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  2. Prolog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prolog

    Prolog is a logic programming language that has its origins in artificial intelligence, automated theorem proving and computational linguistics. [1] [2] [3]Prolog has its roots in first-order logic, a formal logic, and unlike many other programming languages, Prolog is intended primarily as a declarative programming language: the program is a set of facts and rules, which define relations.

  3. YAP (Prolog) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAP_(Prolog)

    YAP is an open-source, high-performance implementation of the Prolog programming language developed at LIACC/Universidade do Porto and at COPPE Sistemas/UFRJ.Its Prolog engine is based in the WAM (Warren Abstract Machine), with several optimizations for better performance.

  4. Warren Abstract Machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Abstract_Machine

    Prolog code is reasonably easy to translate to WAM instructions, which can be more efficiently interpreted. Also, subsequent code improvements and compilations to native code are often easier to perform on the more low-level representation. In order to write efficient Prolog programs, a basic understanding of how the WAM works can be advantageous.

  5. SWI-Prolog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWI-Prolog

    SWI-Prolog is a free implementation of the programming language Prolog, commonly used for teaching and semantic web applications. It has a rich set of features, libraries for constraint logic programming, multithreading, unit testing, GUI, interfacing to Java, ODBC and others, literate programming, a web server, SGML, RDF, RDFS, developer tools (including an IDE with a GUI debugger and GUI ...

  6. Ciao (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciao_(programming_language)

    Ciao provides a full Prolog system (supporting ISO-Prolog), declarative subsets and extensions of Prolog, functional programming (including lazy evaluation), higher-order (with predicate abstractions), constraint programming, and objects, as well as feature terms (records), persistence, several control rules (breadth-first search, iterative deepening, ...), concurrency (threads/engines ...

  7. GNU Prolog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Prolog

    GNU Prolog (also called gprolog) is a compiler developed by Daniel Diaz with an interactive debugging environment for Prolog available for Unix, Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. It also supports some extensions to Prolog including constraint programming over a finite domain , parsing using definite clause grammars , and an operating system interface.

  8. Visual Prolog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Prolog

    Visual Prolog, previously known as PDC Prolog and Turbo Prolog, is a strongly typed object-oriented extension of Prolog. It was marketed by Borland as Turbo Prolog (version 1.0 in 1986 and version 2.0 in 1988). It is now developed and marketed by the Danish firm PDC that originally created it.

  9. Prolog32 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prolog32

    Arity/Prolog32 allows a developer to create and execute Prolog programs for Windows, which are also operable on Linux using WINE. The software includes a compiler and interpreter written in Prolog, C, Assembler. The interpreter provides debugging support, and can be invoked from compiled code for applications that require dynamically modifiable ...