2

This is a case of duplicate value for which I haven't found a solution.

Let's say we've got the following list:

List = [
    (A, B),
    (A, C),
    (B, A),
    (B, C),
    (C, A),
    (C, B)
].

A duplicate element would be an element that has exactly the same values in its package - the order doesn't matter.

So after removing the duplicates, the list would look like this:

List = [
    (A, B),
    (A, C),
    (B, C),
].

How would I go about doing this?

2 Answers 2

1

Write a predicate same/2 to recognize when two elements are the same independently of the order.

Write a predicate member_same/2 (like member/2, but with equality replaced by same/2) that checks whether an element is a member of a list, irrespective ordering.

Then write a predicate to remove duplicates using member_same/2.

BTW, you need to write constants in lower case, upper case is for variables. This could lead to a lot of confusion, because distinct variables can become equal by unification.

0

This is a straight-forward way (but that doesn't really fully utilise inbuilt predicates):

% an item is sorted when the two terms are in standard order of terms
%   note that you use @< and @> when you are comparing things that aren't numbers
sortitem((A, B), Item) :-
    (A @< B,
    Item = (A, B));
    (A @> B,
    Item = (B, A)).

% a list of items is sorted when each of the individual item's terms are sorted (but we
%   don't care if the items themselves are in order)
sortlistitems([], []).
sortlistitems([H|T], List) :-
    sortitem(H, HSorted),
    sortlistitems(T, TSorted),
    List = [HSorted|TSorted].

% sorting with sort/2 removes duplicates and puts the items in order
removeduplicateitems(X, Y) :-
    sortlistitems(X, XSorted),
    sort(XSorted, Y).

Testing:

?- removeduplicateitems([(a, b), (a, c), (b, a), (b, c),(c, a),(c, b)], X).
X = [ (a, b), (a, c), (b, c)] 
3
  • nit in sortlistitems/2: It is common to put a unification like 'List = [...]` into the head. maplist(sortitem, X, XSorted) would have been as good.
    – false
    Mar 17, 2013 at 14:26
  • 1
    Also, removeduplicateitems([(b,a)], [(b,a)]) fails. Not sure OP wanted this.
    – false
    Mar 17, 2013 at 14:28
  • @false both of your comments are definitely valid ones.
    – Peter Hude
    Mar 17, 2013 at 19:39

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