0

My goal for this piece of a Prolog program I am working on is to access a particular field of a list of lists (containing a route's stopping points in a list followed by the distance of the entire route):

Here is the current format of my list of lists:

RoutesAndDistances = [[[Start, Stop1, Stop2, ..., End], TotalDistance],
                      [[Start, Stop1, Stop2, ..., End], TotalDistance]]].

How should I go about accessing the TotalDistance field of each record of RoutesAndDistances?

I know that, to access an individual field of a normal list, I would use Prolog's syntax of [First | Rest] to sort of peel away the list until the value of interest is reached, but I don't know how to extrapolate this into a list of lists...

Any help is much appreciated. Thanks!

2 Answers 2

2

Your lists all seem to have exactly two elements, so you can say:

list_second([_,Second], Second).

and obtain the list of all distances with:

maplist(list_second, Routes_distances, Distances)

Note though that it makes little sense to use lists if you know beforehand that they all have only two elements. It is better to use structures instead, for example:

RDs = [route_distance([Start,Stop1,Stop2,...,End], D1),
       route_distance([Start,Stop1,Stop2,...,End], D2)].

This is a a lot more readable: Notice for instance that you already have one closing bracket too many in the example you gave.

It is easy to adapt the code to this representation:

rd_distance(route_distance(_,D), D).

and then:

maplist(rd_distance, RDs, Ds)

gives you the list Ds of all distances.

1

That structure is a list of lists of pairs. member/2 is the easier way to 'enumerate' elements of a list, on backtracking. Then pattern matching allows to extract the required field. For instance

?- member([_,X], [[[a,b,c],2],[[d,e,f],10]]).
X = 2 ;
X = 10.
2
  • Thanks, this makes sense. Would this member function also work on an arbitrary number of lists of pairs? If my whole list of pairs was called LoP, for example, could I call member([_, X], LoP).? Oct 26, 2013 at 19:47
  • Yes, but beware you need to backtrack to access all elements, i.e. make Prolog work out all solutions, for instance with findall/3
    – CapelliC
    Oct 26, 2013 at 20:16

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.