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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?

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    The problem is with contains/2. Although contains/2 gives the right response when both variables are instantiated, if you query, say, contains([a,b], L) it will generate L=[], then L=[a], then L=[a,a], etc. So the query contains(L1, L3) in your minus/3 predicate isn't doing what you want.
    – lurker
    Jan 11, 2014 at 19:26

1 Answer 1

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Above comment of mbratch is very helpful.

Notice, that your current minus(L1, L2, L3) definition is: All members of L3 are in L1 and no member from L3 is in L2.

Prolog is giving you good answer with L3 = [], it fits for definition I wrote above.

EDIT: Below code should do what you want, but currently I don't have prolog on my computer, so I can't test it.

remove(X, [X|T], T) :- !.
remove(X, [H|T], [H|T2]) :- remove(X, T, T2).

minus(L1,[],L1).
minus(L1,[H|T2],T3) :- member(H, L1), !, remove(H,L1,L4), minus(L4, T2, T3).
minus(L1,[H|T2],[H|T3]) :- minus(L1, T2, T3).

remove(X,LA,LB) which says: LB is LA without it first occurrence of X, so it's just removing element from the list.

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  • The code doesn't work but it gives me another thought direction. I'll try to work it out later. Thanks :)
    – Dan Dv
    Jan 11, 2014 at 20:20
  • Check it now. It should be good now, tested on swi-prolog. : )
    – Świstak35
    Jan 11, 2014 at 23:17
  • @DanDv If it satisfies you, please check my answer as accepted - "tick" mark near my answer.
    – Świstak35
    Jan 13, 2014 at 3:16

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