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I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around the concept of logic programming. I'm trying to get all permutations with repetition into a give list.

I can put what I have, but I don't know what I'm doing!

perms_R(List,[]).
perms_R([X|Xt],[Y|Yt],Out) :- perms_R([Y|Xt],Yt),perms_R(Xt,[Y|Yt])

.

The idea was to go through each element in the second list and put it in my first list. I'm trying to figure this out, but I'm stuck.

I need to call perms_R([a,b,c,d],[1,2,3,4]). and get:

1,1,1,1
1,1,1,2
1,1,1,3
1,1,1,4
1,1,2,1
etc....

I understand the first list seems useless and I could just do it with a list length, but I actually need it for the remainder of my code, so I'm trying to model this after what I need. Once I get past this part, I will be putting extra logic in that will limit the letters that can be replaced in the first list, but don't worry about that part!

1 Answer 1

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What you are looking for is not a permutation. You want to create a list of a given size using items from a given set.

You may do it with this snippet:

perms_R([], _).
perms_R([Item|NList], List):-
  member(Item, List),
  perms_R(NList, List).

You would need to pass a semi instantiated list and the source items:

perms_R([A,B,C,D],[1,2,3,4]).
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  • after much kicking and screaming. I figured it out based on your solution. pro([],_,[]). pro([X|Xt],List,[Y|Yt]) :- member(Y,List), pro(Xt,List,Yt). The member operation made that so much easier! Thanks alot!
    – brandon
    Apr 22, 2011 at 22:28
  • @brandon: why not use gusbro's solution? Yours never does anything with its first argument, so it's overly complex.
    – Fred Foo
    Apr 24, 2011 at 10:02
  • @larsmans, I used my modification because the first variable was used in a bunch of rules that followed. So I could have it skip certain letters based on the current value of X. It ended up working perfectly. His was right and very helpful, I just had to change it to work for my application so I posted my modification.
    – brandon
    Apr 25, 2011 at 13:11

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