0

So basically in C , we can implement some semantic like this:

int foo(int a )
{
    if (a == 100)
        return 0;
    else
      {}

    a = a + 1;
    foo(a);
}

So I am trying to use Prolog to implement the same semantic here, but what I am really confused is whether Prolog has some thing to represent if (a == 100) return 0; else {}

Could anyone give me some help on this issue?

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2 Answers 2

1

Here is Prolog translation (I assume your mean return foo(a);, not just foo(a);):

foo(A, Result) :-
    ( A = 100 ->
        Result = 0
    ;
        NextA is A + 1,
        foo(NextA, Result)
    ).

It will run forever if A > 100, exactly like your C function.

3
  • The original function returns 0 for all inputs a <= 100.
    – schrobe
    Jul 21, 2014 at 9:11
  • @schrobe: consider using finite domain constraints instead of low-level arithmetic, so you can pose a query like ?- foo(A, 0). without running into errors.
    – mat
    Jul 21, 2014 at 10:15
  • @schrobe: I think it's undefined for a<100 and not terminating for a>100. Actually, some compiler will complain ( and forbid compilation of that code ? ).
    – CapelliC
    Jul 21, 2014 at 12:04
-1

Are you aware that this function always returns 0?

Anyway, here is a solution how you can do this in Prolog:

foo(100,0):-!.
foo(A, Result):-
    A1 is A+1,
    foo(A1, Result).
1
  • 1
    ?- foo(100,1). should fail, but does not terminate.
    – mat
    Jul 20, 2014 at 21:24

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