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PROLOG BOOKS
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Marc Eisenstadt and Mike Brayshaw and Jocelyn Paine. By Springer.
Sells new for $154.00.
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No comments about The Transparent Prolog Machine: Visualizing Logic Programs.
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Yoav Shoham. By Morgan Kaufmann Publishers.
The regular list price is $51.00.
Sells new for $122.58.
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No comments about Artificial Intelligence Techniques in PROLOG.
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Lee Naish. By Springer.
The regular list price is $49.95.
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No comments about Negation and Control in Prolog (Lecture Notes in Computer Science).
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Carl Townsend. By Longman Higher Education.
The regular list price is $18.95.
Sells new for $113.78.
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No comments about Advanced Techniques in Turbo PROLOG.
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Paul Brna and Benedict du Boulay and Helen Pain. By Ablex Publishing.
Sells new for $131.95.
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1 comments about Learning to Build and Comprehend Complex Information Structures: Prolog as a Case Study (Contemporary Studies in Cognitive Science and Technology).
- This is a wonderful book for many reasons, but the biggest wonder was that it was ever published! It documents obscure research about an obscure programming language--and the point of the research is to find out why it is so obscure!
If you are a big fan of prolog, but are still wondering why it didn't take off, this book will tell you. For me, the biggest take away messages are these:
1. The very uniformity of the syntax--which makes Prolog "beautiful" in a sense--is a source of obscurity, because since everything is just clauses, its hard to tell what any particular clause is doing. In, say, C, its easy to tell if something is a for-loop or not--the keyword "for" is right there. But in prolog, iteration over a range of values looks pretty much like any other programming statement. There is no syntactic differentiation to help you understand the semantics.
2. In order to understand a prolog program, you pretty much have to be a master of redaction criticism. For example, a prolog program to sum up the values of all the integers in a list of integers is typically written by taking the code for the member/2 function and editing it--adding here an accumulator, there a summation, etc. This is called "Skeletons and Techniques" by Lee Naish and other exponents. It is a very powerful way to develop prolog programs, but someone else wanting to understand _your_ prolog program must first understand how member/2 works, then they must work backwards from the changes you've made to it, first determining how you've edited member/2 and what your editorial changes mean, before they can understand your code. Its very tricky!
Talk about a book which isn't for everyone! But if you are in the business of designing languages, there's lots of interesting insights here just waiting to be gleaned.
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Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Peter Gibbins. By Oxford University Press, USA.
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No comments about Logic with Prolog (Oxford Applied Mathematics and Computing Science Series).
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Mick McAllister. By Wordware.
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1 comments about Illustrated Turbo Prolog/2.0 (Computer Program Language).
- quiero copia de turbo prolog 2.
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Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Hugh De Saram. By Ellis Horwood.
Sells new for $149.98.
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No comments about Programming in Micro-PROLOG (Computers & Their Applications).
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Henry K. Konigsberger and Frank W. G. M. De Bruyn. By Mcgraw-Hill College.
The regular list price is $40.75.
Sells new for $381.08.
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No comments about Prolog from the Beginning.
Posted in Prolog (Saturday, July 19, 2008)
Written by Andrew Bradbury and Rory Woodward. By Mcgraw-Hill (Tx).
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No comments about Turbo Prolog User's Handbook: Version 2.0.
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The Transparent Prolog Machine: Visualizing Logic Programs
Artificial Intelligence Techniques in PROLOG
Negation and Control in Prolog (Lecture Notes in Computer Science)
Advanced Techniques in Turbo PROLOG
Learning to Build and Comprehend Complex Information Structures: Prolog as a Case Study (Contemporary Studies in Cognitive Science and Technology)
Logic with Prolog (Oxford Applied Mathematics and Computing Science Series)
Illustrated Turbo Prolog/2.0 (Computer Program Language)
Programming in Micro-PROLOG (Computers & Their Applications)
Prolog from the Beginning
Turbo Prolog User's Handbook: Version 2.0
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