Cs7120 (Prasad)L14-LP1 Programming Paradigms Logic Programming Paradigm Correctness > Efficiency...
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Transcript of Cs7120 (Prasad)L14-LP1 Programming Paradigms Logic Programming Paradigm Correctness > Efficiency...
cs7120 (Prasad) L14-LP 1
Programming Paradigms
Logic Programming Paradigm
Correctness > Efficiency
http://www.knoesis.org/tkprasad/
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Programming Paradigm
A way of conceptualizing what it means to perform computation and how tasks to be carried out on the computer should be structured and organized.
• Imperative : Machine-model based
• Functional : Equations; Expression Evaluation
• Logical : First-order Logic Deduction
• Object-Oriented : Programming with Data Types
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Imperative Style vs Declarative Style
• Imperative programs– Description of WHAT is to be computed is
inter-twined with HOW it is to be computed.– The latter involves organization of data and the
sequencing of instructions.
• Declarative Programs– Separates WHAT from HOW.– The former is programmer’s responsibility; the
latter is interpreter’s/compiler’s responsibility.
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• What : Intent
– Value to be computed: a + b + c• How : Details
– Recipe for computing the value• Intermediate Code
– T := a + b; T := T + c;
– T := b + c; T := a + T;
• Accumulator Machine– Load a; Add b; Add c;
• Stack Machine– Push a; Push b; Add; Push c; Add;
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Role of variable• In declarative style, a
variable stands for an arbitrary value , and is used to abbreviate an infinite collection of equations.
0 + 0 = 0
0 + 1 = 1
…
for all x : 0 + x = x
• In imperative style, a variable is a location that can hold a value, and can be changed through an assignment.
x := x + 1;
� Declarative variable can be viewed as assign-only- once imperative variable.
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Logic Programming Paradigm
• Integrates Data and Control Structures
edge(a,b).
edge(a,c).
edge(c,a).
path(X,X).
path(X,Y) :- edge(X,Y).
path(X,Y) :- edge(X,Z), path(Z,Y).
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Logic Programming
• A logic program defines a set of relations.
This “knowledge” can be used in various ways by the interpreter to solve different queries.
• In contrast, the programs in other languagesIn contrast, the programs in other languages
also make explicit also make explicit HOWHOW the the ““declarative declarative knowledgeknowledge”” is used to solve the query. is used to solve the query.
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AppendAppend in Prolog
append([], L, L).append([], L, L).
append([ H | T ], L, [ H | R ]) :-append([ H | T ], L, [ H | R ]) :-
append(T, L, R).append(T, L, R).
• True statements about appendappend relation.• “.” and “:-” are logical connectives that stand for
“and” and “if” respectively.
• Uses pattern matching.• “[]” and “|” stand for empty list and cons operation.
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Different Kinds of Queries
• Verification– sig: list x list x list -> boolean
• append([1], [2,3], [1,2,3]).
• Concatenation– sig: list x list -> list
• append([1], [2,3], R).
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More Queries
• Constraint solving– sig: list x list -> list
• append( R, [2,3], [1,2,3]).
– sig: list -> list x list• append(A, B, [1,2,3]).
• Generation– sig: -> list x list x list
• append(X, Y, Z).
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GCD : functional vs imperativePrecondition: n > m >= 0
fun gcd(m,n) = if m=0 then n else gcd(n mod m, m);
function gcd(m,n: int) : int; var pm:int; begin while m<>0 do begin pm := m; m := n mod m; n := pm end; return n end;
GCD: logicPrecondition: n > m >= 0
gcd(M, N, N):- M = 0.
gcd(M, N, G):- M \= 0, M =< N,
T is N mod M, gcd(T, M, G).
?-gcd(3,4,G)
G = 1;
false
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Recursion + Logic Variables• Convenient way of defining functions over
inductively defined sets (e.g., numbers, lists, trees, etc)
• Implicit Stack
• No aliasing problems • Same location cannot be accessed and modified
using two different names
• Use semantics preserving transformations for efficiency
• Role of the interpreter
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Progression of values bound to a variable as computation progresses
• Imperative language– Essentially independent (subject to typing
constraints)
• Logic language– Values are in instance-of/sub-structure relation
(general -> specific)
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OOPL: Expressive Power vs Naturalness
Object-oriented techniques do not provide any new computational power that permits problems to be solved that cannot, in theory, be solved by other means (Church-Turing Hypothesis).
But object-oriented techniques do make it easier and more natural to address problems in a fashion that tends to favor the management of large software projects.
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Other Benefits of Programming in a Declarative Language
• Abstraction – Convenient to code symbolic computations and
list processing applications.• Meta-programming (which exploits uniform syntax)
• Automatic storage management • Improves program reliability.• Enhances programmer productivity.
• Ease of prototyping using interactive development environments.
• Executable Specification
Logic Programming Paradigm(cont’d)
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Logic Program
• Integrates data structures with programs
• Involves asserting properties satisfied by relationships among individuals in a logic language
• Computation is logical deduction – make explicit facts that are implicit, that is, are
logical consequence of input
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Example
• Prolog Facts (asserting relationships among objects) (cf. ABox)– child(c,p) holds if c is a child of p.
child(tom, john).
child(tom, mary).• Prolog Rules (formalizing relationships) (cf.
TBox)– parent(p,c) holds if p is a parent of c.
parent(P,C) :- child(C,P).cs7120 (Prasad) L14-LP 19
Querying as Deduction
?- child(tom, john).– Is Tom a child of John?
?- child(X, john).– List children of John, one by one
?- child(X, Y).– List all child-parent pairs, one by one
?- parent(tom, X).– List children of Tom, one by one
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Two definitions of ancestor relation
• Ancestor-relation is the reflexive transitive closure of the parent-relation.
ancestor(X,X).
ancestor(X,Y) :- parent(X,Y).
ancestor(X,Y) :- parent(X,T), ancestor(T,Y).
ancestor(X,X).
ancestor(X,Y) :- parent(X,Y).
ancestor(X,Y) :- ancestor(X,T), ancestor(T,Y).cs7120 (Prasad) L14-LP 21
Prolog is not an ideal logic programming language
• In traditional Prolog implementations (e.g., SWI-Prolog), the query ancestor(tom,X) terminates (with correct answers), while the query ancestor(tom,X) does not terminate.
• In tabled Prolog (e.g., XSB), both queries terminate.
• Left-recursion causes a depth-first search strategy to loop for ever, while both breadth-first search and tabling strategy terminate.
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expressivenessmechanization
Logic Programming Paradigm
Knowledge Representation
Knowledge Representation
Theorem Proving
Theorem Proving
Attribute Grammars / Compilers (DCGs)Attribute Grammars / Compilers (DCGs)
Relational DatabasesRelational Databases
Programming Languages
Programming Languages
Problem Solving in AI(i)Search
(ii)Divide and Conquer
Problem Solving in AI(i)Search
(ii)Divide and Conquer
unification
declarativeness
efficiency
Trading expressiveness for efficiency :Executable specification
• Knowledge Representation– LP provides a sufficiently rich subset of first-
order logic that is computationally tractable.– Supports non-monotonic reasoning via
negation-by-failure.
• Deductive Databases– LP adds expressive power by extending
relational query language (to support recursion) without sacrificing computational efficiency
• E.g., expression of transitive closure
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Divide and Conquer Strategy
• AND-OR Graphs
Goal_k :-
subgoal_1, subgoal_2, …, subgoal_n
…
subgoal_i :- Alt_i1.
subgoal_i :- Alt_i2.
…
subgoal_i :- Alt_im.cs7120 (Prasad) L14-LP 25
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State-Space SearchinitialState(_).
finalStates(_). …
finalStates(_).
transitions(_,_). …
transitions(_,_).
solved :-
finalStates(Y), reachable(Y).
reachable(Y) :-
initialState(Y).
reachable(Y) :-
transitions(X,Y), reachable(X).
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cs7120 (Prasad) L14-LP 28
Declarative Programming
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Definite Clause Grammars
Program
abcLst -->
abc, abcLst.
abcLst -->
[].
abc --> [a].
abc --> [b].
abc --> [c].
Queries
?-abcLst([b,c],[]).
true
?-abcLst([b,c,d],[]).
false
?-abcLst([b,c,d],[d]).
true
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