This library provides commonly accepted basic predicates for list manipulation in the Prolog community. Some additional list manipulations are built-in. See e.g., memberchk/2, length/2.
The implementation of this library is copied from many places. These include: "The Craft of Prolog", the DEC-10 Prolog library (LISTRO.PL) and the YAP lists library. Some predicates are reimplemented based on their specification by Quintus and SICStus.
member(X, [One]).
ListOfLists | must be a list of possibly partial lists |
append(Part, _, Whole)
.?- select(b, [a,b,c,b], 2, X). X = [a, 2, c, b] ; X = [a, b, c, 2] ; false.
\+ Elem \= H
, which implies that Elem is
not changed.
?- nth0(I, [a,b,c], E, R). I = 0, E = a, R = [b, c] ; I = 1, E = b, R = [a, c] ; I = 2, E = c, R = [a, b] ; false.
?- nth0(1, L, a1, [a,b]). L = [a, a1, b].
semidet
if List is a list and multi
if List is a partial list.
proper_length(List, Length) :- is_list(List), length(List, Length).
If both Xs and Ys are provided and both lists
have equal length the order is |
Xs|
^
2.
Simply testing whether Xs is a permutation of Ys
can be achieved in order log(|
Xs|
)
using msort/2 as
illustrated below with the semidet
predicate is_permutation/2:
is_permutation(Xs, Ys) :- msort(Xs, Sorted), msort(Ys, Sorted).
The example below illustrates that Xs and Ys being proper lists is not a sufficient condition to use the above replacement.
?- permutation([1,2], [X,Y]). X = 1, Y = 2 ; X = 2, Y = 1 ; false.
[]
is distinct from
'[]'.
Ending up needing flatten/3 often indicates, like append/3 for appending two lists, a bad design. Efficient code that generates lists from generated small lists must use difference lists, often possible through grammar rules for optimal readability.
log(N)
and the
predicate may cause a resource-error. There are no other error
conditions.==
E2 holds. The complexity
of the implementation is N*log(N)
.
|
Set1|
*|
Set2|
|
Set1|
*|
Set2|
|
SubSet|
*|
Set|
.
|
Delete|
*|
Set|
.