I've written the following code in prolog:
contains(L1, []).
contains(L1, [X | T2]) :- member(X, L1), contains(L1, T2).
minus(L, [], L).
minus(L1, L2, L3) :- contains(L1, L3), nomembers(L3, L2).
nomembers(L1, []).
nomembers(L1, [X | T2]) :- not(member(X, L1)), nomembers(L1, T2).
contains(L1, L2)
returns true if all of the members in L2
appear in L1
. (contains([1,2],[1,1,1])
is true).
minus(L1, L2, L3)
returns true if L3=L1\L2
, meaning L3
consists of members of L1
but not of L2
.
When I ask minus([1,2,3,4],[2,1],L)
, I get the answer that L=[]
, although logically it should be L=[3,4]
. Does someone know why?
contains/2
. Althoughcontains/2
gives the right response when both variables are instantiated, if you query, say,contains([a,b], L)
it will generateL=[]
, thenL=[a]
, thenL=[a,a]
, etc. So the querycontains(L1, L3)
in yourminus/3
predicate isn't doing what you want.