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I'm trying to create a list in Prolog (SWI Prolog) and check which numbers are powers of 2 and second find how many times a specific number is in the list (in this example I'm trying to find how many times the number 3 is in the list). For a example, if you ask

?- check([0,2,3,-5,-2,1,8,7,4], MULT2, THREE).

you should see

MULT2=[2,8,4] 
THREE=1 

My first try to find a solution is to search the list with head and doing head mod 2 = 0 to find all numbers which are powers of 2, but something went wrong and I only get "false" as an answer.

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    You need to show your coding attempt. Also, is there a reason you are doing powers of 2 and frequency of a given number in a single predicate? They really are two different ideas and would make sense as two different predicates. Is this a homework assignment?
    – lurker
    Feb 3, 2014 at 2:00
  • MULT2=[2,1,8,4] would be the correct answer for MULT2 in this case.
    – lurker
    Feb 3, 2014 at 2:11
  • I 'm studying Prolog at University I am new in this programming language and I want to learn more things, but this task is for me to understand this difficult (for myself part of Prolog) lists. My previous task was to split the array, and I understand many things. But now I m trying to find how can I crete a predicate to do multiple things. Thanks for the answer! Feb 3, 2014 at 2:25

2 Answers 2

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Here's how you can find the "powers of two" in logically-pure way!

Using 4.3.5, library(reif) and library(clpz):

:- use_module([library(reif), library(clpz)]).

power_of_two_t(I, T) :-
   L #= min(I,1),
   M #= I /\ (I-1),
   call((L = 1, M = 0), T).      % using (=)/3 and (',')/3 of library(reif)

Sample query1 using meta-predicate tfilter/3 in combination with power_of_two_t/2:

?- tfilter(power_of_two_t, [0,2,3,-5,-2,1,8,7,4], Ps).
Ps = [2,1,8,4].                  % succeeds deterministically

Here's a more general query suggested by a comment:

?- tfilter(power_of_two_t, [X], Ps).
   Ps = [X], 0#=X/\_A, _A+1#=X, X in 1..sup, _A in 0..sup
;  Ps = [], dif(_A,0), _A#=X/\_B, _B+1#=X, X in 1..sup, _B in 0..sup
;  Ps = [], dif(_A,1), _A#=min(X,1), _B#=X/\_C, _C+1#=X, X#>=_A, _A in inf..1.

Footnote 1: The answer sequences shown above were brushed up to indicate the determinism of calls.

Footnote 2: To reproduce the results use call_det/2 which is defined like this:

call_det(G_0, Det) :-
   call_cleanup(G_0, Flag = set),
   (  nonvar(Flag)
   -> Det = true
   ;  Det = false
   ).

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  • 1
    Purer! As for tfilter(power_of_two_t, [X], P).
    – false
    Nov 16, 2017 at 15:14
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    Cough, det_call/1. Why not use a purer shell for SICStus? Cor.3 has the missing functionality, and SICStus supports this perfectly!
    – false
    Dec 1, 2017 at 17:33
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    Since when I am non-deterministic? det_call(false) fails
    – false
    Dec 1, 2017 at 17:34
  • 1
    @false. call_det(G,Det) succeeds if G succeeds, unifying Det with true or false accordingly?
    – repeat
    Dec 1, 2017 at 18:07
  • 1
    Nts: help repair library(reif).
    – repeat
    Dec 2, 2017 at 0:03
1

It's a strange thing to have two such a different tasks to do in one predicate. You should probably have two separate predicates, one for counting number of powers of 2 and one to count 3s. Then you can combine them in one predicate like:

check(Nums, MULT2, THREE) :-
    count2powers(Nums, MULT2),
    count3s(Nums, THREE).

After that you can decompose further and have a separate predicate to check if a number is a power of 2:

is2power(1).
is2power(N) :-
    N > 0,
    N2 is N // 2,
    N2 * 2 =:= N,
    is2power(N2).

This is basic software engineering and this way you can build your program step by step and you will be able to ask more concrete and meaningful questions than just "The whole program returns false."

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