2

I need a predicate for whether an element is in the list. I've tried to use member/2, but I've noticed a strange behaviour.

When I call something like member(1, [1, 2, 3]). the SWI-prolog outputs true and waits for me to press enter before execution terminates. This does not happen when element is not in list.

I have two questions:

  1. Why is this happening?
  2. What would be the code for member/2 which will return immediately?

2 Answers 2

2
  1. Why is this happening?

The definition of member/2 permits to succeed several times, even if the very same solution is found. In your list, all elements were different. But consider the case with two additional occurrences of 1 at the end:

?- member(1,[1,2,3,1,1]).
   true
;  true
;  true.
  1. What would be the code for member/2 which will return immediately?

This is commonly called memberd/2.

?- memberd(1,[1,2,3,1,1]).
   true.

?- memberd(X,[1,2,3,1,1]).
   X = 1
;  X = 2
;  X = 3
;  false.

The difference is easy to grasp. member/2 is essentially defined as:

member(X, [X|_Xs]).
member(E, [_X|Xs]) :-
   member(E, Xs).

Note that these two clauses are not mutually exclusive! This is the reason why it searches for alternate solutions even if a solution was already found. In the rule, the E and the _X might be identical.

By ensuring that E and X are different in the rule, we get a first definition of memberd/2:

memberd(X, [X|_Xs]).
memberd(E, [X|Xs]) :-
   dif(E, X),
   memberd(E, Xs).

Thanks to this dif/2 the rule is only considered, if the current element is different to E. What is missing here, however, is that Prolog will still have to consider both before concluding that they are disjoint.

The full definition contains some technicalities to avoid useless choices.

memberd(X, [E|Es]) :-
   if_(X = E, true, memberd(X, Es)).

Using library(reif) for SICStus and SWI this is expanded to:

memberd(X, [E|Es]) :-
    (   X\=E
    ->  memberd(X, Es)
    ;   X==E
    ->  true
    ;   X=E,
        true
    ;   dif(X, E),
        memberd(X, Es)
    ).
1
  • Exactly, what I was looking for, kudos.
    – doomista
    Apr 15, 2019 at 16:46
1

This is an alternative answer to the second question.

  1. What would be the code for member/2 which will return immediately?

If you only wish to check if X is a member of Es and both are ground, you can use

memberchk(X, Es).

memberchk/2 is a built-in in SWI-Prolog, but if it wasn't, you could define it as

memberchk(X, Es) :-
    member(X, Es),
    !.

The cut (!) after the member/2 call tells Prolog to forget about any other choices that the call might still have left to try.

Your example succeeds deterministically (immediately):

?- memberchk(1, [1, 2, 3]).
true.

But note that memberchk/2 is quite different from member/2. For example:

?- findall(X, member(X, [1, 2, 3]), Xs).
Xs = [1, 2, 3].

?- findall(X, memberchk(X, [1, 2, 3]), Xs).
Xs = [1].

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