Logtalk
Paradigm | Logic programming, object-oriented programming, prototype-based programming |
---|---|
Designed by | Paulo Moura |
First appeared | 1998 |
Stable release | 3.66.0
/ 30 May 2023 |
OS | Cross-platform |
License | Artistic License 2.0 (2.x) / Apache License 2.0 (3.01.x) |
Website | logtalk |
Influenced by | |
Prolog, Smalltalk, Objective-C |
Logtalk is an object-oriented logic programming language that extends and leverages the Prolog language with a feature set suitable for programming in the large.[1] It provides support for encapsulation and data hiding, separation of concerns and enhanced code reuse.[1] Logtalk uses standard Prolog syntax with the addition of a few operators and directives.
The Logtalk language implementation is distributed under an open source license and can run using a Prolog implementation (compliant with official and de facto standards)[1] as the back-end compiler.
Features
[edit]Logtalk aims to bring together the advantages of object-oriented programming and logic programming.[1] Object-orientation emphasizes developing discrete, reusable units of software, while logic programming emphasizes representing the knowledge of each object in a declarative way.
As an object-oriented programming language, Logtalk's major features include support for both classes (with optional metaclasses) and prototypes, parametric objects,[2] protocols (interfaces), categories (components, aspects, hot patching), multiple inheritance, public/protected/private inheritance, event-driven programming, high-level multi-threading programming,[3] reflection, and automatic generation of documentation.
For Prolog programmers, Logtalk provides wide portability, featuring predicate namespaces (supporting both static and dynamic objects), public/protected/private object predicates, coinductive predicates, separation between interface and implementation, simple and intuitive meta-predicate semantics, lambda expressions, definite clause grammars, term-expansion mechanism, and conditional compilation. It also provides a module system based on de facto standard core module functionality (internally, modules are compiled as prototypes).
Examples
[edit]Logtalk's syntax is based on Prolog:
?- write('Hello world'), nl.
Hello world
true.
Defining an object:
:- object(my_first_object).
:- initialization((write('Hello world'), nl)).
:- public(p1/0).
p1 :- write('This is a public predicate'), nl.
:- private(p2/0).
p2 :- write('This is a private predicate'), nl.
:- end_object.
Using the object, assuming is saved in a my_first_object.lgt file:
?- logtalk_load(my_first_object).
Hello world
true.
?- my_first_object::p1.
This is a public predicate
true.
Trying to access the private predicate gives an error:
?- my_first_object::p2.
ERROR: error(permission_error(access, private_predicate, p2), my_first_object::p2, user)
Anonymous functions
[edit]Logtalk uses the following syntax for anonymous predicates (lambda expressions):
{FreeVar1, FreeVar2, ...}/[LambdaParameter1, LambdaParameter2, ...]>>Goal
A simple example with no free variables and using a list mapping predicate is:
| ?- meta::map([X,Y]>>(Y is 2*X), [1,2,3], Ys).
Ys = [2,4,6]
yes
Currying is also supported. The above example can be written as:
| ?- meta::map([X]>>([Y]>>(Y is 2*X)), [1,2,3], Ys).
Ys = [2,4,6]
yes
Prolog back-end compatibility
[edit]Supported back-end Prolog compilers include B-Prolog, Ciao Prolog, CxProlog, ECLiPSe, GNU Prolog, JIProlog, Quintus Prolog, Scryer Prolog, SICStus Prolog, SWI-Prolog, Tau Prolog, Trealla Prolog, XSB, and YAP.[4] Logtalk allows use of back-end Prolog compiler libraries from within object and categories.
Developer tools
[edit]Logtalk features on-line help, a documenting tool (that can generate PDF and HTML files), an entity diagram generator tool, a built-in debugger (based on an extended version of the traditional Procedure Box model found on most Prolog compilers), a unit test framework with code coverage analysis, and is also compatible with selected back-end Prolog profilers and graphical tracers.[5]
Applications
[edit]Logtalk has been used to process STEP data models used to exchange product manufacturing information.[6] It has also been used to implement a reasoning system that allows preference reasoning and constraint solving.[7]
See also
[edit]- Mercury (programming language)
- Oz (programming language)
- Prolog++
- Visual Prolog
- Comparison of Prolog implementations
- Prolog syntax and semantics
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Paulo Moura (2003). Logtalk: Design of an Object-Oriented Logic Programming Language. PhD thesis. Universidade da Beira Interior
- ^ Moura, Paulo (2011). Programming Patterns for Logtalk Parametric Objects. Applications of Declarative Programming and Knowledge Management. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 6547. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-20589-7_4. ISBN 978-3-642-20588-0.
- ^ Practical Aspects of Declarative Languages. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 4902. 2008. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-77442-6. ISBN 978-3-540-77441-9.
- ^ "Logtalk compatibility". Logtalk.org. 2016-10-10. Retrieved 2021-07-06.
- ^ "Developer Tools – LogtalkDotOrg/logtalk3 Wiki – GitHub". Github.com. 2013-02-12. Retrieved 2013-08-19.
- ^ Logic Programming. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 4079. 2006. doi:10.1007/11799573. ISBN 978-3-540-36635-5.
- ^ Victor Noël; Antonis Kakas (2009). Gorgias-C: Extending Argumentation with Constraint Solving (PDF). Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Reasoning. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 5753. pp. 535–541.
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Logtalking blog
- From Plain Prolog to Logtalk Objects: Effective Code Encapsulation and Reuse (Invited Talk). Paulo Moura. Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Logic Programming (ICLP), July 2009. LNCS 5649. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg". (Slides)