Add ch04, start working on ch05.
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## Some basic syntax
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## Chapter 1: Some basic syntax
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```
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property(name).
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## Unification
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## Chapter 2: Unification
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Two terms unify if they are
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1. The same term
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## Recursion
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## Chapter 3: Recursion
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Recursive definitions require that the recursive function isn't the first
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clause, ex:
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%% Exercises from chapter 4
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%%
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%% Exercise 4.3 Write a predicate second(X,List) which checks whether X is the
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%% second element of List .
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second(X, [_, X|_]).
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%% Exercise 4.4 Write a predicate swap12(List1,List2) which checks whether
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%% List1 is identical to List2 , except that the first two elements are
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%% exchanged.
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swap12([X,Y|T], [Y,X|T]).
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%% Exercise  4.5 Suppose we are given a knowledge base with the following
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%% facts:
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tran(eins,one).
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tran(zwei,two).
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tran(drei,three).
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tran(vier,four).
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tran(fuenf,five).
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tran(sechs,six).
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tran(sieben,seven).
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tran(acht,eight).
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tran(neun,nine).
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%% Write a predicate listtran(G,E) which translates a list of German number
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%% words to the corresponding list of English number words. For example:
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%%     listtran([eins,neun,zwei],X).
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%% should give:
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%%     X  =  [one,nine,two].
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%% Your program should also work in the other direction. For example, if you give it the query
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%%     listtran(X,[one,seven,six,two]).
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%% it should return:
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%%     X  =  [eins,sieben,sechs,zwei].
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%% (Hint: to answer this question, first ask yourself “How do I translate the
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%% empty list of number words?”. That’s the base case. For non-empty lists, first
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%% translate the head of the list, then use recursion to translate the tail.)
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listtran([], []).
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listtran([X|TX], [Y|TY]) :-
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	tran(X, Y),
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	listtran(TX, TY).
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%% Exercise 4.6 Write a predicate twice(In,Out) whose left argument is a list,
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%% and whose right argument is a list consisting of every element in the left
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%% list written twice. For example, the query
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%%     twice([a,4,buggle],X).
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%% should return
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%%     X  =  [a,a,4,4,buggle,buggle]).
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%% And the query
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%%     twice([1,2,1,1],X).
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%% should return
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%%     X  =  [1,1,2,2,1,1,1,1].
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%% (Hint: to answer this question, first ask yourself “What should happen when
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%% the first argument is the empty list?”. That’s the base case. For non-empty
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%% lists, think about what you should do with the head, and use recursion to
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%% handle the tail.)
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twice([], []).
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twice([X|T1], [X,X|T2]) :-
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	twice(T1, T2).
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member(X, [X|_]).
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member(X, [_|T]) :- member(X, T).
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memberr(X, X).
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memberr(X, [X|_]).
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memberr(X, [[H|T1]|T2]) :-
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	memberr(X, H);
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	memberr(X, T1);
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	memberr(X, T2).
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memberr(X, [_|T]) :- member(X, T).
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sameLen([], []).
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sameLen([_|TA], [_|TB]) :- sameLen(TA, TB).
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## Chapter 4: Lists
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Lists are enclosed in square brackets, and are finite sequences of elements.
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Elements can be anything: `[mia, robber(yolanda), X, 2, mia]` or `[mia,
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[vincent, jules], [butch, girlfriend(butch)]]` --- a list can contain other
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lists.
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Prolog lists use the standard head/tail vocabulary, and the decomposition operator is `|`:
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```
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[Head|Tail] = [mia,  [vincent,  jules],  [butch,  girlfriend(butch)]]
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```
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Note that the empty list behaves as one would think.
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```
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 ?-  [X|Y]  =  [].
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   no 
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````
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Arguments can be chained, such as `[X, Y | Z]`.
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### The `member` function
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```
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member(X, [X|_]).
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member(X, [_|T]) :- member(X, T).
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```
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%% 1. Write a 3-place predicate combine1 which takes three lists as arguments
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%% and combines the elements of the first two lists into the third as follows:
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%%
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%%    ?-  combine1([a,b,c],[1,2,3],X).
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%%    
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%%    X  =  [a,1,b,2,c,3]
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%%    
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%%    ?-  combine1([f,b,yip,yup],[glu,gla,gli,glo],Result).
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%%    
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%%    Result  =  [f,glu,b,gla,yip,gli,yup,glo]
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combine1([], [], []).
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combine1([X|TX], [Y|TY], [X,Y|TXY]) :- combine1(TX, TY, TXY).
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%% Now write a 3-place predicate combine2 which takes three lists as arguments
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%% and combines the elements of the first two lists into the third as follows:
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%%
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%%   ?-  combine2([a,b,c],[1,2,3],X).
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%%   
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%%   X  =  [[a,1],[b,2],[c,3]]
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%%   
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%%   ?-  combine2([f,b,yip,yup],[glu,gla,gli,glo],Result).
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%%   
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%%   Result  =  [[f,glu],[b,gla],[yip,gli],[yup,glo]]
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combine2([], [], []).
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combine2([X|TX], [Y|TY], [[X, Y]|TXY]) :- combine2(TX, TY, TXY).
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%% Finally, write a 3-place predicate combine3 which takes three lists as
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%% arguments and combines the elements of the first two lists into the third
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%% as follows:
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%%
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%%   ?-  combine3([a,b,c],[1,2,3],X).
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%%   
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%%   X  =  [j(a,1),j(b,2),j(c,3)]
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%%   
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%%   ?-  combine3([f,b,yip,yup],[glu,gla,gli,glo],R).
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%%   
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%%   R  =  [j(f,glu),j(b,gla),j(yip,gli),j(yup,glo)] 
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combine3([], [], []).
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combine3([X|TX], [Y|TY], [j(X,Y)|TXY]) :- combine3(TX, TY, TXY).
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len([], 0).
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len([_|T], N) :-
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	len(T, X),
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	N is X+1.
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alen_([], A, A).
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alen_([_|H], A, L) :-
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	A2 is A+1,
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	alen_(H, A2, L).
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alen(X, L) :- alen_(X, 0, L).
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max([], N, N).
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max([H|T], N, M) :-
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	H > N,
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	max(T, H, M).
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max([H|T], N, M) :-
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	H =< N,
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	max(T, N, M).
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max([H|T], N) :-
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	max(T, H, N).
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%% Exercise 5.2
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%% 
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%% 1. Define a 2-place predicate increment that holds only when its second
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%% argument is an integer one larger than its first argument. For example,
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%% increment(4,5) should hold, but increment(4,6) should not.
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increment(A, B) :- B is A+1.
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%% 2. Define a 3-place predicate sum that holds only when its third argument is
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%% the sum of the first two arguments. For example, sum(4,5,9) should hold, but
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%% sum(4,6,12) should not.
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sum(X, Y, Z) :- Z is X+Y.
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%% Exercise  5.3
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%%
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%% Write a predicate addone/2 whose first argument is a list of integers, and
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%% whose second argument is the list of integers obtained by adding 1 to each
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%% integer in the first list. For example, the query
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%%     ?-  addone([1,2,7,2],X).
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%% should give
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%%     X  =  [2,3,8,3].
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addone([], []).
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addone([X|TX], [Y|TY]) :-
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	Y is X+1,
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	addone(TX, TY).
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## Chapter 5: Arithmetic in Prolog
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Prolog provides basic arithmetic operators.
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Ex.
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```
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  ?-  8  is  6+2.
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   yes
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   ?-  12  is  6*2.
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   yes
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   ?-  -2  is  6-8.
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   yes
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   ?-  3  is  6/2.
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   yes
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   ?-  1  is  mod(7,2).
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   yes 
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   ?- X is 12/4.
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   X = 3.
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```
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The operators don't actually do arithmetic:
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```
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?- X = 2 + 3.
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X = 2+3.
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```
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The default is just to do unification; `is` must be used. The arithmetic
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expression must be on the RHS. This part of Prolog is a black box that
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handles this, and isn't part of the normal KB and unification parts.
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### Arithmetic and lists
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A recursive list length calculator:
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```
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len([], 0).
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len([_|T], N) :-
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	len(T, X),
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	N is X+1.
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```
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A tail-recursive length calculator:
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```
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alen_([], A, A).
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alen_([_|H], A, L) :-
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	A2 is A+1,
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	alen_(H, A2, L).
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alen(X, L) :- alen_(X, 0, L).
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```
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Standard notes about tail recursion efficiency apply here.
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### Comparing integers
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* *x < y* → `X < Y.`
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* *x ≤ y* → `X =< Y.`
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* *x = y* → `X =:= Y.`
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* *x ≠ y* → `X =\= Y.`
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* *x ≥ y* → `X >= Y`
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* *x > y* → `X > Y`
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Note the difference between `=` and `=:=`.
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Let's write a `max` function:
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```
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%% Chapter 5 practical session
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%%
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%% The purpose of Practical Session 5 is to help you get familiar with Prolog’s
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%% arithmetic capabilities, and to give you some further practice in list
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%% manipulation. To this end, we suggest the following programming exercises:
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%% 
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%% 1. In the text we discussed the 3-place predicate accMax which returned the
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%% maximum of a list of integers. By changing the code slightly, turn this into
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%% a 3-place predicate accMin which returns the minimum of a list of integers.
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min([], N, N).
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min([H|T], N, M) :-
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	H < N,
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	min(T, H, M).
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min([H|T], N, M) :-
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	H >= N,
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	min(T, N, M).
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min([H|T], N) :-
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	min(T, H, N).
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%% 2. In mathematics, an n-dimensional vector is a list of numbers of length n.
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%% For example, [2,5,12] is a 3-dimensional vector, and [45,27,3,-4,6] is a
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%% 5-dimensional vector. One of the basic operations on vectors is scalar
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%% multiplication . In this operation, every element of a vector is multiplied
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%% by some number. For example, if we scalar multiply the 3-dimensional vector
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%% [2,7,4] by 3 the result is the 3-dimensional vector [6,21,12] .
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%% 
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%% Write a 3-place predicate scalarMult whose first argument is an integer,
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%% whose second argument is a list of integers, and whose third argument is the
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%% result of scalar multiplying the second argument by the first. For example,
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%% the query
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%%    ?-  scalarMult(3,[2,7,4],Result).
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%% should yield
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%%    Result  =  [6,21,12]
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scalarMult(_, [], []).
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scalarMult(K, [H|T], R) :-
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	V is K * H, 
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	scalarMult(K, T, [R|V]).
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%% 3. Another fundamental operation on vectors is the dot product. This
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%% operation combines two vectors of the same dimension and yields a
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%% number as a result. The operation is carried out as follows: the
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%% corresponding elements of the two vectors are multiplied, and the
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%% results added. For example, the dot product of [2,5,6] and [3,4,1] is
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%% 6+20+6 , that is, 32 . Write a 3-place predicate dot whose first
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%% argument is a list of integers, whose second argument is a list of
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%% integers of the same length as the first, and whose third argument is
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%% the dot product of the first argument with the second. For example,
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%% the query
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%%    ?-  dot([2,5,6],[3,4,1],Result).
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%% should yield
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%%    Result  =  32
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