The Craft of Prolog by Richard O'Keefe
The Craft of Prolog Richard O'Keefe ebook
Format: djvu
Publisher: MIT
ISBN: 0262150395, 9780262150392
Page: 412
The Craft of Prolog (Logic Programming) book download Richard A. For example, see Richard O'Keefe's book The Craft of Prolog or Sterling and Shapiro's The Art of Prolog. Prolog is different, but not that different. The Craft of Prolog (Logic Programming) [Paperback] REVIEW. I have an old book (1994) on Prolog called The Craft of Prolog written by Richard A. O'Keefe's “The Craft of Prolog”. One of the crucial 'values' of the book is that "Elegance in Not Optional". There are nice discussions of both laziness and continuation passing style in the AI programming textbooks: O'Keefe's Craft of Prolog, and Norvig's AI Programming in Lisp. On my walk home today I felt an irresistible urge to recall Prolog. For a more programmer-oriented book on Prolog, I highly recommend Richard A. Richard Suchenwirth 2000-12-04 -- Job requirements have reawakened my interest in Prolog, while I still love, and work with, Tcl. The Craft of Prolog (Logic Programming),Editorial: The MIT Press, Authors:Richard O'Keefe. > > The Art of Prolog from Shapiro etc, was really useful for me. He doesn't focus on the academic approach, but beautifully shows how to write clear, efficient, elegant code in Prolog. Concurrent logic programming has no search. The art of Prolog ( amazon); The craft of Prolog (amazon); A prolog in haskell (https://propella.blogspot.com/2009/04/prolog-in-haskell.html), and the referenced previous implementation https://darcs.haskell.org/hugs98/demos/prolog/. O'Keefe Download The Craft of Prolog (Logic Programming) The emphasis in The Craft of Prolog is on using Prolog effectively. Concurrent logic programming has made this easier. Hacking your program is no substitute for understanding your problem. O'Keefe's The Craft of Prolog, of course I kept comparisons to Tcl in mind. Two years ago, we were intimate, but time has eroded our bonds, and she is but a shadow flitting through dark synaptical corridors. Does anyone have any Prolog book recommendations?