I'm a second year student with my discrete mathematics 2 assignment is to make an automated theorem prover. I have to make a simple prover program that works on Propositional Logic in 4 weeks (assuming that the proof always exist). I've googled so far but the materials there is really hard to understand in 4 weeks. Can anyone recommend me some book/site/open source code that is for beginners or some useful hints to start with? Thank you in advance.
closed as off topic by Will♦ Feb 20 at 17:04
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Note: I flagged this to be moved to the Computer Science site because they are much more on top of ATP over there. It would be nice if you could include what you have looked at and why it does not help you. Then we can figure out what might be better for you. Also, if you have to write a program, then knowing what languages you know will help. Most of what I do with this is done in a functional language such as OCaml or F#, or a logic language such as Prolog or Mercury. Have you seen "Handbook of Practical Logic and Automated Reasoning" (WorldCat) by John Harrison. I included the (WorldCat) link so you can find the book in a local library as opposed to waiting to buy it which will eat up most of your time. If you look you will find the OCaml code at the bottom of the page, and F# here and Haskell here. In case you haven't see the ATP or Proof Assistant at Wikipedia, you might get a lead to some code and papers. |
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