1

I have these facts: fact(1,'a'). fact(2,'b'). fact(3,'c'). fact(4,'d').

my goal is to create 2 lists: one for the ID and one for the strings. So, something like this one: fact(['a', 'b', 'c' , 'd'], [1, 2, 3, 4]). but by a RULE.

Is it possible?

2 Answers 2

1

the easiest way I know is with library(pairs):

facts_lists(Ids, Atoms) :-
   findall(Id-Atom, fact(Id, Atom), Pairs),
   pairs_keys_values(Pairs, Ids, Atoms).
1
  • Thanks, this works very well. Is it also possible count the pairs with this library?
    – user840718
    Jun 8, 2013 at 14:12
0

Here's a slightly more involved solution if you don't have the pairs library available (e.g., you're using gprolog):

unzip( [], [], [] ).
unzip( [[L,R]|ListT], [L|LT], [R|RT] ) :-
    unzip( ListT, LT, RT ).

fact_lists( Ids, Atoms ) :-
    findall( [Id, Atom], fact(Id, Atom), FactList ),
    unzip( FactList, Ids, Atoms ).

So you'd call:

fact_lists( Ids, Atoms ).

And get:

Ids = [1,2,3,4]
Atoms = ['a','b','c','d']
9
  • the pair representation as [A,B] it's a bit cumbersome. A-B (exactly as used in library(pairs)) it's the preferred way in Prolog community.
    – CapelliC
    Jun 8, 2013 at 10:05
  • I agree. I was only presenting an alternative not using pair. I was going to just show a custom pair type of approach, but chose this method, again, as an alternative. As I said at the beginning of my answer: "Here's a slightly more involved solution if you don't have the pairs library available." I've only been using gprolog, so I don't have "library(pair)", for example.
    – lurker
    Jun 8, 2013 at 13:05
  • @mbratch CapelliC was pointing out that if you have two things, you would rather represent them as a "pair", A-B, than a list of two things. Your approach is otherwise perfectly fine. [A, B] is actually .(A, .(B, [])), so you can see why A-B is preferred. "Pair" in this context just means two separate things that need to be together for the time being; the dash is the conventional way of denoting a pair.
    – user1812457
    Jun 9, 2013 at 19:15
  • Thanks Boris. How would you suggest doing that in gprolog?
    – lurker
    Jun 9, 2013 at 21:13
  • Unless you address me, I will not get your comment in my Inbox and might not react to it. Check out the source code of library(pairs) from the SWI-Prolog web page.
    – user1812457
    Jun 10, 2013 at 15:09

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