1

in an exercice I have to write a predicate that prints numbers < N using repeat/0, here is what I have tried :

loop(N) :-
    repeat,
        write(N), nl,
        N is N-1,
        write(N),
        N > 0,
    !.

but it only prints the given number N Endlessly.

Any Idea how to implement this using repeat/0 ?? thank you

7 Answers 7

2

What about:

loop(N) :-
        between(1, N, X),
        writeln(X),
        false.
3
  • 1
    Doesn't use repeat. which is required. Notice that yous predicate loop/1 fails while the others succeed.
    – joel76
    Nov 10, 2012 at 19:20
  • 1
    Or when you want success of the predicate loop/1, you can also replace ..., false, by ..., false; true.
    – user502187
    Nov 10, 2012 at 20:59
  • 1
    repeat/0 is senseless in this case - you can stick it after false/0 if you insist it show up. Notice also that for example ?- loop(-3) loops with the other versions while it terminates with mine.
    – mat
    Nov 10, 2012 at 21:17
2

you can use assert/retract eg

:- dynamic value/1.
loop(N) :-
    retractall(value(_)),
    assert(value(N)),
    repeat,
            retract(value(V)),
            writeln(V),
            V1 is V - 1,
            assert(value(V1)),
            V = 0,
    !.
2
  • Thans for your reply. But at this point, I don't think that we are allowed to use these predicates you showed me. (dynamic, rectratcall, assert, retract). All we are allowed to use is, repeat/0 & between/3, the cut ! and the basic controllers, no more :/ Nov 10, 2012 at 16:29
  • Adding dynamic over something as simple as a loop seems like a bad practice to me. Dec 15, 2017 at 10:47
2

Your original one doesn't work for various reasons, but in particular

loop(N) :-
    repeat,
        write(N), nl,
        N is N-1,                <--- no!
        write(N),
        N > 0,
    !.

"is" unifies if the left side is the mathematical result of the right. the left side will be bound to the right. you can't change the value of a var once you've set it in Prolog.

2
  • Thanks for your reply. I have noticed that the "is" was not working, but failed to deduct the reason. So, If I cannot do it this way, is there an other way around to use a Variable that decrements each time repeat loops ? Nov 10, 2012 at 23:26
  • 'Variables' aren't 'Variable' in Prolog So you'd either do it recursively, or use something like between that hands out a succession of numbers
    – Anniepoo
    Nov 11, 2012 at 3:48
2

I finally got to make it work using the predicate between/3 this is my final code :

loop(N) :-
    repeat,
        between(1, N, X),
        writeln(X),
        X = N,
    !.

Edit : as @CookieMonster said, repeat/0 is not needed, so here is the last version of the code :

loop(N) :-
        between(1, N, X),
        writeln(X),
        false.
5
  • 1
    The repeat in the above is not needed. You can try it by yourself, and remove the repeat, it will work exactly the same. One you should also tell your teacher that combining repeat and between doesn't make sense.
    – user502187
    Nov 10, 2012 at 20:46
  • 1
    repeat is only for infinite looping where you have no generator. But between is already generator. You also don't need the X=N, !, between does it already for you. Replace this by fail.
    – user502187
    Nov 10, 2012 at 20:56
  • @CookieMonster Thank you for your explanations, it really makes sense, and I have learned from you here. Nov 10, 2012 at 23:16
  • 1
    @AbderrahmaneTAHRIJOUTI: This ! at the end is useles. Stick to mat's solution!
    – false
    Nov 10, 2012 at 23:52
  • @false thanks. would you have an answer for my question I posted on Anniepoo's Anser ? stackoverflow.com/a/13325860/614277 Nov 11, 2012 at 0:05
1

I would introduce a service predicate

isint(I) :- I = 0 ; isint(T), I is T + 1.

this is needed to scope in a new variable (practically solve the point that Anniepoo highlighted in her first response).

Then I could write

loop(N) :-
  repeat,
  isint(I),
  write(I), nl,
  I >= N, !.
1

Abderrahmane asked about how to decrement.

Couple ways to do this. Most people would do

dec(0).
dec(N) :-
   write(N), nl,
   NewN is N - 1,
   dec(NewN).

if you insist on a failure driven loop, how about

dec(N) :-
    between(1,N,X),
    Dec is 11 - X,
    write(Dec), nl,
    Dec = 1.

or, and this is ugly and bad style (and slow as molasses):

dec(N) :-
      assert(current_n(N)),
      repeat,
      current_n(Y),
      write(Y), nl,
      NewY is Y - 1,
      retractall(current_n(_)).
      assert(current_n(NewY)),
      Y > 0.
1
  • 1
    Beware! Your first definition does not terminate: dec(1), false
    – false
    Nov 15, 2012 at 23:23
0

A simple way :

loop(N) :-
    between(1, N, X),
    writeln(X),
    X >= N, !.
    loop(X).

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