BNR Prolog

BNR Prolog, also known as CLP(BNR) is a declarative constraint logic programming language based on relational interval arithmetic developed at Bell-Northern Research in the 1980s and 1990s. Embedding relational interval arithmetic in a logic programming language differs from other constraint logic programming (CLP) systems like CLP(R) or Prolog-III in that it does not perform any symbolic processing. BNR Prolog was the first such implementation of interval arithmetic in a logic programming language.[1] Since the constraint propagation is performed on real interval values, it is possible to express and partially solve non-linear equations.[2]

Example rule

The simultaneous equations:

are expressed in CLP(BNR) as:

?- {X>=0,Y>=0, tan(X)==Y, X**2 + Y**2 == 5}.

and a typical implementation's response would be:

X = _58::real(1.0966681287054703,1.0966681287054718),
Y = _106::real(1.9486710896099515,1.9486710896099542).
Yes

gollark: Pandora?
gollark: Lemmmy's secret backup tower?
gollark: GTech's lava pool offices for the PotatOS Advanced Projects team?
gollark: The Institute for PotatOS Research in Keansia?
gollark: GTech Site Null?

References

  1. Rossi, Francesco; Van Beek, Peter; Walsh, T., eds. (2006). Handbook of constraint programming (Hardback). Elsevier. ISBN 9780444527264.
  2. Jaffar, Joxan; Maher, Michael J. (1994). "Constraint logic programming: a survey". The Journal of Logic Programming. Elsevier. 19-20: 503–581. doi:10.1016/0743-1066(94)90033-7.
  • J. G. Cleary, "Logical Arithmetic", Future Computing Systems, Vol 2, No 2, pp. 125–149, 1987.
  • W. Older and A. Vellino, "Extending Prolog with Constraint Arithmetic on Real Intervals", in Proc. of the Canadian Conf. on Electrical and Computer Engineering, 1990.
  • Older, W., and Benhamou, F., Programming in CLP(BNR), in: 1st Workshop on Principles and Practice of Constraint Programming, 1993.
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