problem: Application to logical inference", Information Processing Letters 48(3):151-158, November 19, 1993. Cohen, J., "Constraint Logic Programming Languages", Communciations of the ACM 33(7):52-68, 1992. [Good introduction to CLP and includes a historical overview.] Freeman-Benson, B.N., Maloney, J., and Borning, A., "An Incremental Constraint Solver", Communications of the ACM 33(1):54-63, 1990. [Includes a good reading list on the history and applications of constraints.] Freuder, Eugene C., and Richard J. Wallace, "Partial constraint satisfaction", Artificial Intelligence 58(1-3):21-70, December 1992. Van Hentenryck, Pascal, "Constraint Satisfaction in Logic Programming", MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1989, ISBN 0-262-08181-4. Jaffar, Joxan and Jean-Louis Lassez, "Constraint Logic Programming", in Proceedings of the 14th ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL), Munich, Germany, pages 111-119, 1987. [A longer version appears in Joxan Jaffar and Jean-Louis Lassez, "Constraint Logic Programming", Technical Report 86-74, Monash University, Victoria, Australia, June 1986.] Kumar, Vipin, "Algorithms for Constraint-Satisfaction Problems: A Survey", AI Magazine 13(1):32-44, 1992. Mackworth, Alan K., "The logic of constraint satisfaction", Artificial Intelligence 58:3-20, 1992. Meseguer, P., "Constraint Satisfaction Problems: An Overview", AICOM 2(1):3-17, 1989. Steele, Guy L., "The Definition and Implementation of A Computer Programming Language Based on Constraints", PhD thesis, MIT, 1980. Tsang, Edward, "Foundations of Constraint Satisfaction", Academic Press, 1993. 421 pages, ISBN 0-12-701610-4 ($75). [Good overview.] Zhang, Ying and Alan K. Mackworth, "Constraint Programming in Constraint Nets", in Position Papers for the First Workshop on Principles and Practice of Constraint Programming, pages 303-312, Newport, RI, April 28-30, 1993. [See also the articles on Constraint Networks (pages 276-285) and Constraint Satisfaction (pages 285-293) in Shapiro's Encyclopedia of Artificial Intelligence.] Prolog Implementations and WAMs: Ait-Kaci, Hassan, "Warren's Abstract Machine: A Tutorial Reconstruction", MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. 1991. 125 pages, ISBN 0-262-51058-8 paper ($17.50), 0-262-01123-9 cloth. Patrice Boizumault, "The Implementation of Prolog", Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1993. Translated by Ara M. Djamboulian and Jamal Fattouh. ISBN 0-691-08757-1, 357 pages ($49.50). [The interpreters developed in the book are available by anonymous ftp from cnam.cnam.fr:/pub/Boizumault/. See [2-1].] Campbell, J.A. (ed): "Implementations of Prolog", John Wiley, 1984 Peter M. Kogge, "The Architecture of Symbolic Computers", McGraw-Hill, 1991. ISBN 0-07-035596-7. Includes sections on memory management, the SECD and Warren Abstract Machines, and overviews of the various Lisp Machine architectures. David H. D. Warren: "An Abstract Prolog Instruction Set", Technical Note No 309, SRI International, Menlo Park, CA, 1983. David H. D. Warren, "Logic Programming and Compiler Writing," in Software-Practice and Experience 10(2):97-125, 1980. J. Cohen and T. Hickey, "Parsing and Compiling using Prolog", ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems (TOPLAS), 9(2):125-163, 1987. J. Paakki, "Prolog in practical compiler writing", The Computer Journal 34(1):64-72, 1991. (But see Letters to the Editor, The Computer Journal 35(3):313, 1992.) Jonathan P. Bowen, "From Programs to Object Code using Logic and Logic Programming", in R. Giegerich and S. L. Graham, editors, Code Generation -- Concepts, Tools, Techniques, pages 173-192, Springer-Verlag, 1992. Jonathan P. Bowen, "From Programs to Object Code and back again using Logic Programming: Compilation and Decompilation", Journal of Software Maintenance: Research and Practice 5(4):205-234, December 1993. Parallel Prologs: Gregory, Steve: "Parallel Logic Programming in Parlog: The Language and Its Implementation", Addison-Wesley, 1987, ISBN 0-201-19241-1. Tick, E.: "Parallel Logic Programming". MIT Press, 1991 Miscellaneous: Deville, Yves: "Logic Programming, Systematic Program Development", International Series in Logic Programming, Addison-Wesley, 1990, 338 pages. ISBN 0-201-17576-2. Wolfram, D.A., "The Clausal Theory of Types", Cambridge Tracts in Theoretical Computer Science {\bf 21}, Cambridge University Press, 1993. Magazine Articles: PCAI Magzine, September/October 1993. Article on exploring Prolog, showing the first steps to four applications -- an adventure game, an object-oriented shell, a tax program, and an animal guessing game. An excerpt of this article is available from ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/doc/intro/explore.doc BYTE Magazine, August 1987. 5 introductory articles on Prolog. Applications include logic grammars and simulating a microprocessor. Uwe Schreiweis: Beredte Logik, Konzepte der 'KI-Sprache" Prolog, (Eloquent Logic, Concepts of the AI language Prolog), iX Magazine, October 1992, pages 84-90. Uwe Schreiweis: Basis der Fuenf, Die Sprache Prolog in der Public Domain, (Base of the Five, Prolog in the Public Domain), iX Magazine, October 1992, pages 92-94. Uwe Schreiweis: Fuenfte Generation, Kommerzielle Prolog-Systeme, (Fifth Generation, Commercial Prolog Systems), iX Magazine, October 1992, pages 96-102. Klaus Bothe: Weniger Raum, Speicherplatzbezogener Prolog-Benchmark, (Less Space, A Space Oriented Prolog Benchmark), iX Magazine, October 1992, pages 106-7. Magazines Related to Prolog: Logic Programming Newsletter (4 issues/yr) Included with membership in the Association for Logic Programming ($20 regular, $10 students). For membership information, write to Cheryl Anderson (ALP), DoC-ICSTM, 180 Queens Gate, London SW7 2BZ, UK, phone +44-71-589-5111 x5011, fax +44-71-589-1552, or send email to alp@doc.ic.ac.uk. Contributions are welcome and should be sent to Andrew Davidson . Selected articles from the newsletter are available from the WWW archive http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/~ad/alp/archive.html AI Communications (4 issues/yr) "The European Journal on Artificial Intelligence" ISSN 0921-7126, European Coordinating Committee for Artificial Intelligence. AI Expert (issued monthly) ISSN 0888-3785, Miller Freeman Publishers See a copy of the magazine for list of BBS's in NA. On CompuServe: GO AIEXPERT. Regularly reviews Prolog interpreters and compilers. Expert Systems (issued Feb, May, Aug and Nov) ISSN 0266-4720, Learned Information (Europe) Ltd. Subscription: GBP 85 or USD 110 IEEE Expert (issued bimonthly) ISSN 0885-9000, IEEE Computer Society The Journal of Logic Programming (issued bimonthly), (North-Holland), Elsevier Publishing Company, ISSN 0743-1066 New Generation Computing, Springer-Verlag. (LOTS of Prolog in it.) ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-4] Prolog and Logic Programming Associations and Journals ASSOCIATION FOR LOGIC PROGRAMMING (ALP) Members receive the ALP Newsletter. For information on membership, contact Cheryl Anderson ALP Administrative Secretary Department of Computing Imperial College 180 Queen's Gate London, SW7 2BZ, UK Email: csa@doc.ic.ac.uk Fax: +44 71 589 1552 Phone: +44 71 589 5111 x5011 Newsletter submissions should be sent to Andrew Davison Department of Computer Science University of Melbourne Parkville Melbourne, Victoria 3052 AUSTRALIA Email: ad@cs.mu.oz.au Fax: +61 3 348 1184 Phone: +61 3 344 7207 / 5230 Telex: AA 35185 ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-5] FTP Archives and Other Resources The following are achives that contain Prolog-related material, such as code, interpreters, articles, etc. Most of the archives are ftp sites. They are listed by domain.name and [IP Address]. To access them and download programs type at the prompt: ftp (or IP address) login: "anonymous", password: your own return email address, cd , ls to see files, set binary, get to transfer file to your system stop with quit or exit Deviations from this general scheme may occur but the above should work in most cases. CMU AI Repository, Prolog Section: The Prolog Section of the CMU Artificial Intelligence Repository (aka "The Prolog Repository") is accessible by anonymous ftp to ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/ [128.2.206.173] through the AFS directory /afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/ai-repository/ai/lang/prolog/ or by WWW from the URL http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/Web/Groups/AI/html/repository.html and includes more than 110 megabytes of sources and other materials of interest to Prolog programmers, including all freely distributable implementations and many programs. The contents of the CMU AI Repository has been keyword indexed to provide convenient browsing of the contents. The repository has standardized on using 'tar' for producing archives of files and 'gzip' for compression. To search the keyword index by mail, send a message to: ai+query@cs.cmu.edu with one or more lines containing calls to the keys command, such as: keys prolog gui in the message body. Keywords may be regular expressions and are compared with the index in a case-insensitive conjunctive fashion. You'll get a response by return mail. Do not include anything else in the Subject line of the message or in the message body. For help on the query mail server, include: help instead. A Mosaic interface to the keyword searching program is in the works. We also plan to make the source code (including indexes) to this program available, as soon as it is stable. Most of the Prolog Section of the AI Repository appears on Prime Time Freeware for AI, Issue 1-1, a mixed-media book/CD-ROM publication. It includes two ISO-9660 CD-ROMs bound into a 224 page book and sells (list) for US$60 plus applicable sales tax and shipping and handling charges. Payable through Visa, Mastercard, postal money orders in US funds, and checks in US funds drawn on a US bank. For more information write to Prime Time Freeware, 370 Altair Way, Suite 150, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 USA, call 408-433-9662, 408-433-0727 (fax), or send email to ptf@cfcl.com. Contributions of software and other materials are always welcome but must be accompanied by an unambiguous copyright statement that grants permission for free use, copying, and distribution -- either a declaration by the author that the materials are in the public domain, that the materials are subject to the GNU General Public License (cite version), or that the materials are subject to copyright, but the copyright holder grants permission for free use, copying, and distribution. (We will tell you if the copying permissions are too restrictive for us to include the materials in the repository.) Inclusion of materials in the repository does not modify their copyright status in any way. Materials may be placed in: ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/new/ When you put anything in this directory, please send mail to ai+contrib@cs.cmu.edu giving us permission to distribute the files, and state whether this permission is just for the AI Repository, or also includes publication on the CD-ROM version (Prime Time Freeware for AI). We would also appreciate if you would include a 0.doc file for your package; see /user/ai/new/package.doc for a template. (If you don't have the time to write your own, we can write it for you based on the information in your package.) The Prolog Section of the AI Repository is maintained by Mark Kantrowitz . Artificial Intelligence Programs: ai.uga.edu:/pub/ [128.192.12.9] The University of Georgia AI FTP Library contains public domain Prologs, such as Open Prolog and ESL PD Prolog, PrEd (a small text editor for Prolog), and some miscellaneous prolog programs in ai.uga.edu:/pub/prolog/ A copy of the programs from the book by Covington, Nute, and Vellino, (see the section on Books below), is in ai.uga.edu:/pub/prolog.book/ and the draft ISO standard for prolog is in ai.uga.edu:/pub/prolog.standard/ Some technical reports with accompanying code are in ai.uga.edu:/pub/ai.reports/ Other materials of interest are in ai.uga.edu:/pub/natural.language/ ai.uga.edu:/pub/natural.language.book/ Maintained by Michael Covington . ALE: ALE (Attribute Logic Engine), a freeware system written in Prolog, integrates phrase structure parsing and constraint logic programming with typed feature structures as terms. Types are arranged in an inheritance hierarchy and specified for the features and value types for which they are appropriate. Grammars may also interleave unification steps with logic program goal calls (as can be done in DCGs), thus allowing parsing to be interleaved with other system components. While ALE was developed to handle HPSG grammars, it can also execute PATR-II grammars, DCG grammars, Prolog, Prolog-II, and LOGIN programs, etc. Grammars and programs are specified with a version of Rounds-Kasper Attribute Value Logic with macros and variables. ALE supports lexical rules and empty categories for grammars, using a bottom-up, all-paths dynamic chart parser. ALE supports last call optimization, negation by failure and cuts in definite clauses, which may be used independently or integrated into grammars. The system is distributed with several sample grammars, including a fairly comprehensive implementation of a head-driven phrase structure grammar for English. Version 2.0 of ALE is available free for research purposes by anonymous ftp from j.gp.cs.cmu.edu:/usr1/carp/ftp/ as the files ale.*, or from the CMU AI Repository in ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/code/parsing/ale/ For more information write to Bob Carpenter or Gerald Penn . ALP-UK Library: The best Prolog library currently is the one collected by the ALP-UK group. It is available to members at 30 pounds sterling for a Sun cartridge or 2 pounds/IBM DOS disk. (non-members maybe, how much?) It contains MBs of Prolog systems (including SB Prolog), libraries (including the Edinburgh library), benchmarks, grammars, theorem provers, object and graphics systems etc. For more information, write to ALP-UK Library, Sanjay Raina, Librarian, Dept. of Computer Science, University of Bristol, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TR, UK, call +44 0272 303030 x3304, or send email to raina@compsci.bristol.ac.uk. CASLOG CASLOG (Complexity Analysis System for LOGic) is an experimental semi-automatic complexity analysis system for logic programs. It can perform the worst-case analysis for complexity measures: argument size complexity, number of solutions complexity, and time complexity. CASLOG extends the techniques developed for analyzing imperative and functional languages to deal with nondeterminism and generation of multiple solutions via backtracking in logic languages. The analyses for different complexity measures are implemented in a unified framework and share several common features. First, the predicates in a program are processed in an order generated by a bottom-up topological sorting over the call graph of the program. Second, the complexity function for a predicate is derived from the complexity function of its clauses by using the information about the mutual exclusion relationships between its clauses. Third, the complexity function for a clause is inferred based on the data dependency relationships between its literals. Fourth, the complexity functions for recursive clauses are in the form of difference equations and are transformed into closed form functions using difference equation solving techniques. This unified framework can simplify proofs of correctness and the implementation of the algorithms. CASLOG is available by anonymous ftp from cs.arizona.edu:/caslog/. This is an alpha distribution, and includes CASLOG version 1.0, a preliminary user manual, a paper on CASLOG, and a set of examples. For more information, contact Nai-Wei Lin . Constraint Programming Paper Archive: Aarhus University, Denmark, has established an anonymous ftp archive for papers on "Constraint Programming" at ftp.daimi.aau.dk:/pub/CLP/. For further information, contact Brian H. Mayoh . CSP: Some constraint-related papers by a research group at the University of Washington are available by anonymous ftp from june.cs.washington.edu:/pub/constraints/papers/ The papers from the 1994 Principles and Practice of Constraint Programming Workshop are available in june.cs.washington.edu:/pub/constraints/papers/ppcp94/ There are also implementations of several constraint satisfaction algorithms and constraint-based systems, including the DeltaBlue and SkyBlue algorithms, the Multi-Garnet user interface toolkit, ThingLab II, and CoolDraw (a constraint-based drawing system), in subdirectories of june.cs.washington.edu:/pub/constraints/code/ The ftp archive is also accessible via WWW: http://web.cs.city.ac.uk/archive/constraints/constraints.html All the source code is in the public domain. For more information, write to Alan Borning . C implementations of a number of constraint satisfaction algorithms are available by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.ualberta.ca:/pub/ai/csp/ Get the files README and csplib.tar.Z. The algorithms include variations on backtracking (backjumping, backmarking, chronological backtracking, etc.), local consistency preprocessing algorithms (e.g., arc consistency), and random problem generators. For more information, write to Peter van Beek . Eden: Eden is a Poplog-based AI microworld developed by Simon Perkins, Jocelyn Paine and Edmund Chattoe of the Oxford University Artificial Intelligence Society. It is intended to serve as a testbed for learning and planning programs. Programs written in Pop-11, Prolog, Lisp, and ML control a "bug" that lives in a 2-dimensional world. Any kind of algorithm may be used to control the bug, including genetic algorithms, neural nets, and rule-based systems. Eden consists of a grid of cells, each of which can contain objects such as keys, doors, boulders and quicksand. Bug's objective is to find and eat a piece of food which the simulator has placed somewhere within this grid. To do this, Bug must negotiate its way towards the food while dealing intelligently with obstacles. Eden's laws of physics allow Bug to take one of several different actions when it encounters an object. The simulator then works out the consequences of the chosen action on Bug and on Eden, and displays these graphically in a Ved window. Bug's perceptions are updated to reflect the new state of the world, and the cycle repeats. Eden is available by anonymous ftp from the Imperial College archive in src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/prolog-pd-software/ [146.169.2.10] as the file eden.tar.Z. (Note: This is really a link to the directory computing/programming/languages/prolog/pd-software/.) Eden includes PopBeast, a simple Prolog bug which can read and parse simple commands, extract their meaning, plan how to satisfy these commands, and then carry out the plans. Parts of the current Eden are coded in Pop-11, so porting it to Prologs other than Poplog will require some effort. Most of the recoding needed is in the grid-world simulator and the definition of objects. Send mail to Jocelyn Paine if you're willing to try this. FW_Rules: FW_RULES is a Sicstus Prolog library providing a compiler for forward chaining rules. The implementation is based on a non-state saving technique coupled with an indexing mechanism on the working memory based on C bitwise operations to achieve efficiency. The library supports interoperability between the forward chaining language and the underlying Prolog engine. Terms in the working memory are represented as Prolog facts and can be accessed from Prolog to perform deduction. It is available by anonymous FTP from ftp.cs.unibo.it:/pub/gaspari/fw_rules/ as the files README and fw_rules.tar.Z. For more information, please write to Mauro Gaspari . HDRUG: Hdrug is an environment to develop logic grammars, parsers, and generators for natural languages. The package comes with a number of example grammars, including a Categorial Grammar, a Tree Adjoining Grammar, a Unification Grammar in the spirit of Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar, an Extraposition Grammar, a Definite Clause Grammar, and a port of the HPSG grammar from Bob Carpenter's ALE system. Each of the grammars comes with a set of parsers, such as Earley-like chart parsers, left-corner parsers and head-driven parsers. Some grammars come with variants of the head-driven generator. The package allows easy comparison of different parsers/generators, extensive possibilities of compiling feature equations into Prolog terms, graphical (Tk), LaTeX and ordinary Prolog output of trees, feature structures and Prolog terms, and plotted graphs and tables of statistical information. Hdrug runs in Sicstus Prolog and requires ProTcl and Tcl/Tk. It is available by anonymous FTP from tyr.let.rug.nl:/pub/prolog-app/Hdrug/ or by WWW from http://tyr.let.rug.nl/~vannoord/prolog-app/Hdrug/ For more information, write to Gertjan van Noord . Logic Programming Bibliographies: duck.dfki.uni-sb.de:/pub/lp-proceedings/ [134.96.188.92] The ftp server supports tar'ing on the fly, so if you type "get bibtex.tar" you will get a tar'ed version of the "bibtex" directory. BibTeX entries for the proceedings of the following conferences are included: SLP84-87,91, NACLP89-90, ILPS91, ICLP82,84,86-91,93, JICLP92, LP88, RTA89,93, PLILP90-92, ALPUK91, ICOT92, ALP90,92, CADE90,92, CTRS90,92, LICS86-91, UNIF89, EPIA89,91,93, TACS91, TAPSOFT93, EAIA90, FGCS92, FAC, ILPS93, PEPM91,93 and the following journals: JLP85-93, JAR91-93, JSC91-93, IANDC82-92. The bibliography is mirrored by the Universidade Nova de Lisboa. In addition, the bibliography can be searched using either WAIS or GOPHER. To search the lp-proceedings using WAIS, use the lp-proceedings.src wais source, available from the directory of servers. To search the lp-proceedings using GOPHER, point the client to gopher.fct.unl.pt, and follow the directories "Research/Bibliography/Logic Programming Proceedings". Searching should be easier than retrieving the entire package every time you want to locate a particular article. Send comments and bug reports to rscheidhauer@dfki.uni-sb.de. Machine Learning Algorithms Implemented in Prolog: In 1988 the Special Interest Group on Machine Learning of the German Society for Computer Science (GI e.V.) decided to establish a library of PROLOG implementations of Machine Learning algorithms. The library includes - amongst others - PROLOG implementations of Winston's arch, Becker's AQ-PROLOG, Fisher's COBWEB, Brazdil's generation of discriminations from derivation trees, Quinlan's ID3, FOIL, IDT, substitution matching, explanation based generalization, inverse resolution, and Mitchell's version spaces algorithm. All algorithms are written in Edinburgh Prolog syntax. Most of the algorithms are copyleft under the GNU General Public License. The programs are currently available via anonymous ftp-server from the GMD: ftp.gmd.de:/gmd/mlt/ML-Program-Library/ [129.26.8.84] They are also available by surface mail from Thomas Hoppe, Projektgruppe KIT, Technische Universitaet Berlin, Franklinstr. 28/29, 10629 Berlin, Germany. Files will be distributed via MS-DOS formated 3.5 inch floppy (double, high and extra-high density), which should be included with your request. You can also get them by sending an email message to Thomas Hoppe (see below). Send additional PROLOG implementations of Machine Learning Algorithms, complaints about them and detected bugs or problems to Thomas Hoppe, . Send suggestions and complaints about the ftp library to Werner Emde, Gesellschaft fuer Mathematik und Datenverarbeitung, Bonn, . Natural Language Processing in Prolog: The Prolog and DCG programs from Pereira and Shieber's book, "Prolog and Natural Language Analysis", are available by anonymous ftp from ftp.das.harvard.edu:/pub/shieber/pnla/. See the file README for the conditions under which the material is distributed. If you retrieve the files, please send an email message to the authors letting them know how you plan to use them. For further information, write to Fernando Pereira or Stuart Shieber . Parser: A parser for standard Prolog text written in C is available by anonymous ftp from trappist.elis.rug.ac.be:/pub/prolog/ It consists of only three modules (tokenizer, parser, and display routine) and an interface module to integrate it with an existing Prolog system. It is completely deterministic and about 10 times faster than O'Keefe's public domain parser written in Prolog. For more information, write to Koen De Bosschere . Partial Evaluation: Prolog code for the partial evaluator for the flowchart language described in Ch. 4 of "Partial Evaluation and Automatic Program Generation" by Jones, Gomard and Sestoft is available for anonymous ftp from ftp.diku.dk:/pub/diku/dists/jones-book/ch4_pl.tar.Z All three Futamura projections are implemented. The code has been tested under SWI Prolog 1.5 and 1.7 and should hopefully port to other prologs without too many problems. For more information, please contact Zerksis Umrigar . Pleuk Grammar Development System: Pleuk is intended to be a shell for grammar development, in that many different grammatical formalisms can be embedded within it. Grammatical formalisms that currently work with Pleuk include CFG (a simple context-free grammar system), HPSG-PL (a system for developing HPSG-style grammars, produced at Simon Fraser University, Canada, by Fred Popowich, Sandi Kodric and Carl Vogel), Mike (a simple graph-based unification system, enhanced with additional operations for the treatment of free word order proposed by Mike Reape in various publications), SLE (a graph-based formalism enhanced with arbitrary relations in the manner of Johnson & Rosner and Doerre & Eisele. Delayed evaluation is used to compute infinite relations. This system has been used for the development of several HPSG-style grammars) and Term (a term-based unification grammar system, originally developed for the support of Unification Categorial Grammar of Zeevat, Klein and Calder). Sample grammars are provided for all of these formalisms. Work continues apace on other formalisms, including Bob Carpenter's Ale system for typed feature structures, and Veronica Dahl's Static Discontinuity Grammars. Pleuk requires SICStus prolog version 2.1#6 or later, plus a variety of ancillary programs available free of charge from many FTP servers. Pleuk is available via anonymous FTP from the University of Georgia Artificial Intelligence FTP library ai.uga.edu:/pub/natural.language/ as the files pleuk.1.0.tar.Z, pleuk.PSmanuals.tar.Z, and pleuk.README. Pleuk will also be available shortly from the Natural Language Software Registry, German Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence (DKFI), Saarbruecken. For more information, send email to pleuk@cogsci.ed.ac.uk. Prolog Repository: Established by Jocelyn Paine of Experimental Psychology, Oxford University in 1987. The current catalogue (January 1991) contains 30 entries. For catalogue, queries and contributions contact POPX at: popx%vax.ox.ac.uk@oxmail.ox.ac.uk (internet) or popx@uk.ac.ox.vax (janet) FTP access is available through the Imperial College archive at src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/prolog-pd-software/ [146.169.2.10] This is actually a link to the directory /computing/programming/languages/prolog/pd-software/ To access it, cd to either of the above directories via anonymous ftp. The file README gives a brief summary of the contents of the directory and CATALOGUE gives a (long!) description of each entry. Entries include the Logic Programming Tutor from Paine's book, the DEC-10 public-domain library, the Linger natural-language corrector, a simple object-oriented add-on for Prolog, graph utilities, among other things. Files in the archive are also available on MS-DOS floppies for a nominal fee to cover the cost of floppies, postage, and packing. Prolog to SQL Compiler: The Prolog to SQL Compiler translates database access requests, which consist of a projection term and a database goal, to the appropriate SQL query. The compiler is written in standard Edinburgh Prolog and has been ported to a number of Prologs. The code posted to comp.lang.prolog works in ECRC's SEPIA Prolog, but should be easily ported to other Prologs. A detailed tech report on the implementation is available by email from draxler@cis.uni-muenchen.de (include your full postal address). The compiler is copyright, but may be used free of charge for non-commercial purposes and redistributed provided the copyright notice is retained intact. PSI: PSI is a handy system for the management and retrieval of your personal data, be it addresses, CD collections, or bibliographic references. It is intended for the non-commercial user. It may not be as full-fledged as some data-base systems, but has some features that you won't find in most commercial systems. Also, you may find it easier to set up and faster to use. PSI is useful for a broad range of data. Indexing with descriptors makes searching for the data you need fast, and the interface to other data-base formats (import and export) is quite powerful. PSI was written in LPA MacProlog and is a "genuine 'double clickable' Mac application". PSI runs on all Macs with System 6 or 7 in 1MB of main memory. As LPA MacProlog isn't yet 32-bit clean, PSI isn't either. Extensive documentation and some examples are included. PSI is available by anonymous ftp from sumex-aim.stanford.edu:/info-mac/app/ as the file psi-23.hqx. It was also available on a recent Nautilus CD-ROM and will be on the first Info-Mac CD-ROM. Queens and Knights: Queens and Knights are favorite problems for Prolog programmers. A collection of several implementations is available by anonymous ftp from sics.se:/pub/muse/queensANDknights.tar.Z.uue Write to Roland Karlsson for more information. Rubik's Cube: Amzi! Inc., the creators of Cogent Prolog, have made sources to Cube Solver II available from their ftp site, ftp.std.com:/vendors/amzi/. It is also available from the Prolog Repository at CMU, in ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/code/fun/rubik/. This Prolog program solves Rubik's Cube. The sources include a simple scrolling interface that should work in any Edinburgh standard Prolog. Also included is a ready-made executable for 386 and 486 PCs; it was implemented using Cogent Prolog. For more information, write to Amzi! Inc. (formerly Amziod) , 40 Samuel Prescott Dr., Stow, MA 01775, Tel: 508-897-7332. Fax: 508-897-2784. SEL: SEL is a declarative set processing language. Its main features are subset and equational program clauses, pattern matching over sets, support for efficient iteration and point-wise/incremental computation over sets, the ability to define transitive closures through circular constraints, meta-programming and simple higher-order programming, and a modest user-interface including tracing. The language seems well-suited to a number of problems in graph theory, program analysis, and discrete mathematics. The SEL compiler is written in Quintus Prolog and the run-time system is written in C. It generates WAM-like code, extended to deal with set-matching, memoization, and the novel control structure of the language. SEL is available by anonymous FTP from ftp.cs.buffalo.edu:/users/bharat/SEL2/. The FTP release comes with a user manual, bibliography of papers (including .dvi files), several sample programs, and source code. For further information, write to Bharat Jayaraman . A public-domain WAM emulator, written in C++ by Herve Touati, is available by anonymous FTP from gatekeeper.dec.com:/pub/plan/prolog/ucb/. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-6] Free Object-Oriented Systems for Prolog OL(P), Object Layer for Prolog, is an object-oriented extension to Prolog. It provides an object-oriented structuring and reuse mechanism for Prolog in a manner that preserves performance and semantics. The object-oriented layer is compiled into Prolog without introducing any side-effects. OL(P) takes the view of objects as collections of predicates (called methods). To Prolog, OL(P) 1.1 adds objects with methods, data encapsulation, instances, and multiple inheritance. Object methods can access Prolog predicates and vice versa. The OL(P) incremental compiler translates OL(P) programs to Prolog programs that don't need runtime interpretation (e.g., no search is needed for inheritance). OL(P) 1.1 comes with prepared installation for SICStus Prolog and QUINTUS Prolog (both on UNIX), documentation, simple built-in project management, some libraries, and example programs. The source is included, so you can port OL(P) to different platforms, different Prolog systems, and different logic programming languages. OL(P) is available by anonymous ftp from parcftp.xerox.com:/ftp/pub/ol/ [13.1.64.94]. Written by Markus P.J. Fromherz . LogTalk is a free object oriented extension to the Prolog programming language. It is based on a reflexive architecture intended to provide an open system, easily tailored to user needs. It implements simple inheritance and a delegation mechanism. Logtalk enables users to define new types of slots, each one with its own semantics, that can be reused by any object. It includes features for event-based programming. This enables the creation of elegant solutions to represent and maintain relations that restrict the internal state of participating objects. Logtalk (and more information about it) is available using the URL http://cygnus.ci.uc.pt/logtalk/logtalk.html For more information, write to the author Paulo Moura . See Common ESP (CESP) in [2-1] and BeBOP in [2-3]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-7] Commercial Object-Oriented Systems for Prolog LAP is an object-oriented system by Elsa. For more information, write to Elsa Software, La Grange Dame Rose, 6 ave du Marechal Juin, 92366 Meudon-La-Foret Cedex, France, call +33 (1) 46 30 24 55, fax +33 (1) 46 30 55 26, or send email to elsa!lap@uunet.uu.net. SPIRAL is an object oriented system by CRIL for Sun3 and Sun4 under Unix. For more information, write to CRIL, Conception et Realisation, Industriel de Logiciel, 146 bd de Valmy 92707, Colombes Cedex, France, call +33 1 47 69 53 67, or fax +33 1 47 69 53 99. See also LPA Prolog ++ in [2-2]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-8] The Prolog 1000 Database The Prolog 1000 is a database of real Prolog applications being assembled in conjunction with the Association for Logic Programming (ALP) and PVG. The aim is to demonstrate how Prolog is being used in the real world and it already contains over 500 programs with well over 2 million lines of code. The database is available for research use in SGML format from the Imperial College archive src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/packages/prolog-progs-db/prolog1000.v1.gz If you have or know about a program that might qualify for inclusion, send an email message to Al Roth (alroth@cix.compulink.co.uk) for an electronic entry form which only takes a few minutes to complete. Or write to Prolog 1000, PO Box 137, Blackpool, Lancashire, FY2 0XY, U.K., Fax: +44 253 53811 Telephone: +44 253 58081. (Floppy disks for PC or Mac in text form are also welcome, and paper entries may also be sent). Queries may also be addressed to: Chris Moss (cdsm@doc.ic.ac.uk), Leon Sterling (leon@alpha.ces.cwru.edu). ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-9] X-Windows Interfaces PI: PI is an interface between Prolog applications and the X Window System that aims to be independent from the Prolog engine, provided that it has a Quintus-style foreign function interface (such as SICStus, YAP). It is mostly written in Prolog and is divided in two libraries: (1) Edipo, a low-level interface to the Xlib functions, and (2) Ytoolkit, a high-level user interface toolkit that allows you to create and manage graphical objects, define new classes of objects, and handle user interaction. PI is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.ncc.up.pt:/pub/prolog/pi_1.2.tar.gz and includes documentation and some demos. Also see ytoolkit.tar.Z. PI has been tested in Quintus Prolog 3.1.1 and SICStus 2.1 #8. Send questions, comments, and bug reports to Ze' Paulo Leal, Universidade de Porto, Portugal, . XWIP: ftp.x.org:/contrib/xwip.tar.Z (formerly export.lcs.mit.edu) ftp.uu.net:/X/contrib/xwip.tar.Z XWIP is an X Windows interface for PROLOG. XPCE: XPCE is an object-oriented X-window interface toolkit for symbolic programming languages (Prolog and Lisp), offering a high level of abstraction for communication with X11, Unix processes, Unix networking facilities (sockets) and Unix files. XPCE's built-in classes (about 150) are mostly written in C. The XPCE/Prolog interface allows the user to create and manipulate instances of these classes. The user can also create new XPCE classes from Prolog. XPCE's window related classes provide various styles of menus, primitive graphical objects, compound graphical objects and Emacs oriented programmable text manipulation windows. The distribution contains several demo programs, including a diagram drawing tool (PceDraw), an animation demo, an Epoch-like editor, a graphical interface to Unix ispell, and an online hyper-text manual for XPCE itself. A demo version of XPCE/SWI-Prolog for Linux may be obtained by anonymous ftp from swi.psy.uva.nl:/pub/xpce/linux/ [145.18.114.17]. The non-demo versions (for SWI-Prolog, SICStus Prolog, Lucid Common Lisp and LispWorks) require filling out a license and paying a fee (see the file pub/xpce/INFO). To be added to the mailing list xpce@swi.psy.uva.nl send mail to xpce-request@swi.psy.uva.nl. Send bugs to xpce-bugs@swi.psy.uva.nl. ProWindows 3 is a commercial version of XPCE for Quintus Prolog. For further information, write to Simon Heywood, AI International Ltd, The Chapel, Park View House, 1 Park View Road, Berkhamsted, Herts, HP4 3EY, phone +44-(0)442-876722 (Sales Hotline +44 (0)442 876448), fax +44-(0)442-877997, or send email to sheywood@aiil.co.uk. ProTcl: ProTcl (pronounced pro-tickle) is a Prolog interface to Tcl/Tk. It has a very simple and lightweight interface, which allows one to evaluate Tcl expressions from Prolog. It defines the tcl_eval/1,2 predicate which passes the Tcl expressions to the Tcl interpreter. It has been tested on ECLiPSe and SICStus, on a Sparc 10. ProTcl is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.ecrc.de:/pub/eclipse/progs/protcl/ The ProTCL home page is http://www.ecrc.de/eclipse/html/protcl.html Send comments and suggestions to Micha Meier . ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-10] Is there a straight-forward way of compiling Prolog to C? Two methods of compiling Prolog to C have been reported in the literature: - WAM-based approaches - Continuation-based approaches The WAM-based approach compiles Prolog programs into a sequence of C function or macro calls to WAM instructions. A brief description of this method and some results are given in the paper: Michael R. Levy and R. Nigel Horspool, "Translating Prolog to C: a WAM-based Approach", in Proceedings of the Second Compulog Network Area Meeting on Programming Languages, and the Workshop on Logic Languages in Pisa, May 1993. (Available by anonymous ftp from csr.uvic.ca:/pub/mlevy/.) The best tutorial for writing a WAM-based compiler or WAM emulator is Hassan Ait-Kaci's book, "Warren's Abstract Machine: A Tutorial Reconstruction" (see [1-3] above). A "quick-and-dirty" method is to implement the WAM functions as described in Ait-Kaci's tutorial, to label each call with a C case label, and then throw a giant switch(P) statement around the entire sequence of calls, where P is the WAM program counter. On return from any instruction that modifies P, a "goto Start" must be inserted. (This method was posted by Rob Scott, , based on the JANUS papers by Saraswat.) This strategy will work, but does not allow you to modularize your prolog program. Predicates in prolog seem to generate 8 to 15 WAM instructions per clause, so (assuming very roughly a clause per line)you might expect your 1,000 line program to expand to a switch statement containing up to 15,000 lines. Some C compilers can't handle such a big switch statement. Levy and Horspool solve this problem by compiling each Prolog predicate to a seperate C function. A dispatch loop mechanism is used to call the C functions. C switch statements are used only inside the functions. A predicate that calls another predicate sets P to contain the address of the C function that implements the called predicate, (and sets another register called W in their scheme) and then returns to the dispatcher instead of calling the predicate. This bypasses the C run-time stack. This lets one exploit WAM optimizations (like LCO) and yet retain the ability to create many modules. Their system performs well when compared with byte-code compilers, but translated code runs slower than code produced by native code compilers. On the other hand, it outputs portable ANSI C that can run on any machine with a C compiler. Other approaches to translating to C use continuations. The idea here is to translate every Prolog predicate to a C function that has an additional argument, namely a continuation function. If the function fails, it simply returns, but if it succeeds, it executes the continuation. When the function regains control from the continuation, it can then try to generate a new solution. Here are two references that describe systems built using continuations: J. L. Weiner and S. Ramakrishnan, "A Piggy-Back Compiler for Prolog", in Proceedings of SIGPLAN T88 Conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation, Atlanta, Georgia, 1988, pages 288-296. J. L. Boyd and G. M. Karam, "Prolog in C", Carleton University, Ottawa, 1988. Oliver Ridoux reports that a continuation-based approach works well when used to compile LambdaProlog. His scheme translates every predicate into a function that uses and modifies the success and failure continuations, with recursion in the predicate becoming iteration in the continuation passing mechanism. Inside the function one uses whichever intermediate machine one fancies. Clauses within the function can be either the branches of a switch statement or simply labelled when using a C system that can store labels. This approach can still generate monstrous C programs that blow up the C compiler, but the C programs aren't as large as those generated by a one module to a function scheme. Approaches that replace recursion in a predicate with recursion in a function tend to overload the C stack and lead to sloppy memory management. Two technical reports describing Ridoux's approach are available by anonymous ftp from ftp.irisa.fr:/ as pm/*.ps.Z and mailv06/*.ps.Z. Michael Covington points out that a very simple approach is to write a Prolog interpreter in C, then store the Prolog program in that program's data! This will, of course, execute slowly. One might imagine all sorts of other schemes. For example, a query could be treated as a stack of "suspensions" (with the left-most goal on top). The top suspension is executed by selecting the appropriate clause (possibly using indexing), and then, if necessary, pushing new suspensions on the stack (the body of the clause whose head unified with the current suspension). Another question to ask is this: Is there any reason why you should want to convert Prolog to C at all? George Saab of Quintus Corp. pointed out that, with Quintus Prolog, you can create a standard .o file from a Prolog file, which can then be linked with your other .o files to create an executable. What's more, your Prolog code can be called from C code and vice versa. On ther hand, the advantage of distributing "Prolog objects" as C rather than .o files is portability. M. Gaspari and G. Attardi describe an approach to translating Prolog to C based on the provision of a common runtime architecture. This is described in G. Attardi and M. Gaspari, "Multilanguage Interoperability", in Proceedings of The 3rd International Symposium, PLILP 91, Springer Verlag, LNCS #528, 1991. [Note: Thanks to Michael Levy, Department of Computer Science, University of Victoria, , for writing this section.] ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-11] WAM emulators and tracers Johan Bevemyr's Luther-based WAM-tracer is available by anonymous ftp from Uppsala University in Sweden. It includes a simple compiler from Prolog to WAM code and a low-level WAM code tracer written in emacs-lisp. The tracer splits the screen into regions to show data-areas, registers, and so on. You can then step through running the code. The tracer is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.csd.uu.se:/pub/WAM-tracer/luther.tar.Z Documentation on the tracer is included in the distribution. The emulator is in the /pub/WAM-emulator/ directory (and runs in SICStus Prolog). For more information, contact Johan Bevemyr or . ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-12] What is the Basic Andorra Model and AKL? The Basic Andorra Model is a way to execute definite clause programs that allows dependent and-parallelism to be exploited transparently. It also supports nice programming techniques for search programs. The idea is to first reduce all goals that match at most one clause. When no such goal exists, any goal (e.g., the left-most) may be chosen. The BAM was proposed by David H. D. Warren, and his group at Bristol has developed an AND-OR parallel implementation called Andorra-I, which also supports full Prolog. See, for example, Seif Haridi and Per Brand, "Andorra Prolog, an integration of Prolog and committed choice languages", in Proceedings of the FGCS 1988, ICOT, Tokyo, 1988. Vitor Santos Costa, David H. D. Warren, and Rong Yang, "Two papers on the Andorra-I engine and preprocessor", in Proceedings of the 8th ICLP. MIT Press, 1991. Steve Gregory and Rong Yang, "Parallel Constraint Solving in Andorra-I", in Proceedings of FGCS'92. ICOT, Tokyo, 1992. AKL (Andorra Kernel Language) is a concurrent constraint programming language that supports both Prolog-style programming and committed choice programming. Its control of don't-know nondeterminism is based on the Andorra model, which has been generalised to also deal with nondeterminism encapsulated in guards and aggregates (such as bagof) in a concurrent setting. See, for example, Sverker Janson and Seif Haridi, "Programming Paradigms of the Andorra Kernel Language", in Proceedings of ILPS'91. MIT Press, 1991. Torkel Franzen, "Logical Aspects of the Andorra Kernel Language", SICS Research Report R91:12, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, 1991. Torkel Franzen, Seif Haridi, and Sverker Janson, "An Overview of the Andorra Kernel Language", In LNAI (LNCS) 596, Springer-Verlag, 1992. Sverker Janson, Johan Montelius, and Seif Haridi, "Ports for Objects in Concurrent Logic Programs", in Research Directions in Concurrent Object-Oriented Programming, MIT Press, 1993 (forthcoming). The above papers on AKL are available by anonymous ftp from sics.se:/pub/ccp/papers/ An (as yet non-released) prototype implementation of AKL is available for research purposes (contact sverker@sics.se). ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-13] What is Constraint Logic Programming? Constraint Logic Programming (CLP) augments Prolog by adding constraints to the clauses. The CLP implementation solves goals in the same manner as Prolog, but also merges the constraints associated with each rule. If the merge succeeds, the successful goal and the corresponding constraints are returned. If, however, the constraints are mutually exclusive, the solution fails. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-14] How do you write portable programs in Prolog? The de-facto standard syntax for Prolog is known as the Edinburgh standard. It is based on the syntax of DEC-10 Prolog, an early Prolog implementation developed at the University of Edinburgh. See question [1-1] for information on the draft ISO standard for Prolog. Unfortunately, not every Prolog implementation is Edinburgh compatible. There also isn't any notion of read-conditionalization, like #+ and #- *features* in Common Lisp. One option is to use the C preprocessor on Prolog code before loading it into Prolog. Or you could use term-expansion to roll your own conditional compilation system. Term expanding a clause to [] effectively discards it. Another possibility is to conditionalize the execution instead of the compilation. The user would have to uncomment a line like one of the following, % this_is(quintus). % this_is(sicstus). and the code would have to test for the proper literal a :- this_is(quintus), blah, blah, blah. a :- this_is(sicstus), blah, blah, blah. at a slight cost in efficiency. (If you first feed the program through a general partial evaluator, you'll get an equivalent program without the inefficiency. Partial evaluation is in some sense a more powerful and semantically cleaner form of source preprocessing. Given :- , . If is always false, we can safely drop the clause. If is always true, we can drop it from any clauses that include it.) Another possibility is Richard O'Keefe's environment package for Prolog. It was posted to comp.lang.prolog on 1-SEP-94; a copy can be found in ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/code/ext/env/env.pl ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-15] World-Wide Web (WWW) Resources The World Wide Web (WWW) is a hypermedia document that spans the Internet. It uses the http (HyperText Transfer Protocol) for the light-weight exchange of files over the Internet. NCSA Mosaic is a World Wide Web browser developed at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA). Mosaic's popularity derives, in part, from its ability to communicate using more traditional Internet protocols like FTP, Gopher, WAIS, and NNTP, in addition to http. Mosaic can display text, hypertext links, and inlined graphics directly. When Mosaic encounters a file type it can't handle internally, such as Postscript documents, mpeg movies, sound files, and JPEG images, it uses an external viewer (or player) like Ghostscript to handle the file. Mosaic also includes facilities for exploring the Internet. In other words, Mosaic is an multimedia interface to the Internet. The hypertext documents viewed with Mosaic are written in HTML (HyperText Markup Language), which is a subset of SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language). All that is needed is just a few more improvements, such as the ability to format tables and mathematics, and a WYSIWYG editor, for HTML to greatly facilitate electronic journals and other publications. NCSA Mosaic for the X Window System is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu:/Mosaic/ as source code and binaries for Sun, SGI, IBM RS/6000, DEC Alpha OSF/1, DEC Ultrix, and HP-UX. Questions about NCSA Mosaic should be directed to mosaic-x@ncsa.uiuc.edu (X-Windows version), mosaic-mac@ncsa.uiuc.edu (Macintosh), and mosaic-win@ncsa.uiuc.edu (Microsoft Windows). An automatically generated HTML version of the PRG is accessible by WWW as part of the AI-related FAQs Mosaic page. The URL for this resource is http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/Web/Groups/AI/html/faqs/top.html The direct URL for the PRG is http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/Web/Groups/AI/html/faqs/lang/prolog/prg/top.html The remainder of this section lists WWW resources of interest to Prolog and logic programming researchers, students, and practitioners. Constraints: The newsgroup comp.constraints has an ftp archive and WWW home page: ftp.cs.city.ac.uk:/pub/constraints http://web.cs.city.ac.uk/archive/constraints/constraints.html Logic Programming: http://www.comlab.ox.ac.uk/archive/logic-prog.html Jonathan Bowen http://www.watson.ibm.com/watson/logicpgm/ [Logic Programming at IBM Research] Peter Reintjes http://ps-www.dfki.uni-sb.de/~vanroy/impltalk.html ["Issues in Implementing Logic Languages" -- overview of state-of-art in Prolog implementation.] Peter Van Roy http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/index.html [Table of Contents from Conferences and Journals in the fields of database systems and logic programming.] Michael Ley Abstract Interpretation for LP Bibliography: http://www.labri.u-bordeaux.fr/~corsini/Public/Reports/abint-biblio.ps 200 entries so far. Marc-Michel Corsini ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-16] Prolog Job Postings The PROLOG-JOBS mailing list exists to help programmers find Prolog programming positions, and to help companies with Prolog programming positions find capable Prolog programmers. (Prolog here means Prolog-like languages, including logic programming languages.) Material appropriate for the list includes Prolog job announcements and should be sent to ai+prolog-jobs@cs.cmu.edu. Resumes should NOT be sent to the list. [Note: The 'ai+' part of the mailing list name is used for directing submissions to the appropriate mail-server. The list is NOT restricted to AI-related Prolog jobs -- all Prolog job announcements are welcome.] As a matter of policy, the contents of this mailing list is considered confidential and will not be disclosed to anybody. To subscribe, send a message to ai+query@cs.cmu.edu with subscribe prolog-jobs , in the message body. (If your mailer objects to the "+", send subscription requests to "ai+query"@cs.cmu.edu, job announcements to "ai+prolog-jobs"@cs.cmu.edu, etc.) For help on using the query server, send mail to ai+query@cs.cmu.edu with help in the message body. Job postings sent to the list are automatically archived in ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/jobs/prolog/ If you have any other questions, please send them to ai+@cs.cmu.edu ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-17] Is Prolog really used in Windows NT? Yes. For more information, see Dennis Merritt, "Extending C with Prolog", Dr Dobb's Journal, August 1994, pages 78-82 and 102, 104. D. Hovel, "Small Prolog and Windows NT Networking", Dr Dobb's Journal, August 1994, page 80. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-18] History of Prolog Van Roy, Peter, "1983-1993: The Wonder Years of Sequential Prolog Implementation," DEC Paris Research Laboratory, Research Report 36, December 1993. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [1-A] Acknowledgements The original version of this guide (Version 0.6, Dec 11, 1991) was compiled by Dag Wahlberg, Uppsala University, Sweden , and published in the 5(1) issue of the ALP Newsletter (February 1992). Other people who helped with the compilation include Chris Moss , Mats Carlsson, SICS , Michael A. Covington , Jocelyn Paine , Per G. Bilse, PDC , David Cohen, BIM Systems Inc , Mark Korsloot , and David W. Talmage . Thanks also to Jamie Andrews . ---------------------------------------------------------------- ;;; *EOF* Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!uhog.mit.edu!nntp.club.cc.cmu.edu!cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!mkant From: mkant+@cs.cmu.edu (Mark Kantrowitz) Newsgroups: comp.lang.prolog,comp.object.logic,news.answers,comp.answers Subject: FAQ: Prolog Implementations 2/2 [Monthly posting] Supersedes: Followup-To: poster Date: 13 Mar 1995 08:03:00 GMT Organization: School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University Lines: 1561 Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu Distribution: world Expires: 24 Apr 1995 08:00:33 GMT Message-ID: References: Reply-To: mkant+prg@cs.cmu.edu NNTP-Posting-Host: glinda.oz.cs.cmu.edu Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.lang.prolog:12371 comp.object.logic:389 news.answers:39807 comp.answers:10629 Archive-name: prolog/resource-guide/part2 Last-Modified: Thu Mar 9 15:25:48 1995 by Mark Kantrowitz Version: 1.26 Maintainer: Mark Kantrowitz URL: http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/Web/Groups/AI/html/faqs/lang/prolog/prg/top.html Size: 85173 bytes, 1569 lines ;;; **************************************************************** ;;; Prolog Resource Guide ****************************************** ;;; **************************************************************** ;;; prg_2.faq This is part two of the Prolog Resource Guide. This part lists available Prolog, logic programming, and constraint system implementations, both free and commercial. Send suggestions and comments to: mkant+prolog-guide@cs.cmu.edu Prolog Implementations (Part 2): [2-0] General information about Prolog Implementations [2-1] Free Prolog Implementations [2-2] Commercial Prolog Implementations [2-3] Free Parallel Prolog Implementations [2-4] Commercial Parallel Prolog Implementations [2-5] Free Constraint Systems [2-6] Commercial Constraint Systems [2-7] Free Logic Programming Systems [2-8] Commercial Logic Programming Systems [2-9] Other Commercial Prolog Products [2-10] Prolog extensions, meta-interpreters, and pre-processors Search for [#] to get to topic number # quickly. In newsreaders which support digests (such as rn), [CTRL]-G will page through the answers. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-0] General information about Prolog Implementations When comparing free and commercial Prolog implementations, a rule of thumb is that commercial prolog implementations are often more robust and better supported than the public domain and free prolog implementations. Commercial Prolog implementations tend to have better debugging facilities. Many of the commercial Prolog vendors offer educational discounts to universities, and some of the commercial Prolog implementations are rather inexpensive. When considering a commercial Prolog implementation, be sure to ask for current pricing information. Although we try to keep this information up to date, there is no guarantee that it hasn't changed in the interim. If you find that the information has changed, please ask the vendor to send us current information. Some research institutions make their Prolog implementations available for a fee. We have included those implementations in the lists of commercial Prolog implementations. The Prolog Vendors' Group may be contacted by email via the Secretary, Al Roth, at . Remember when ftping compressed or compacted files (.Z, .arc, .fit, .zip, .z, etc.) to use binary mode for retrieving the files. Files that end with a .z suffix were compressed with the patent-free gzip (no relation to zip). Source for gzip is available from: prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu/ as the files gzip-1.2.3.shar, gzip-1.2.3.tar,or gzip-1.2.3.msdos.exe. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-1] Free Prolog Implementations The following list of free Prolog and logic programming implementations excludes those listed in the comp.lang.lisp and comp.lang.scheme FAQs (i.e., Prolog interpreters written in Lisp and Scheme). Most of these Prolog implementations are available from the CMU AI Repository, in the directory ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/impl/ A.D.A. Public Domain Prolog: aisun1.ai.uga.edu:ai.prolog/adapdpro.zip A rather slow implementation of Prolog for MS-DOS systems, originally a product of Automata Design Associates (now defunct), 1570 Arran Way, Dresker, PA 19025, 215-335-5400. Aquarius Prolog: Aquarius Prolog is a high-performance, portable Prolog implementation developed since 1989 by the Aquarius Project at UC/Berkeley, the Advanced Computer Architecture Laboratory (ACAL) at the University of Southern California (USC), and at Digital Equipment Corporation's Paris Research Laboratory. The developers are Tom Getzinger, Ralph Clarke Haygood, and Peter Van Roy. Aquarius Prolog includes: - A compiler with global analysis. The compiler is built around the Berkeley Abstract Machine (BAM) execution model for Prolog. BAM retains desirable features of the Warren Abstract Machine (WAM), but allows for significant further optimizations and is easier to map onto actual general-purpose machines. - A back-end that maps the BAM onto various actual general-purpose machines, including MIPS R3000 (DEC Ultrix and MIPS RISC/os), SPARC (SunOS), HP 9000 300/400 with MC68020, MC68030 or MC68040 processors (HP-UX), and Sun3 (SunOS). - A run-time system offering substantially the same built-in predicates and memory management as Quintus Prolog, with additions such as two kinds of destructive assignment. Most of the built-in predicates are written in Prolog, with little or no performance penalty. Aquarius Prolog also includes an interpreter and documentation. Aquarius Prolog comes in two distributions, Enduser and Full. The latter includes full source code and implementation notes. Aquarius Prolog may be obtained free of charge from USC, after signing and returning a license agreement. To get the license agreement, send a message to listserv@acal-server.usc.edu with get aquarius-info license in the message body. To get more information about the Full and Enduser distributions, send the listserver a message containing one or both of the two lines: get aquarius-info readme-full get aquarius-info readme-enduser To subscribe to the aquarius-prolog mailing list, send the listserver a message with body: subscribe aquarius-prolog To get more information about the abilities of the listserver, send it a message with 'help' in the body. For further information, write to University of Southern California, Advanced Computer Architecture Laboratory (ACAL), Attn: Aquarius Prolog Licensing, 3740 S. McClintock, Suite 131, Los Angeles, CA 90089-2561, or send email to aquarius@acal-server.usc.edu. Beta-Prolog (version 1.2): Beta-Prolog is a fast and portable Prolog implementation. It consists of an emulator of the NTOAM (matching Tree Oriented Abstract Machine) written in C, a compiler written in Prolog that translates Prolog programs into NTOAM instructions, and a library of built-in predicates. Beta-Prolog has the following features: 1. It is one of the fastest emulator-based Prolog implementations. The NTOAM inherits many good features of the WAM, but differs from WAM-based systems in that predicate arguments are passed directly in stack frames and only one frame is used for each predicate. For many programs written for WAM-based systems, Beta-Prolog is faster than emulator-based SICStus Prolog 2.1. Further speed-ups can be achieved if these programs are rewritten into a style suitable for Beta-Prolog by taking the NTOAM's argument passing scheme into account. 2. Besides Edinburgh style clauses, Beta-Prolog also accepts matching clauses in which input and output unifications are separated, and determinism is denoted explicitly. The compiler is able to translate predicates in this form into matching trees and index them using all input arguments. The compiler can compile quite large programs in a short time because it consists of only matching clauses. 3. It provides an interactive interface through which the programmers can consult, compile, load, debug and run programs. 4. It provides an interface through which C functions can be called from Prolog. 5. It provides a special data structure called state tables that can be used to represent graphs, simple and complex domains in constraint satisfaction problems, and situations in various combinatorial search problems. 6. It includes a finite-domain constraint solver with which constraint satisfaction problems can be specified declaratively. Beta-Prolog is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.kyutech.ac.jp:/pub/Language/prolog/ [131.206.1.101] or from the CMU AI Repository in ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/impl/prolog/beta_pl/ The system can be installed without difficulty on any machine that runs Unix and the cc (or gcc) C compiler. Beta-Prolog was developed by Neng-Fa Zhou, , Faculty of Computer Science and Systems Engineering, Kyushu Institute of Technology, 680-4 Kawazu, Iizuka, Fukuoka 820, Japan, phone 81-948-29-7774, fax 81-948-29-7760. For more information, send mail to betaprolog@cad.mse.kyutech.ac.jp. BinProlog: clement.info.umoncton.ca:/BinProlog3.0.tar.gz [139.103.16.2] ftp.elis.rug.ac.be:/pub/BinProlog/ [157.193.67.1] BinProlog replaces the WAM by a more compact continuation passing logic engine based on a mapping of full Prolog to binary logic programs. It includes an interface Tcl/Tk. Version 2.20 runs on Sparc, DEC Alpha, MIPS (SGI, DEC) 68k (NeXT, Sun3), R6000 (IBM), PA-RISC (HP) and IBM PC (386/486). The compiler makes 528 KLIPS on a Sparc 10-40 (101 KLIPS on a NeXT) and still uses a very small (49K under Solaris 2.1) emulator, making it among the fastest freely available C-emulated Prologs (3-5 times faster than C-Prolog, 2-3 times faster than SWI-Prolog, 1.5-2 times faster than (X)SB-prolog and close to C-emulated Sicstus 2.1.). Comments and bug reports should be sent to Paul Tarau . BinProlog is free for reasearch and other non-profit purposes. Use in industrial applications, licensing of C-sources, porting to other platforms, BinProlog related support and consulting are available but need a separate agreement. BinProlog's very small code-size and high performances make it suitable to be integrated in industrial C-applications that need the services of an embedded logic programming engine. Boizumault Prolog: The various Prolog interpreters described in Patrice Boizumault's book, "The Implementation of Prolog", are available by anonymous ftp from cnam.cnam.fr:/pub/Boizumault/ or from the CMU AI Repository in ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/impl/prolog/boiz_pl/ The three interpreters, corresponding to appendices A through D of the book, are written in Common Lisp. Examples which run in all the interpreters include cryptarithms, Eliza, Sieve of Eratosthenes, Factorial, N-Queens, and Quicksort. For more information, write to Patrice Boizumault . Common ESP: CESP (Common Extended Self-contained Prolog) is an object-oriented system by the AI Language Research Institute, Kamakura, Japan. The binary is free for R & D use only -- send 1/4in CMT Sun3 and Sun4 (Sparc) with Sun OS R4.0.3, R4.1 or R4.1.1. For more information, write to AI Language Research Institute Ltd, Yoshitoku Bldg, Shiba 3-15-14, Minato-Ku, Tokyo 105, Japan, fax +81 3 3456 4418, or send email to k-hata@air.co.jp or matsuura@air.co.jp. cu-Prolog: See [2-5]. ECLiPSe (ECRC Logic Programming System) combines the functionalities of several ECRC systems, including SEPIA (an Edinburgh-style extensible Prolog system based on a WAM compiler), MegaLog (a database system) and CHIP (a constraint logic programming system). ECLiPSe includes a Prolog compiler with extended functionality that is Quintus and SICStus compatible, a tightly connected database system based on the BANG file system, a CLP system, and an interface to the Tcl/Tk X11 toolkit. The BANG database can store not only relations, but also any Prolog structures and programs. The CLP system contains several libraries with various types of constraint handling schemes, including atomic finite domains, linear rational constraints, CHR (constraint handling rules) and Propia (generalised propagation). It also supports writing further extensions like new user-defined constraints or complete new constraint solvers. ECLiPSe also includes a profiler, user-definable syntax, metaterms as first-class citizens, coroutining, a high-level debugger (OPIUM), a partial evaluation system (PADDY), and unlimited precision integer and rational numbers. ECLiPSe is available for a nominal fee of DM 300 (~$200) to all academic and government-sponsored organizations. It is distributed in binary form for Sun-3 and Sparc machines. Send orders or requests for further information to eclipse_request@ecrc.de or write to ECRC, Arabellastrasse 17, 81925 Munich, Germany. The ECLiPSe documentation (ASCII and dvi) and some shareware packages ported to ECliPSe are now available by anonymous ftp from ecrc.de:/pub/eclipse To subscribe to the eclipse_users@ecrc.de mailing list, send mail to eclipse_request@ecrc.de. The tech support email address is eclipse_bugs@ecrc.de. eLP (Ergo Lambda Prolog) is an interpreter written by Conal Elliott, Frank Pfenning and Dale Miller in Common Lisp and implements the core of lambda Prolog (higher-order hereditary Harrop formulas). It is embedded in a larger development environment called ESS (the Ergo Support System). eLP implements all core language feature and offers a module system, I/O, some facilities for tracing, error handling, arithmetic, recursive top-levels, on-line documentation and a number of extended examples, including many programs from Amy Felty's and John Hannan's thesis. It should run in Allegro Common Lisp, Lucid Common Lisp, Kyoto Common Lisp, CMU Common Lisp and Ibuki Common Lisp. The eLP implementation of lambda Prolog is no longer developed or maintained, but it is still available via anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/ergo/export/ess/. The file ergolisp.tar.Z contains the Ergo project's extensions to Common Lisp, including some facilities for attributes and dealing with abstract syntax trees. The file sb.tar.Z contains the Ergo Parser/Unparser/Formatter generator and ab.tar.Z contains the Ergo Attribute Grammar facility. The file elp.tar.Z contains the Ergo implementation of lambda Prolog. To customize grammars you need the sb.tar.Z file. When you retrieve the system, please print, fill out, and send in a copy of the non-restrictive license you will find in the file LICENSE. To subscribe to the elp@cs.cmu.edu mailing list, send mail to elp-request@cs.cmu.edu. Bugs should be sent to elp-bugs@cs.cmu.edu. ESL Prolog-2 (PD Version): ai.uga.edu:ai.prolog/eslpdpro.zip [128.192.12.9] A prolog for MS-DOS systems with good performance. It deviates slightly from Edinburgh standard (strings "like this" are not lists of ASCII codes), but you can add a declaration that makes it fully Edinburgh-compatible. (Add the line :- state(token_class,_,dec10). at the beginning of the program.) It is a more limited version of the interpreter from the Commercial Version (see [2-2] below). [Please note that ESL Prolog is NOT a UGA product, they just run the machine on which a copy is made available. Anyone with questions should contact ESL in Oxford, England (see [2-2] below). The commercial version of ESL Prolog-2 has been sold to ESI.] Documentation is available as a 2-volume set published by Ablex (type "prolog2" for info). ESL Prolog is also discussed extensively in Tony Dodd's book "Prolog: A Logical Approach," Oxford University Press. GOEDEL is intended to be a declarative successor to Prolog. The main design aim of Goedel is to have functionality and expressiveness similar to Prolog, but to have greatly improved declarative semantics compared with Prolog. This improved declarative semantics has substantial benefits for program construction, verification, debugging, transformation, and so on. Considerable emphasis is placed on Goedel's meta-logical facilities, since this is where Prolog is most deficient. In particular, Goedel has declarative replacements for Prolog's var, nonvar, assert, and retract. Goedel is a strongly typed language, its type system being based on many-sorted logic with parametric polymorphism. It has a module system, and supports floating point numbers and infinite precision integers and rationals. It can solve constraints over finite domains of integers and also linear rational constraints. It supports processing of finite sets. It also has a flexible computation rule and a pruning operator which generalises the commit of the concurrent logic programming languages. The release includes the Goedel system, the SAGE partial evaluator for Goedel, a user manual, and 50 example programs. Goedel must be compiled in SICStus Prolog 2.1 #6 or later; Sparc and Linux executables are included in the distribution. Goedel is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.kuleuven.ac.be:/pub/logic-prgm/goedel/ [134.58.41.2] ftp.cs.bris.ac.uk:/goedel [137.222.102.102] For more information, write to goedel@compsci.bristol.ac.uk. Please send an email message to this address (with your name, institution and address) to this address when you obtain the system. To subscribe to the goedel-users@compsci.bristol.ac.uk mailing list, send mail to goedel-users-request@compsci.bristol.ac.uk indicating that you wish to join the Goedel discussion group. A book describing the language is now available from MIT Press: Patricia Hill and John Lloyd, "The Godel Programming Language", MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1994. ISBN 0-262-08229-2 ($45.00). IC-Prolog II: src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/computing/programming/languages/prolog/icprolog/. The emulator is available at present only in Sun-4 binary form. Source code may be released later in the year when project finishes. Produced by Imperial College, IC-Prolog II is a multi-threaded Prolog system. It includes a Parlog sub-system, an interface to TCP primitives and "mailboxes", a high level communication system. These enable distributed applications (such as client/server systems) to be written using logic programming. The distribution also includes a simple expert system shell and the preprocessor for the Prolog language extension L&O from the book "Logic & Objects" by Frank McCabe. (The sources for the L&O extension is also available to LPA MacProlog users in the subdirectory 'lo'.) See "I.C. Prolog II : a Multi-threaded Prolog System" by Damian Chu and Keith Clark and also "IC Prolog II: a Language for Implementing Multi-Agent Systems" by Damian Chu. Postscript copies of these two papers may be found in the subdirectory 'papers'. Standalone versions of the Parlog system for Sun-3 and Sun-4 can also be found in this directory. Contact Damian Chu for questions about IC Prolog II, and contact Zacharias Bobolakis for information about L&O. JB-Prolog 2.1.2 is a slim and powerfull prolog for the MacIntosh. Its key features are: Arbitrary long integers, fast interpreter only, source line debugger, user interface toolkit, persistent objects. It is available from the CMU AI repository as ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/impl/prolog/jbprolog/JBprolog2.1.2.sit.hqx For more information contact Jan Burse, jburse@clients.switch.ch, XLOG, Scheuchzerstr. 67, 8006 Zrich, Switzerland. PIE2 is a Prolog interpreter for DOS. It is available on CompuServe in the AIEXPERT forum. PIE2.zip contains the interpreter and examples, and PIEDOC.ZIP contains the documentation. Written by Brent Ruggles . Prolog-68 is a free WAM-based Prolog system running on Atari ST and TT computers. Not yet finished (no floating point, some missing built-ins). Contact Jens Kilian for information. Available by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/impl/prolog/prolog68/ as a ZOO archive. Prolog/Mali is a compiler for the higher-order language Lambda-Prolog. Lambda-Prolog is an extension of Prolog defined by Miller (Miller, D.A., and Nadathur, G., "Higher-order logic programming", 3rd International Conference on Logic Programming, pages 448-462, London 1986). It is an extension of Prolog where terms are simply typed lambda terms and clauses are higher order hereditary Harrop formulas. The main novelties are universal quantification on goals and implication. Prolog/Mali is a complete system which includes a C translator, a linker, libraries, runtime, and documentation, and runs on UNIX. It requires the MALI-V06 abstract memory package. Prolog/Mali is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.irisa.fr:/pm/. Written by Pascal Brisset (or ) and Olivier Ridoux (ridoux@irisa.fr). To be added to the mailing list, send mail to prolog-mali-request@irisa.fr. For more information, send mail to pm@irisa.fr. LIFE (Logic, Inheritance, Functions, and Equations) is an experimental programming language with a powerful facility for structured type inheritance. It reconciles styles from functional programming, logic programming, and object-oriented programming. It subsumes the functionality of its precursor languages LOGIN and Le_Fun, and may be seen as an extension of Prolog. The syntax of Wild_LIFE has been kept as close as possible to that of the Edinburgh standard for Prolog. LIFE offers natively high-level abstraction facilities and convenient data and control structures particularly well-suited for AI programming. LIFE implements a constraint logic programming language with equality (unification) and entailment (matching) constraints over order-sorted feature terms. The interplay of unification and matching provides an implicit coroutining facility thanks to an automatic suspension mechanism. This allows interleaving interpretation of relational and functional expressions which specify structural dependencies on objects. The Wild_LIFE interpreter is the first implementation of the LIFE language available to the general public. It is a product of Digital Equipment Corporation's Paris Research Laboratory (DEC PRL). Wild_LIFE runs on MIPS/Ultrix (DECstations), Alpha/OSF-1, SPARC/SunOS, RS/6000, and SGI machines, and should be portable to other Unix workstations. It is implemented in C, and includes an interface to X Windows. Wild_LIFE is available by anonymous ftp from gatekeeper.dec.com:/pub/plan as the file Life1.0.tar.Z. To be added to the mailing list (life-users@cs.sfu.ca), send mail to life-users-request@cs.sfu.ca. Send bug reports to life-bugs@cs.sfu.ca. Open Prolog: Open Prolog (OP) is a Prolog interpreter for the Apple Macintosh. It follows the so-called 'Edinburgh' syntax and supports most standard Prolog features, including Definite Clause Grammars. Extra predicates can be added via drop-in external predicates, similar to Hypercard's XCMDs. OP will work in any Macintosh from a Plus upwards, and is now 32-bit clean. OP is available by anonymous ftp from grattan.cs.tcd.ie:/languages/open-prolog/ [134.226.32.15] It is also available from other sites, such as: sumex-aim.stanford.edu:/info-mac/ mac.archive.umich.edu [141.211.165.41] nexus.yorku.ca:/pub/prolog/ [130.63.9.1] aisun1.ai.uga.edu [128.192.12.9] /afs/umich.edu/group/itd/archive/mac/development/languages but the most recent version will always be available from grattan, OP's home site. For more information, write to Michael Brady, Computer Science Department, Trinity College, Dublin 2, IRELAND, send email to brady@cs.tcd.ie, call +353 1 7021786, or fax +353 1 6772204 (5 hours ahead of East Coast US time). PD Prolog 19: wuarchive.wustl.edu:/mirrors/msdos/prolog/prolog19.arc (IBM PC) aisun1.ai.uga.edu (128.192.12.9) Portable Prolog System is an interpreter from the University of York. Runs on any system having a Pascal compiler. For more information, write to University of York, Software Distribution Officer, Department of Computer Science, University of York, York, YO1 5DD, UK, call +44 (904) 59861, or fax +44 (904) 433744. Qu-Prolog 3.2 and Ergo 4.0: Qu-Prolog is a high-level language designed primarily for rapid prototyping of interactive theorem provers and, more generally, for symbolic computation on formal languages. Its object level includes quantified terms and object variables. As an example, the interactive theorem prover Ergo 4.0 is implemented in Qu-Prolog. The compactness and high level of Ergo 4.0 source code demonstrate the advantages of Qu-Prolog for such applications. Ergo includes a 'window inference' method that is specifically designed to support hierarchical goal-directed proofs and allow easy access to the context of a subterm. Ergo also provides support for defining a variety of logics and support for proving schematic theorems and answer extraction. Ergo is being used to support the development of verified software. The system has been tested only on a Sun4. Qu-Prolog and Ergo are available by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.uq.oz.au:/pub/SVRC/ as software/qp.tar.Z and software/Ergo.tar. The tech report techreports/tr93-18.ps.Z describes Qu-Prolog in detail. Send comments to Peter Robinson . SB-Prolog: cs.arizona.edu:/sbprolog sbcs.sunysb.edu:/pub/sbprolog Stony Brook Prolog runs on Sun4, Pyramid-98x, DEC3100, SGI Iris, Amiga, and MS-DOS machines. Contact warren@sbcs.sunysb.edu for more information. Two versions are available: version 2.5 is an interpreter for Amigas and version 3.1 is an interpreter and compiler for Unix and MSDOS/386. SB-Hilog runs in SB-Prolog and Quintus Prolog and is available on sbcs.sunysb.edu:/pub/hilog/ src.doc.ic.ac.uk [146.169.2.10] contains SBProlog 3.1 executables for MS-DOS/386 in /computing/programming/languages/prolog/sbprolog, filename sbpmsdos.zip. nic.funet.fi contains SBProlog executables for Amiga in /pub/amiga/fish/disks100-199/ff140. Modular SB-Prolog (= SB-Prolog version 3.1 plus modules) is available by anonymous FTP from ftp.dcs.ed.ac.uk:/pub/dts/mod-prolog.tar.Z [129.215.160.5] Includes interpreter for SPARC. For more information, write to Brian Paxton . [NOTE: SB-Prolog is superseded by XSB (see below) and hence is no longer supported by Stony Brook or the University of Arizona. The only reason to continue using SB-Prolog is for DOS, since XSB does not run under DOS and there are currently no plans to port it to DOS.] SLG: The SLG system is a meta interpreter implementation of goal-oriented deductive query processing and non-monotonic reasoning with the following features: * goal-oriented query evaluation of normal logic programs under the well-founded semantics by Van Gelder, Ross and Schliph; * goal-oriented query evaluation of general logic programs under the alternating fixpoint logic by Van Gelder, with the restriction that the body of a clause has to be either an existential conjunction of literals or a universal disjunction of literals. * goal-oriented query evaluation under the stable model semantics by Gelfond and Lifchitz. * integration with Prolog execution, and the use of Prolog syntax for all programs. The SLG system is freely available by anonymous ftp from Southern Methodist University or SUNY at Stony Brook seas.smu.edu:/pub/ [129.119.3.2] sbcs.sunysb.edu:/pub/XSB/ [130.245.1.15] as the file slg.tar.gz. Comments, requests, and bug reports should be sent to Weidong Chen, , Computer Science and Engineering, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas 75275-0122, phone 214-768-3097, or David Scott Warren, , Department of Computer Science, SUNY at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794-4400, phone 516-632-8454. SWI Prolog: swi.psy.uva.nl:/pub/SWI-Prolog/ [145.18.114.17] (Main source) as the files pl-1.9.tar.gz (sources), win-pl.zip (Windows 3.1 application), xos.tgz (DOS File I/O redefinition) and GNU readline [The patch level (last digit) is regularly updated and diffs between patch levels are located in the same directory.] mpii02999.ag2.mpi-sb.mpg.de:pub/tools/SWI/ [139.19.20.250] (OS/2) ftp.th-darmstadt.de:/pub/programming/languages/prolog/ [130.83.22.253] rs3.hrz.th-darmstadt.de [130.83.55.75] SWI-Prolog includes a fast compiler, a profiler, C interface, a module system, libraries, and dynamic loading. Runs on Atari ST, Gould PN, NeXT, HP, IBM Linux, DEC MIPS, IBM PS/2 AIX, OS/2, IBM RS/6000, Sun3, Sun4, Sparc, and Vax. Written by Jan Wielemaker, SWI, University of Amsterdam, Roetersstraat 15, 1018 WB Amsterdam, The Netherlands, . Ported to OS/2 by Andreas Toenne, . The mailing list is prolog@swi.psy.uva.nl. To be added to the list, send mail to prolog-request@swi.psy.uva.nl. Toy Prolog is an interpreter written in Pascal. About 3500 lines of source. Free with "Prolog for Programmers" by Kluzniak and Szpakowicz (Academic Press 1985). The Atari ST version is no longer supported. TPM (Transparent Prolog Machine) is a demo version of LPA MacProlog with the TPM debugger included. Runs on Apple Macintosh. It is available by anonymous FTP from hcrl.open.ac.uk:/pub/software/. Tricia is a free Prolog high-level emulator with interpreter available by email from Uppsala University. Tricia currently runs on the Apple Macintosh. It used to run on Sun3, Sun4, Apollo DN-3500/4500/5500 (OS version 10.*) and HP-730's, but support for those platforms has been discontinued. For more information, write to Uppsala University, Tricia project, Computing Science Department, Box 311, S-751 05 UPPSALA, Sweden, fax +46 18 511925, or email to tricia-request@csd.uu.se. It is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.csd.uu.se:/pub/Tricia/ A copy is also available in the directory /afs/umich.edu/group/itd/archive/mac/development/languages if your site runs the Andrew File System, or by anonymous ftp from mac.archive.umich.edu. WAMCC 2.2 is a WAM-based Prolog to C compiler. It conforms more or less to the Edinburgh standard, and includes most of the usual built-in predicates, a top-level, a Prolog debugger and a WAM debugger. WAMCC is designed to be easily extended (see clp(FD) in [2-5], for example). WAMCC's speed is halfway between SICStus emulated and SICStus native code on a Sparc (1.5 times faster and 1.5 times slower, respectively). WAMCC requires GCC 2.4.5 or higher and has been tested on Sparc workstations. It should be easily ported to 32-bit machines with GCC. WAMCC is available free by anonymous ftp from ftp.inria.fr:/INRIA/Projects/ChLoE/LOGIC_PROGRAMMING/wamcc/ For more information, write to Daniel Diaz , INRIA Rocquencourt, FRANCE. XSB is a Prolog-based Logic Programming System that extends the standard functionality of Prolog with an implementation of OLDT (tabling) and HiLog terms. It is a descendent of PSB-Prolog and SB-Prolog. OLDT resolution is useful for recursive query computation, allowing programs to terminate correctly in many cases where Prolog does not. HiLog supports a type of higher-order programming in which predicate symbols can be variable or structured. This allows unification to be performed on the predicate symbols themselves in addition to the arguments of the predicates. XSB includes an optimizing compiler, C interface, a module system, list processing libraries, and dynamic loading. XSB is a descendant of SB-Prolog. XSB runs on Sun3, Sun4, 386/486 PCs (Linux and 386 BSD), SGI machines (IRIX), HP 300/400 series (HP-UX) and NeXT, and can be compiled using either the GNU C compiler or the Sun C compiler. Porting XSB to any 32-bit machine running Unix should be straightforward. THIS IS A BETA RELEASE. XSB is available by anonymous ftp from sbcs.sunysb.edu:/pub/XSB/XSB.tar.Z [130.245.1.15] For more information, write to XSB Research Group, Computer Science Department, SUNY at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794, or send email to xsb-contact@cs.sunysb.edu. See also BeBOP and NCL in [2-3]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-2] Commercial Prolog Implementations AAIS Full Control Prolog (version 3.1.3) is an Edinburgh-standard compiler and interpreter that runs on all Apple 680x0 Macintosh computers (from Plus through Quadras and Powerbooks). It runs under System 6 and 7 (or A/UX 3.0), requiring 4mb RAM, and is 32-bit clean. It is built on an object-oriented kernel, includes many object-oriented extensions to the language, functions for constructing graphical user interfaces, direct program access to the printer for printing text or graphics, and full support for Apple Events. There are also numerous example programs, including source code for the AAIS Full Control Prolog's own standard development interface, and how to interface with Oracle databases and FileMaker Pro databses. AAIS Full Control Prolog costs $495. For an additional $199 (and a signed license), you can get a copy of AAIS Prolog Program Creator, an application generator/runtime distribution system that turns Prolog programs into Macintosh applications. For more information, write to Advanced AI Systems, Inc., PO Box 39-0360, Mountain View, CA 94039-0360, call 415-948-8658, fax 415-948-2486, or email AAISProlog@aol.com. Earlier version (2.0) reviewed in AI Expert, Feburary 1991. [NOTE: Douglas Lanam, President of Advanced AI Systems, Inc., announced on April 1, 1994, that he would be ceasing all future development of the product due to economic and personal reasons. The remaining stock of AAIS Full Control Prolog and the Program Creator is being offered on an as-is basis with no return for $99 a copy. You can order copies by phone using your credit card. Technical support through phone, mail, and email is continuing, but they cannot return phone calls or faxes outside North America, so those replies would be sent by email or snail mail.] AIAI Edinburgh Prolog is a high level prolog emulator that runs on Acorn R140 (RISC iX), DG AViiON (DG/VX 4.1), Vax (Berkeley Unix, VMS), Gould Encore (Unix), HP 9000/300 (HP-UX), MIPS RISC (RiscOS), Sequent (DYNIX V3), Sun 2,3,4 (SunOS-3,4). For more information, write to AIAI, AI Applications Institute, Software Secretary, University of Edinburgh, 80 South Bridge, Edinburgh EH1 1HN, UK, call +44 (31) 650 2734, fax +44 (31) 226 2730, or send email to AIAI@ed.ac.uk. ALS Prolog runs on 80386 machines, including DOS ($799), Sun 386i, Xenix, Apple Macintosh ($499), System V Unix (Microport), Sun3, Sun4, Sparc, Aviion, NeXT, VAX and Delta88. Workstation versions $4,500. Student editions $59. Provides a superset of Edinburgh Prolog. Includes OOP, X Windows/Motif/Windows interface, and C interface (Prolog programs may be embedded in C programs). It is available from Applied Logic Systems, Inc., PO Box 180, Newton Centre, MA 02159, phone 617-965-9191, fax 617-965-1636, or email info@als.com, sales@als.com, or support@als.com. Send a message to info@als.com with subject line "HELP" to get a general information file in reply. The URL for their WWW site is http://www.als.com/ and their FTP site is frege.als.com. Arity Prolog 6.1 is an emulator with interpreter and compiler and runs on DOS ($650), OS/2 ($1k), Windows (extra $350), OS/2 V.2, and Windows-NT. (Note that Windows support means that you can write Prolog programs that manipulate Windows. The Windows version of Arity Prolog does not itself run under MS Windows.) For more information, write to Arity Corporation, Damonmill Square, Concord, MA 01742, call 800-722-7489 (508-371-1243), fax 508-371-1487, or send email to 73677.2614@compuserve.com or Paul G. Weiss . ProLog by BIM is a high-performance and robust implementation of the Prolog language. It compiles to native machine code for maximum execution speed, and provides flexible memory management with automated expansion, shrinking, garbage collection and user-definable parameters. The ProLog by BIM environment comprises a GUI including an execution monitor and debugger, an on-line help facility, a extended emacs interface and a profiler. ProLog by BIM also includes a bi-directional external language interface, which is used for the included interfaces to graphics, windowing and RDBMS packages. The system also comes with a large library of Prolog source code which contains many of the most commonly used predicates. Stand-alone run-times without royalties and embeddability allow problem-free end-user delivery. ProLog by BIM comes with Carmen, a WYSIWYG GUI-Generator delivering Prolog code that allows notifiers and call-backs in Prolog and serves as a powerful rapid-prototyping aid. ProLog by BIM runs on SPARC, INTEL PC running Solaris 2.x, HP700 and IBM RS/6000. BIM provides both training and consultancy on Prolog and Prolog based developments efforts. For more information write to BIM sa/nv, ProLog by BIM dept., Kwikstraat 4, B-3078 Everberg, Belgium, call +32 2-759-59-25, fax to +32 2-725-47-83 (or +32 2-759-47-95) or email to prolog@sunbim.be. CIM-Prolog is a high-level emulator with interpreter for Apollo Domain and Sun (Unix). Also Standard Prolog for Apollo Domain, IBM PC/AT (DOS), INMOS transputer, and Sun. A parallel version is also available. For more information, write to Creative Soft GmbH, Turnstrasse 10, D-8510 Fuerth, Germany, call +49 911 7499214, or fax +49 911 747756. Coder's Prolog 2.0 is a Prolog Interpreter from Austin Code Works. Works on any system with a C compiler (it is designed for use with C programs), including IBM PCs (MS-DOS) and Unix workstations. For more information, write to Austin Code Works, 11100 Leafwood Lane, Austin, TX 78750-3587, call 512-258-0785, fax 512-258-1342, or send email to info@acw.com. Cogent Prolog 3.0 is an Edinburgh-standard compiler and interpreter. Compiled and interpreted code may be intermixed in the same program (for ease of debugging). The full system includes a debugger, definite clause grammar support, full-screen shell, standard listener, support for 16-bit and 32-bit protected mode, linker, .exe generator and royalty-free distributable runtime (DOS or Windows $248, both $347). Compiler & interpreter without linker and distributable runtime ($149). Interpreter alone ($49). Also available is an interactive tutorial, the Active Prolog Tutor ($75) and full source code for expert system shell prototypes for forward/backward chaining, frames, Rete-network and more ($82). All are IBM-PC (DOS) based. For more info or tech support, email amzi@world.std.com, or contact Amzi! Inc., 40 Samuel Prescott Dr., Stow, MA 01775. Tel: 508-897-7332. Fax: 508-897-2784. Delphia Prolog v2 is an Edinburgh-standard compiler and interpreter that runs on Sun3, Sun4, Sparc, RS/6000, Apollo, HP9000/300, Unigraph 68xxx, 386/486 (SCO Unix), DecStation (Ultrix), Sony NEWS (Unix), VAX (VMS, Ultrix), uVax (Ultrix), VaxStation (Ultrix). Includes database interfaces, graphical libraries, and incremental compilation. Price $10,000. Write to Delphia, 27 Avenue de la Republique, 38170 Seyssinet, France, call 33-76-26-68-94 or fax 33-76-26-52-27. An earlier version was reviewed in AI Expert, January 1991 and Feburary 1991. ECRC SEPIA. See ECLiPSe. SEPIA is no longer delivered as a stand-alone system, but as a part of ECLiPSe. EDCAAD C-Prolog is a prolog interpreter for Sun (SunOS), VAX (Ultrix, VMS), Apollo, and 68000 (Unix). An inexpensive academic license is available. It is an interpreter-based system, and hence is slower than WAM-based Prologs. It is implemented in C, and should run on almost any 32-bit machine with a C compiler. For more information, write to EdCAAD, Department of Architecture, Edinburgh University, 20 Chambers St., Edinburgh EH1 1JZ, UK, call +44 (31) 650 1000, fax +44 (31) 667 0141, or send email to chris@caad.ed.ac.uk. FRIL (Fuzzy Relational Inference Language) is a logic-programming language that incorporates a consistent method for handling uncertainty, based on Baldwin's theories of support logic, mass assignments, and evidential reasoning. Mass assignments give a consistent way of manipulating fuzzy and probabilistic uncertainties, enabling different forms of uncertainty to be integrated within a single framework. Fril has a list-based syntax, similar to the early micro-Prolog from LPA. Prolog is a special case of Fril, in which programs involve no uncertainty. Fril runs on Unix, Macintosh, MS-DOS, and Windows 3.1 platforms. For further information, write to Dr B.W. Pilsworth, Fril Systems Ltd, Bristol Business Centre, Maggs House, 78 Queens Rd, Bristol BS8 1QX, UK. A longer description is available as ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/areas/fuzzy/com/fril.txt GT-Prolog is a high performance implementation of Edinburgh-standard Prolog for the Commodore Amiga. GT-Prolog includes the ProBench interactive development environment supporting incremental compilation, a multi-port debugger based on the Byrd model, a source code editor, and a break facility. GT-Prolog provides transparent access to sophisticated optimization techniques including Tail Recursion Optimisation, First Argument Indexing/Hashing, In-line Arithmetic Evaluation and automatic Garbage Collection of code and data. Error handling is based on catch and throw mechanisms. GT-Prolog is also one of the first implementations to support a fully logical Prolog database. GT-Prolog provides explicit control of memory allocation allowing programs to use up to 16mb for data and 4gb for code and requires a minimum configuration of 1Mb memory plus Workbench version 2 or later. GT-Prolog includes a library of more than 120 predicates that provide user programs with access to the facilities of AmigaDOS. The single user price is 89.95 pounds sterling inclusive of VAT and postage/packing. For more information, write to Graham Thwaites, Grange Technology Limited, Stream Road, Upton, Didcot, Oxon OX11 9JG, UK, tel/fax +44-1235-851818, or send email to gtpam@gtech.demon.co.uk or 100434.3011@compuserve.com. HyperProlog. See Delphia Prolog. IBM PROLOG for AIX/6000 (PFA) is a high performance implementation of the PROLOG language, combined with a powerful programming environment, especially designed for the IBM RISC System/6000 under AIX. PFA was developed by BIM as an adaptation of ProLog by BIM for the IBM RISC System/6000 under AIX. It was selected by IBM Europe as their official PROLOG implementation for the RISC System/6000 (Program Number 5776-FAH). For more information: In North-America contact BIM systems, 11111 Santa Monica Bld, call 310-445-1500, fax to +310-445-1515; in Europe contact your local IBM representative. Elsewhere contact BIM, Kwikstraat 4, B-3078 Everberg, Belgium, call +32 2 759 59 25, or fax +32 2 759 92 09, or email prolog@sunbim.be. IF/Prolog 5.0 is a Prolog compiler with a variety of highly efficient constraint problem solving tools, including Boolean constraints, Rational terms, Linear terms, Equations and Inequations, Finite Domain Constraints and Co-routines. IF/Prolog conforms to the ISO Prolog Standard, part 1. IF/Prolog also includes interfaces to C, C++, FORTRAN, X11 (OSF/Motif and Athena widgetsets), and SQL (Ingres, Oracle, and Informix). IF/Prolog has full screen X11 and Windows based debuggers and online hypertext help and quick reference guide. It is available on Unix, OSF/1, VMS, MS-Windows, and mainframe systems, including Apollo, Aviion 300, Macintosh (A/UX), microVAX 2000 (Ultrix), Vax (Ultrix, VMS), VaxStation (Ultrix), DEC Alpha (OSF/1, VMS), HP9000, Sun3, Sun4, Sparc, UTS, AIX/370, IBM RS/6000, Decstation (Ultrix, OSF/1), Sequent S16, Silicon Graphics, Sony News (Unix), Motorola, Nixdorf, Interactive Unix, SCO UNIX, DOS-based 386 PCs, and Windows 3.0/3.1. Academic licenses are available at half price. For more information contact Annette Kolb (marketing) or Dr. Andrew Verden (technical) at IF Computer GmbH, Ludwig-Thoma-Weg 11a, D-82065 Baierbrunn, tel +49 89 7936 0037, fax +49 89 7936 0039, or email prolog@mch.sni.de, or IF Computer Japan Ltd., 7/F 2nd Asanuma Bldg., 3-21-10 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113, Japan. tel + 81 3 3818 5826 fax + 81 3 3818 5829. IQSOFT MProlog is a high-level emulator with interpreter for Unix, Macintosh and IBM PC (DOS). Runs on Vax (Unix 4.2 BSD), 68000-based machines (Unix), Tektronix 4404, HP3000, and Siemens 1. For more information, write to IQSOFT, SZKI Intelligent Software Ltd., Iskola u. 10., Budapest, H-1011, Hungary, call +36 1 201 6764, fax +36 1 201 7125, or send email to szeredi@iqsoft.hu. LPA Prolog is a prolog compiler for IBM PCs (DOS, Windows, 386) and Apple Macintosh. LPA Prolog++ is an object-oriented programming system based on Prolog. (See Chris Moss's book on Prolog++ in [1-3].) MacProlog32 includes incremental 32-bit compilation and Edinburgh syntax compatability, and runs under System 7. Programmer Edition is $745 list, and the Developer Edition, which includes a runtime generator for producing standalone applications, is $1,495. LPA Prolog for Windows runs $745, as does LPA Prolog for DOS. Prolog++ runs $995 ($1,995 Developer Edition). Write to Logic Programming Associates, Ltd., Studio 4, Royal Victoria Patriotic Building, Trinity Road, London SW18 3SX, England, call +44 081-871-2016, fax +44 081-874-0449, or send email to lpa@cix.compulink.co.uk (sales, tech support), UK0049@applelink.apple.com (Clive Spenser), or 100135.134@compuserve.com. In the US call 800-949-7567. LPA products are distributed in North America by Quintus under the Quintus name. Maxon Prolog is available for the Atari ST from the German magazine 'ST-Computer' for 298 DM. Tel: 010 49 61 96 481811. MU-Prolog, NU-Prolog are prolog interpreters from the University of Melbourne. Source licences are available for educational institutions. Implemented in C for BSD Unix. Currently running on Sun3, Sun4, Vax, Elxsi, Encore, and SGI. For more information, write to University of Melbourne, MU-Prolog Distribution, Department of Computer Science, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia, call +61 3 344 7270, or send email to lee@cs.mu.oz.au or jws@cs.mu.oz.au. OU Prolog is a prolog interpreter from Open University for IBM PC (MS-DOS). Includes video, books. Ask for item PD622 and quote reference SA69. For more information, write to Open University, Learning Materials Sales Office, PO Box 188, Milton Keynes MK7 6DH, UK. PDC Prolog runs on IBM PCs (DOS, OS/2, Windows and SCO Unix). Formerly known as Turbo Prolog from Borland. Includes a native code compiler but is incompatible with most other prologs. Its variables are strongly typed, unlike most other prologs. For more information, write Prolog Development Center, 568 14th Street, Atlanta, GA 30318, call 800-762-2710, (404-873-1366), fax 404-872-5243 or email pdc-request@pdc.dk (general information), sales@pdc.dk (sales), support@pdc.dk (tech support). A BBS is run at 404-872-5358. European customers may write to Prolog Development Center, A/S, H.J. Holst Vej 5A, DK-2605 Broendby, Denmark, call +45 36 72 10 22, or fax +45 36 72 02 69. Reviewed in AI Expert January 1991. Other email addresses include 753CD.165@compuserve.com. To subscribe to the PDC-L@nic.surfnet.nl mailing list, a discussion list for PDC Prolog users, send mail to LISTSERV@nic.surfnet.nl with SUBSCRIBE PDC-L in the message body. POPLOG is a high-level prolog emulator with interpreter for Unix. The POPLOG environment integrates four AI programming languages in one environment: Lisp, Prolog, ML and POP11. POPLOG can also load in C and Fortran binaries. Runs on VAX (Ultrix, VMS), VAXStation (Ultrix), DECStation (Ultrix), Sun 3,4, Sparc, Solbourne, HP Apollo 9000/400, Sparc (HP-UX), MIPS (RISCOS), Sequent Symmetry (Dynix), Apple Macintosh (AUX), SONY News (News-OS), and Silicon Graphics Iris (Irix). The academic version from Sussex University. For more information, write to POPLOG, Sussex University, Poplog Manager, School of Cognitive Sciences, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QN, UK, call +44 273 608367, fax +44 273 678188, or send email to popsales@cogs.sussex.ac.uk or popmanager@cogs.sussex.ac.uk. The commercial version is available from Integral Solutions Ltd as Integral Poplog and Pop++. For more information, write to Integral Solutions Ltd, Unit 3, 23 Campbell Court, Bramley, Basingstoke Hampshire RG26 5EG, UK, call +44 256 88 20 28, fax +44 256 88 21 82, or send email to isl@integ.uucp or isl@integ.co.uk. The North American retailer is Computable Functions Inc. For more informatin, write to Computable Functions Inc., 35 S. Orchard Drive, Amherst, MA 01002, call 413-253-7637, or fax 413-545-1249. Contact Robin Popplestone, pop@cs.umass.edu, for info on a new book on Pop-11. There's a users mailing list, and a newsgroup as well (comp.lang.pop). Prolog-2 (Commercial Version), is a high-level emulator with interpreter and compiler for IBM PC (MS-DOS, Windows 3.0/3.1), and 386-up. (Non-PC versions for Sun3, Sun4, HP9000 (Unix), RS/6000 (Unix), and VAX (VMS) are no longer supported, since ESI, the new owners, are also distributors for BIM-Prolog.) It is an Edinburgh standard prolog with a number of extensions. The windows version includes BIPs for programming windows graphics and dialogues. For more information, write to Expert Systems International (ESI), Attn: Leo Mulders, PO Box 148, NL-3700 AC ZEIST, the Netherlands, call +31-3404-22911, fax +31-3404-32888, or email . To join the user's group, send mail to prolog2-request@hplb.hpl.hp.com. Prolog III integrates constraint programming with Prolog. It runs on Apple Macintosh, IBM PC (386, MS-DOS), Next, Sun3, Sun4, Sparc, HP9000, Apollo, RS/6000, Bull DPX, Masscomp (Unix), Vax (Ultrix, VMS), DecStation and MicroVAX. For more information, write to PrologIA, Parc Technologique de Luminy, Case 919, 13288 Marseilles cedex 09, France, call 33-91-26-86-36, fax 33-91-41-96-37, or send email to prolia@dcftlx.das.net or prolia@tlxf.geomail.org. The US point of contact for Prolog III by PrologIA is BIM Systems, Inc. Prolog-86 is available from Solution Systems Inc. For more information, write to Solution Systems Inc., 335-D Washington Street, Norwell, MA 02061, call 617-337-6963, or fax 617-431-8419. PTC (Prolog To C) is a portable Prolog compiler based around an optimized Prolog to ANSI C compiler. It runs on Sun, SGI, IBM (Unix), and HP. PTC includes an integrated compiler/interpreter, project-file-based compilation, a Motif user interface, editor, debugger, online help, and support for C modules. It costs $1,495 for the development environment and $795 for each additional runtime library. The standalone environment is $495. For more information, write to Paralogic Inc., 115 Research Drive, Bethlehem, PA 18015, call 215-861-6960, fax 215-861-8247 or send email to plogic@lehi3b15.csee.Lehigh.edu. Quintec Prolog is a high-level emulator with interpreter for IBM PC (MS-DOS), and Unix workstations such as Vax, VAXstation (Ultrix, VMS), Decstation (Ultrix), and Sparc (SunOS4.0). For more information, write to Quintec Prolog, Quintec Systems Ltd., Midland House, West Way, Botley, Oxford OS2 0PL, UK, call +44 865 791565, or fax +44 865 791595. Quintus Prolog is a complete Prolog development system with extensive Prolog libraries, graphical user interface, source-linked debugger, profiler, on-line help, interface to X Windows, and user-customizable I/O and memory management. Quintus Prolog supports development of stand-alone applications, as well as fully embeddable Prolog modules, which may be called as subroutines from other languages. There are no royalties on applications developed with Quintus Prolog. Quintus offers Prolog-based solutions for database, expert system, and GUI developers. Quintus also provides Prolog consulting and Prolog training. Platforms include DEC Alpha (OSF/1), HP 9000 (HP-UX), IBM RS/6000 (AIX), PC (DOS, Windows, Windows NT, Solaris, OS/2), Macintosh 32bit, SGI (IRIX), Sun SPARC (SunOS, Solaris). For product information and Prolog training schedules contact Quintus Corporation, 301 East Evelyn Avenue, Mountain View, CA 94041, call 415-254-2800 or 800-542-1283 (US), fax 415-428-0211, or send email to sales@quintus.com. To be added to the users group mailing list, email to quintus-users-request@quintus.com. The email address for technical support is teksup@quintus.com. SICStus Prolog: SICStus Prolog 2.1 is an Edinburgh compatible Prolog that runs on Macintosh, 386/486 (MSDOS), and most UNIX platforms. It includes a WAM-based emulator and compiler, native code compilation for Sparc and 680x0, indexed interpreted and compiled predicates mixed arbitrarily, support for cyclic terms, garbage collection and stack shifting, backtrackable side-effects, coroutining facilities, exceptions, unbounded precision integer arithmetic, double precision floating point arithmetic, extended set of built-in arithmetic functions, a Boolean constraint solver, socket communication, support for building stand-alone applications, bidirectional C/Prolog interface, user-defined streams and signals, a GNU Emacs interface, execution profiling, a "procedure box" debugger, and a module system. It comes with a library of utility modules implementing commonly needed algorithms and data types, an external store for Prolog facts with user-defined indexing, an object-oriented extension (SICStus Objects), and a package for GUI construction. Muse is an OR-parallel version of SICStus Prolog. Muse runs on several multiprocessor platforms and supports full Prolog and most builtins. The current version is a research version based on SICStus Prolog 0.6, but soon it will be integrated into the main SICStus Prolog release. Mixtus is an automatic partial evaluator for SICStus Prolog. Presently it is distributed separately. Contact dan@sics.se for more information. Available third-party products include: + APPEAL 2.1 (an interface and language to program X Toolkit applications, email: appeal@dslogics.it, or write to: Cristina Ruggieri, DS logics S.r.l., Viale Silvani 1, 40122, Bologna, Italy, Tel. +39-51-521285, Fax. +39-51-522109) + XPCE and PI X Windows interfaces (see [1-9]) + PRODATA (a tight coupling to Oracle, Ingres or Sybase relational database systems, write to: Keylink Computer Ltd., 2 Woodway House, Common Lane, Kenilworth, Warwickshire CV8 2ES, UK, Tel: +44-926-50909, Fax: +44-926-864128) + NP Module (an interface to a highly efficient propositional logic theorem prover. Contact: Logikkonsult NP AB, Jakobdalsv{gen 13, 126 53 H{gersten, Sweden. Tel: +46-8-188809, Fax: +46-8-183210 ). Personal, academic and commercial licenses are available. More information is available on the WWW http://www.sics.se/ps/sicstus.html or by writing to SICS, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, PO Box 1263, S-164 28 KISTA, Sweden, calling +46 8 752 15 02, fax +46 8 751 72 30, or sending email to sicstus-request@sics.se or sicstus@sics.se. Bug reports and tech support questions should be sent to sicstus-bug@sics.se. To subscribe to the users group and implementors mailing list, send email to sicstus-users-request@sics.se. SNI Prolog Version 3 is an implementation of the Prolog language that is compatible with the ISO Standard draft. It is available from Siemens Nixdorf for Unix workstations for about DM 11100 in Germany. SNI Prolog runs on the SGI, SNI and Sun platforms, and ports to other systems, including MS-DOS, are in progress. Includes coroutines, finite domains, numerical and boolean constraints, garbage collection, incremental compilation, dynamic linking, hypertext style on-line help, a window environment with an integrated editor, interfaces to INFORMIX, Motif/XWindows and C. The constraint programming features of SNI Prolog provide support for solving problems from operations research such as dynamic resource allocation and flexible scheduling with numerical constraints or the verification of complex systems with Boolean constraints. For more information, write to Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG, Otto-Hahn-Ring 6, D-8000 Munich 83, Germany, Attn: Hans-Juergen Stenger, Systems Planning, call +49 89 636 44049, fax +49 89 636 41208, or send email to stenger@sd235-hera.zfe.siemens.de. SPIES YAP is a high-level emulator with interpreter for the Apple Macintosh, Amiga (Atari ST), and Unix workstations including Sun3, Sun4, VAXstation, SGI, and HP9000. For more information, write to SPIES, Sociedade Portuguesa de, Importacao e Exportacao de Software, Lda Av da Republica, 46 - 2, 1000 Lisboa, Portugal, call +351 1 795075, or fax +351 1 775891. Turbo Prolog. See PDC Prolog. XPRO 5.0 is a Prolog development environment for OS/2. It includes a 32-bit Prolog interpreter/compiler and a rule compiler than compiles natural language-style rules into Prolog code. Includes a C/C++ interface. Costs $299 (no runtime or license fees). For more information, contact: Rational Vision, 7111 West Indian School Road, Suite 131, Phoenix, AZ 85033, or phone 602-846-0371. See also CHIP V4 from COSYTEC in [2-6]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-3] Free Parallel Prolog Implementations This section contains free parallel Prolog and logic programming implementations. BAP: Brain Aid Prolog (BAP) is a Concurrent Sequential Processes (CSP) based standard Prolog for Transputer networks. BAP uses its own MS Windows or X Windows server for I/O. Special features include automatic topology adapation and concurrent source level debugging (see several processes exchange messages). Performance is pretty high, comparable to that of other Prolog compilers. BAP has achieved good results (>80% efficiency) when executing applications like N-queens or checkers in parallel on an 8 processor network. A demo version that supports Transputer systems with a maximum of 2 processors is available by anonymous ftp from unlisys.in-berlin.de:/pub/brainaid/ and also from the CMU AI Repository, in ftp.cs.cmu.edu:/user/ai/lang/prolog/impl/parallel/bap/ A full version for up to 128 nodes is also available for both SUN and PC. Write to Frank Bergmann or for more information. BeBOP: The BeBOP language combines sequential and parallel Logic Programming (LP), object oriented programming and meta-level programming. The LP component offers both don't know non-determinism and stream AND parallelism, a combination not possible with concurrent LP languages. BeBOP's object oriented features include object IDs, encapsulation, message passing, state updating, and object behaviour modification. The meta-level capabilities are based on the treatment of Prolog theories as first order entities, which enables them to be updated easily and lets fragments to be passed between objects in messages. BeBOP is implemented by translation down to NU-Prolog, and its parallel extension, PNU-Prolog. The BeBOP system (BeBOP and bp) and the PNU-Prolog preprocessor pnp can be obtained by anonymous ftp from munnari.oz.au:/pub/bebop.tar.Z [128.250.1.21]. The release comes with a user manual, several papers (in Postscript format), sample programs, and source code. The BeBOP system requires the NU-Prolog system, compiler and interpreter, the pnp preprocessor (which is included as part of the BeBOP system release), GCC or a similar compiler, Yacc (or Bison) and Lex. For more information, contact Andrew Davison, , Dept. of Computer Science, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia, call +61 3-287-9172/9101, or fax +61 3-348-1184. KLIC: KLIC is a portable implementation of KL1 (an extended Flat GHC), a concurrent logic programming language developed at ICOT in Japan. Runs on Suns, HPs, DECs, and Linux PC's and marks 2 MLIPS on SparcStation 10/30 and 4MLIPS on system with 200MHz Alpha. A sequential version available via anonymous ftp from ftp.icot.or.jp. Parallel versions planned shortly. A representative paper on the language is Kazunori Ueda and Takashi Chikayama, "Design of the Kernel Language for the Parallel Inference Machine", The Computer Journal, December, 1990. A paper on its KLIC implementation is Takashi Chikayama, Tetsuro Fujise and Daigo Sekita, "A Portable and Efficient Implementation of KL1", PLILP'94 (LNCS #844, Springer-Verlag). For more information, send an email to klic-requests@icot.or.jp or write to ICOT Free Software Desk, Institute for New Generation Computer Technology, 21st Floor, Mita Kokusai Bldg., 4-28, Mita 1-chome, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108, Japan, fax +81-3-3456-1618. Multi-BinProlog: Multi-BinProlog 2.00 is a prototype Linda-style parallel extension to BinProlog 1.71 developed by Koen De Bosschere and Paul Tarau. It uses Koen's C-parser and C-writer which together speed-up IO considerably. It works with shared-memory and remote procedure calls and is available from clement.info.umoncton.ca:MultiBinProlog/ See BinProlog in [2-1] for more information. NCL: NCL (Net-Clause Language) is aimed at describing distributed computation models using term unification as a basic processing and control mechanism. It is embedded in standard Prolog and comprises two parts -- net-clauses and data-driven rules, which can communicate each to other and to standard Prolog programs. A net-clause is a special domain in the database defining a network of nodes and links. The nodes are represented by Prolog compound terms. The variables occurring within the nodes are global logical variables, which can be shared within the scope of the net-clause thus playing the role of network links. Two control mechanisms are implemented: a spreading activation scheme similar to the connectionist spreading activation and to the marker passing mechanism in SN (in logic programming it is seen as a restricted forward chaining) and a default mechanism based on using variables to propagate terms without being bound to them, thus implementing the non-monotonicity of default reasoning. The Data-driven Rules implement a full scale forward chaining for Horn clauses. They simulate a data-driven parallel computation, where each rule is a process (in contrast to the traditional parallel logic programming where each goal is a process). The NCL/Prolog interpreter along with a reference manual and a set of examples is available by anonymous ftp at ai.uga.edu:/pub/misc/ncl.tar.Z. For more information contact Zdravko Markov, Institute of Informatics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Acad.G.Bonchev Street, Block 29A, 1113 Sofia, Bulgaria, . PCN: PCN (Program Composition Notation) is not a logic programming language, but it has similarities to Strand and other concurrent logic programming languages. PCN is a parallel programming system that provides a simple language for specifying concurrent algorithms, interfaces to Fortran and C, a portable toolkit that allows applications to be developed on a workstation or small parallel computer and run unchanged on supercomputers, and integrated debugging and performance analysis tools. PCN includes a runtime system, compiler, linker, a set of standard libraries, virtual topology tools, a symbolic debugger (PDB), an execution profiler (Gauge), and a trace analysis tool (Upshot). PCN was developed at Argonne National Laboratory and the California Institute of Technology. PCN runs on Sun4, NeXT, IBM RS/6000, SGI Iris, Intel iPSC/860, Intel Touchstone DELTA, Sequent Symmetry running Dynix (not PTX), and should be easy to port to other architectures. PCN is in the public domain and can be obtained by anonymous ftp from info.mcs.anl.gov:/pub/pcn/pcn_v2.0.tar.Z The distribution includes a user's guide containing a tutorial and reference material. For further information on PCN, please send email to or contact Ian Foster 708-252-4619 or Steve Tuecke 708-252-8711. ROLOG: ROLOG is a parallel PROLOG compiler with a reduce-OR process model. It is available by anonymous ftp from cs.uiuc.edu:/pub/ROLOG/. See also IC-Prolog II (a multi-threaded Prolog) in [2-1]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-4] Commercial Parallel Prolog Implementations This section contains commercial parallel Prolog and logic programming implementations. Densitron CS Prolog is a parallel prolog compiler and interpreter for IBM PCs (MS-DOS or OS/2), T414/T800 transputer (mono or multi), 386 (Unix V), uVAX (VMS), or VAX(VMS). Also standard Prolog for MS-DOS, UNIX and VAX. For more information, write to Densitron, Unit 4, Aiport Trading Estate, Biggin Hill, Kent, TN16 3BW, UK, call +44 959 76331, or fax +44 959 71017. Paralogic is a parallel implementation of the Clocksin and Mellish Prolog. It runs on DOS-based PCs or Apple Macintoshes with the INMOS Transputers. For more information, write to Paralogic Inc., 115 Research Drive, Bethlehem, PA 18015, call 215-861-6960, fax 215-861-8247 or email plogic@lehi3b15.csee.Lehigh.edu. It is also distributed by Computer Systems Architects, 905 N. University Avenue, Provo, UT 84604-3422, 800-753-4272 (801-374-2300), or fax 801-374-2306 as n-parallel Prolog. PARLOG is a parallel emulator from Imperial College for the Sequent Balance, Sequent Symmetry, Encore Multimax, Alliant FX (Unix), Sun (Unix, 1 processor). For more information, write to Imperial College, Department of Computing, Parlog Distribution Secretary, 180 Queen's Gate, London SW7 2BZ, UK, call +44 71 589 5111 x7537, fax +44 71 589 8024, or send email to parlog@doc.ic.ac.uk. The single processor versions of PARLOG for the Sun-3 and Sun-4 are now available free of charge. Please refer to the entry regarding IC-Prolog II in this Resource Guide. Parallel Logic Programming produces PC-PARLOG and MacPARLOG for the IBM PC and Macintosh computers. For more information contact Parallel Logic Programming Ltd., PO Box 49, Twickenham, Middlesex TW2 5PH, UK or call +44 454 201 652. Strand-88 is a parallel emulator for Sun3, Sun4, Sparc BBN Butterfly, GPT2000, Cogent Multimax, Intel iPSC/2, iPSC/860, MIPS RiscStation, Sequent Symmetry Balance (Unix System V or Mach, Helios) and communication component from CSTools, Express in some cases. Also Transputer systems PC hosted systems from Paracom, Telmat and others, Unix hosted systems from Meiko, Paracom, Telmat and others, Apple Macintosh, Atari ATW, and NeXT. Price dependent on configuration and scale of target machine. For more information, write to Strand Software Technologies Ltd., Ver House, London Rd, Markyate, Herts AL3 8JP, UK, call +44 582 842424, fax +44 582 840282, or send email to strand88@sstl.uucp. SICS Aurora and Echo. See SICStus Prolog above. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-5] Free Constraint Systems This section contains constraint systems, constraint logic programming systems, concurrent constraint languages, and other constraint processing systems. CIAL: CIAL 1.0b is an interval constraint logic programming language. The main difference between CIAL and other CLP(Interval) languages is that a linear constraint solver, which is based on preconditioned interval Gauss-Seidel method, is embedded in CIAL in addition to the interval narrowing solver. The main motivations for a linear solver are: * Pure interval narrowing fails to narrow the intervals to any useful width even for such simple systems as {X+Y=5, X-Y=6}. Interval splitting may help but is costly. * Pure interval narrowing cannot always detect inconsistency or halt (in a reasonable time). A simple example is {A+1=D, A+B=D, A>0, B<0}. * Efficient linear constraint solver is also important to the study of efficient non-linear constraint-solving. Recent results show that interval Newton method works better than pure interval narrowing for solving non-linear constraints, but may require to solve many linear constraints in order to give the best results. This version of CIAL prototype is implemented as an extension to CLP(R) v1.2 and tested on Sun Sparc machines. You should have obtained CLP(R) from IBM prior to installing CIAL. The distribution is in the form of patches to the CLP(R) sources. [See entry on CLP(R) below]. Send email to cial@cs.cuhk.hk to request CIAL, and for more details. Relevant papers include C.K. Chiu and J.H.M. Lee, "Towards practical interval constraint solving in logic programming", in Proceedings of the Eleventh International Logic Programming Symposium, Ithaca, NY, USA, November 1994 (to appear). J.H.M. Lee and T.W. Lee, "A WAM-based abstract machine for interval constraint logic programming and the multiple-trailing problem", in Proceedings Sixth IEEE International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence, New Orleans, Nov 1994. cu-Prolog: cu-Prolog is an experimental constraint logic programming language available free from Japan's Institute for New Generation Computer Technology (ICOT). Unlike most conventional CLP systems, cu-Prolog allows user-defined predicates as constraints and is suitable for implementing a natural language processing system based on the unification-based grammar. For example, the cu-Prolog developers implemented a JPSG (Japanese Phrase Structure Grammar) parser in cu-Prolog with the JPSG Working Group (the chairman is Prof. GUNJI, Takao of Osaka University) at ICOT. cu-Prolog is a complete implementation of Constraint Unification (cu), hence the name. cu-Prolog is implemented in C for BSD UNIX 4.2/3. Professor Sirai of Chukyo-University has also implemented cu-Prolog for the Apple Macintosh and DJ's GPP (80386/486 MS-DOS machine with the DOS extender). cu-Prolog is available free by anonymous ftp from ftp.icot.or.jp. For further information, send email to ifs@icot.or.jp, or write to ICOT Free Software Desk, Institute for New Generation Computer Technology, 21st Floor, Mita Kokusai Bldg., 4-28, Mita 1-chome, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108, Japan, fax +81-3-3456-1618. clp(FD): clp(FD) 2.2 is a constraint logic programming language over finite domains and booleans based on the wamcc Prolog compiler (see [2-1]). clp(FD) provides several constraints "a la CHIP" on finite domains and booleans and some facilities for building new constraints. clp(FD) is 4 times faster than CHIP v3.2 on average. clp(FD) requires GCC 2.4.5 or higher and has been tested on Sparc workstations, DEC (Ultrix), Sony MIPS (R3000), and 386/486 PCs under linux. It should be easily ported to 32-bit machines with GCC. clp(FD) is available free by anonymous ftp from ftp.inria.fr:/INRIA/Projects/ChLoE/LOGIC_PROGRAMMING/clp_fd/ For more information, write to Daniel Diaz , INRIA Rocquencourt, FRANCE. CLP(R): CLP(R) is a constraint logic programming language with real-arithmetic constraints. The implementation contains a built-in constraint solver which deals with linear arithmetic and contains a mechanism for delaying nonlinear constraints until they become linear. Since CLP(R) subsumes PROLOG, the system is also usable as a general-purpose logic programming language. It includes facilities for meta-programming with constraints. The system consists of a compiler, byte-code emulator, and constraint solver. CLP(R) is written entirely in C and runs on Suns, Vaxen, MIPS-based machines (Decstations, Silicon Graphics), IBM RS6000s and PS2s. Includes MS-DOS support. It is available free from IBM for academic and research purposes only. To get a copy, write to Joxan Jaffar, H1-D48, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, P.O. Box 704, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, or send email to joxan@watson.ibm.com or joxan@yktvmh.bitnet. Current version 1.2. For more information, write to Joxan or Roland Yap . OZ: Oz is a concurrent constraint programming language designed for applications that require complex symbolic computations, organization into multiple agents, and soft real-time control. It is based on a computation model that provides a uniform foundation for higher-order functional programming, constraint logic programming, and concurrent objects with multiple inheritance. From functional languages Oz inherits full compositionality, and from logic languages Oz inherits logic variables and constraints (including feature and finite domain constraints). Search in Oz is encapsulated (no backtracking) and includes one, best and all solution strategies. DFKI Oz is an interactive implementation of Oz featuring a programming interface based on GNU Emacs, a concurrent browser, an object-oriented interface to Tcl/Tk, powerful interoperability features (sockets, C, C++), an incremental compiler, a garbage collector, and support for stand-alone applications. Performance is competitive with commercial Prolog and Lisp systems. DFKI Oz is available for many platforms running Unix/X, including Sparcs and 486 PCs. Applications DFKI Oz has already been used for include simulations, multi-agent systems, natural language processing, virtual reality, graphical user interfaces, scheduling, placement problems, and configuration. Version 1.0 of DFKI Oz has been released on January 23, 1995. DFKI Oz is available by anonymous ftp from ps-ftp.dfki.uni-sb.de:/pub/oz or through the WWW from http://ps-www.dfki.uni-sb.de/ Tutorials, reference manuals, and research papers are available from the same locations. You may start with "A Survey of Oz" (8 pages) and continue with "An Oz Primer" (110 pages). Questions may be directed to oz@dfki.uni-sb.de. To join the Oz users mailing list, contact oz-users-request@dfki.uni-sb.de. See also ECLiPSe, Beta-Prolog, and LIFE in [2-1] and ALE in [1-5]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-6] Commercial Constraint Systems This section contains constraint systems, constraint logic programming systems, concurrent constraint languages, and other constraint processing systems. CHIP V4 (Constraint Handling In Prolog) is designed as an extension to Prolog offering three constraint solving domains: Integers, Rationals and Booleans. The system was originally developed at ECRC in Munich and now extended by the same team at COSYTEC in Paris. CHIP V4 includes extensions to the three domains: symbolic constraints, update demons and cumulative constraints. The system is available with optional interfaces for X11 and DOS graphics (XGIP), Oracle or Ingres database connection (QUIC), C language interface (CLIC) and embedded application interface (EMC). CHIP V4 is written completely in C, and is available on a range of workstations including SunSparc (SunOS 4.1), IBM RS6000 (AIX 3.2), HP 9000/700 series (HPUX 9.0) and Decstation 3000 & 5000 (Ultrix 4.2) and PC386/486 (Dos 5.0). Development and Runtime licences can be purchased for single-user, multi-user or site licences together with support and maintenance. An academic discount is offered for educational and research purposes. For more information contact COSYTEC, Parc Club Orsay Universite 4 rue Jean Rostand, 91893 Orsay Cedex, France, phone +33-1-60-19-37-38, fax +33-1-60-19-36-20 or email . The Tech Support email address is help@cosytec.fr. COSYTEC is a founding member of the PVG (Prolog Vendors Group). CLP(R) is a constraint system from Monash University for VAX, Sun, and Pyramid (Unix). Costs $150. For more information, write to Monash University, CLP(R) Distribution, Department of Computer Science, Clayton, Victoria 3168, Australia, or send email to clp@moncsbruce.oz.au. ILOG SOLVER (formerly called PECOS) is a C++ library that implements a CLP (Constraint Logic Programming) instance known as finite domains. It is available on most Unix platforms, including Sun, HP, IBM RS-6000, DEC, and SGI, and on Windows 3.1 for both Microsoft Visual C++ and Borland C++. This library includes: - Prolog control structures: non determinism, choice points, backtracking and cut. Modification of user-defined objects can be trailed so that their state is restored when a failure occurs. - Finite domain logical variables, and associated constraints. - Finite set logical variables and associated constraints. - Interval floating point variables, and associated constraints, analogous to what is found in BNR Prolog. - Predefined search and optimization algorithms. ILOG SOLVER does not use unification for passing arguments. This enables a smooth integration with C++. For further information: In the USA and Canada, contact ILOG, Inc., 2073 Landings Drive, Mountain View, CA 94303, phone (415) 390-9000, fax (415) 390-0946, e-mail info@ilog.com. Outside the USA and Canada: contact ILOG SA, 12 avenue Raspail, 94251 Gentilly Cedex, France, tel (+33 1) 4740-8000, fax (+33 1) 4740-0444, e-mail info@ilog.fr, or URL http://www.ilog.fr/ilog/home.html See also http://www.ilog.fr for some papers about Ilog Solver and Ilog Schedule. VS Trilogy is a Prolog compiler available from Vertical Software for $395. For more information, write to Vertical Software Ltd., 14-636 Clyde Ave, W. Vancouver, BC, V7T 1E1, Canada, call 604-925-0321, or fax 604-688-8479. See also Prolog III and SNI Prolog in [2-2]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-7] Free Logic Programming Systems ALF: ALF (Algebraic Logic Functional programming language) is a language which combines functional and logic programming techniques. The foundation of ALF is Horn clause logic with equality which consists of predicates and Horn clauses for logic programming, and functions and equations for functional programming. The abstract machine is based on the Warren Abstract Machine (WAM) with several extensions to implement narrowing and rewriting. In the current implementation programs of this abstract machine are executed by an emulator written in C. It is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.germany.eu.net:/pub/programming/languages/LogicFunctional/ (aka simpson.germany.eu.net) as the files alf_*.zoo (Documentation, C sources for the emulator, the preprocessor and the compiler). For further information, contact Rudolf Opalla . CORAL: CORAL is a deductive database/logic programming system developed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It is a declarative language based on Horn-clause rules with extensions like SQL's group-by and aggregation operators, and uses a Prolog-like syntax. CORAL is available via anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.wisc.edu:/coral/. The distribution includes source code compatible with AT&T C++ Version 2.0 or later, executables for Decstations and SUN 4s, the CORAL User Manual, and some related papers containing a language overview and implementation details. (A version of the source code compatible with GNU g++ will be available shortly.) For more information, contact Raghu Ramakrishnan, . Lolli: Lolli is an interpreter for logic programming based on linear logic principles. Lolli, named for the linear logic implication operator "-o" called lollipop, is a full implementation of the language described in the paper "Logic Programming in a Fragment of Intuitionistic Linear Logic" (Josh Hodas & Dale Miller, to appear in Information and Computation), though it differs a bit in syntax, and has several built-in extra-logical predicates and operators. Lolli is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.cis.upenn.edu:/pub/Lolli/Lolli-07.tar.Z This distribution includes full ML source, along with a Makefile, as well as several background papers and a collection of example programs. For those who do not have SML-NJ at their site, the authors hope to provide pre-built binaries for a variety of architectures. These binaries can be found on ftp.cis.upenn.edu:/pub/Lolli/binaries/ At present Sparc and NeXT binaries are available. If you compile lolli on a new architecture, please contact Josh Hodas at so that he can make your binary available. See also LIFE, SLG, and XSB in [2-1], BeBOP in [2-3], and Oz in [2-5]. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-8] Commercial Logic Programming Systems None so far. This is to be expected, as most logic programming systems are experimental. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-9] Other Commercial Prolog Products ClauseDB is a database manager for Prolog data. Advanced knowledge-based applications often need to use a large number of highly complex data objects. The objects are so complex that they cannot be managed in a standard commercial RDB product, and the number of them makes it impractical to store them in the standard Prolog in-memory database. ClauseDB may also be useful even in Prolog applications whose data can be handled in a RDB. The retrieval procedure of ClauseDB is integrated in the Prolog search method. This avoids the performance problems that arise with the standard scheme for coupling Prolog with a RDBM (e.g., those caused by the well-known mismatch problem between tuple- and set-based retrieval methods). ClauseDB supports all the normal Prolog data objects (arbitrary terms and clauses) and provides a locking mechanism that allows the sharing of data while ensuring its integrity. ClauseDB 2.0 is available on SUN SPARC (SunOS 4.x and 5.x) and the INTEL PC running Solaris 2.x. For more information write to BIM sa/nv, ProLog by BIM dept., Kwikstraat 4, B - 3078 Everberg, Belgium, call ++32 2 759 59 25, fax to +32 2 725 47 83 or e-mail to prolog@sunbim.be. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: [2-10] Prolog extensions, meta-interpreters, and pre-processors ProFIT (Prolog with Features Inheritance and Templates) is an extension of Prolog with sorted feature structures (including multi-dimensional inheritance), finite domains, feature search, cyclic terms, and templates. ProFIT works as a pre-processor, which takes a file containing a ProFIT program as input, and gives a file with a Prolog program as output. Sorted feature terms and finite domains are compiled into a Prolog term representation, and the usual Prolog term unification is used at runtime, so that there is no slowdown through a unification algorithm, and no meta-interpreter is needed. ProFIT uses the same techniques for compiling sorted feature terms and finite domains into Prolog terms as the Core Langauge Engine of SRI Cambridge and the Advanced Linguistic Engineering Platform (ALEP 2.2) by the European Community, BIM, and Cray Systems. ProFIT is not a grammar formalism (although it is motivated by NLP), although it provides some ingredients that are considered typical of grammar formalisms. The goal of ProFIT is to provide these datatypes without enforcing any particular theory of grammar, parsing or generation. ProFIT can be used to extend your favourite Prolog-based grammar formalism, parser and generator with the expressive power of sorted feature terms. Cyclic terms can be printed out and a user-configurable pretty-printer for feature terms is provided. ProFIT is available free of charge by anonymous ftp from coli.uni-sb.de:/pub/profit/ and is implemented in Sicstus Prolog (2.1 #9). For more information, write to Gregor Erbach, Univ. Saarlandes, Saarbruecken, Germany . ---------------------------------------------------------------- ;;; *EOF*