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Prolog Programming
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  • Adventure in Prolog (Dennis Merritt)

    This book takes a pragmatic, rather than theoretical, approach to the language and is designed for programmers interested in learning this powerful language, uses the very first interactive computer games to teach the expressive power of Prolog.

  • The Power of Prolog (Markus Triska)

    The goal of this book is to bridge the gap between the great traditional Prolog textbooks of the past and the language as it currently is. It is meant to teach Prolog as a practical programming tool and so it concentrates on using Prolog to solve interesting problems.

  • Learn Prolog Now! (Patrick Blackburn, et al.)

    This book has became one of the most popular introductions to the Prolog programming language, an introduction prized for its clarity and down-to-earth approach. The emphasis in this book is on using Prolog effectively.

  • The Art of Prolog: Advanced Programming Techniques

    This book offers a departure from current books that focus on small programming examples requiring additional instruction in order to extend them to full programming projects. It shows how to design and organize moderate to large Prolog programs.

  • Prolog for Programmers (Feliks Kluznia, et al)

    This book is intended as an introduction to Prolog for people familiar with conventional programming languages. It explains in terms of programming constructs and techniques found in Pascal.

  • Prolog Programming in Depth (Michael A. Covington)

    This book covers the Prolog programming language thoroughly with an emphasis on building practical application software, not just theory. Readers build several types of expert systems, as well as natural language processing software and utilities.

  • Logic, Programming and Prolog, 2nd Edition (Ulf Nilsson, et al)

    This book introduces major new developments in a continually evolving field and includes such topics as concurrency and equational and constraint logic programming. What sets this book apart from others on logic programming is the breadth of its coverage.

  • An Introduction to Logic Programming Through Prolog (J. Spivey)

    This is one of the few texts that combines three essential theses in the study of logic programming: logic, programming, and implementation. The book contains a concise and self-contained account of the logic behind Prolog programming.

  • Prolog Programming: A First Course (Paul Brna)

    The course for which these notes are designed is intended for undergraduate students who have some programming experience and may even have written a few programs in Prolog. The emphasis in this book is on using Prolog effectively.

  • Prolog Experiments in Discrete Math, Logic, and Computability

    This book contains programming experiments that are designed to reinforce the learning of discrete mathematics, logic, and computability. The Prolog programming language is the tool used for the experiments in this book.

  • Prolog Programming for Artificial Intelligence (Ivan Bratko)

    This book is a guide to Prolog and Artificial Intelligence, including key developments in the field, concentrates on the art of using the basic mechanisms of Prolog to solve interesting AI problems.

  • Artificial Intelligence through Prolog (Neil C. Rowe)

    This book presents many concepts in artificial intelligence (AI) and problem-solving systems in terms of the Prolog language. Its stated purpose is to provide an informal, hands-on approach to learning AI.

  • Expert Systems in Prolog (Dennis Merritt)

    For Prolog programmer interested in either building expert systems or experimenting with various expert system techniques. using a step-by-step approach to building systems, explaining the concepts and showing the Prolog code at each stage.

  • AI Algorithms, Data Structures, and Idioms in Prolog, Lisp, and Java

    Illustrateing how to program AI algorithms in Lisp, Prolog, and Java. Topics include: simple production-like system based on logic, logic-based learning, and natural language parsing.

  • Simply Logical: Intelligent Reasoning by Example (Peter Flach)

    This book is an introduction to Prolog programming for artificial intelligence covering both basic and advanced AI material. A unique advantage to this work is the combination of AI, Prolog and Logic.

  • Natural Language Processing for Prolog Programmers

    An examination of natural language processing in Prolog for those who know Prolog but not linguistics, this book enables students to move quickly into writing and working in useful software.

  • Prolog and Natural-Language Analysis (Fernando Pereira, et al)

    A concise and practical introduction to logic programming and the language Prolog both as vehicles for understanding elementary computational linguistics and as tools for implementing the basic components of natural-language-processing systems.

  • Natural Language Processing Techniques in Prolog

    This book introduces the subject through the discussion and development of various computer programs which illustrate some of the basic concepts and techniques.

  • Prolog Techniques (Attila Csenki)

    This book is intended to relieve the difficulty of learning Prolog programming by providing a good collection of programming projects, case studies and exercises of various complexity.

  • Applications of Prolog (Attila Csenki)

    Many interesting hurdles are identified and solved thereby using Prolog. The availability of unification as a pattern matching tool makes Prolog uniquely suitable for solving such problems.

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