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Programming Techniques

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Programming Techniques t.k.prasad_at_wright.edu http://www.knoesis.org/tkprasad/ cs7120 (Prasad) L26-ProgTech * – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Programming Techniques


1
Programming Techniques
  • t.k.prasad_at_wright.edu
  • http//www.knoesis.org/tkprasad/

2
Generalization/Abstraction
  • Analogy
  • a,b,c ? f(a),f(b),f(c)
  • maplist(_,,).
  • maplist(P,XT,NXNT) -
  • G .. P,X,NX,
  • call(G),
  • maplist(P,T,NT).
  • (G ? p(N,NX))

3
Application
  • transpose(,).
  • transpose(_,) - !.
  • transpose(RRs,CCs) -
  • maplist(first,RRs,C),
  • maplist(rest,RRs,RC),
  • transpose(RC,Cs).
  • first(HT,H).
  • rest(HT,T).
  • / Built-in maplist exists/

4
Enhancing Efficiency
  • Interpreted vs Compiled code (order of magnitude
    improvement observed)
  • Improving data structures and algorithm
  • 8-Queens problem, Heuristic Search, Quicksort,
    etc
  • Tail-recursive optimization
  • Memoization
  • storing partial results / caching intermediate
    results
  • Difference lists
  • DCGs

5
(contd)
  • Prolog implementations that index on the first
    argument of a predicate improve determinism.
  • Cuts and other meta-programming primitives can be
    used to program in new search strategies for
    controlled backtracking.

6
Optimizing Fibonacci Number Computation
  • fib(0,0) - !.
  • fib(1,1) - !.
  • fib(N,F) -
  • N1 is N - 1, N2 is N1 -1, fib(N1,F1),
    fib(N2,F2),
  • F is F1 F2.
  • ?-fib(5,F).
  • Complexity Exponential time algorithm

7
Fibonacci Call Tree with Parameter Value
8
(contd)
  • f(0,F,_,F).
  • f(1,_,F,F).
  • f(N,Fpp,Fp,F) - N gt 2,
  • N1 is N 1, F0 is Fp Fpp,
  • f(N1,Fp,F0,F).
  • fib(N,F) - f(N,0,1,F).
  • ?-fib(5,F).
  • Complexity Linear time algorithm
  • (tail-recursive version)

9
Last call optimization
  • Activation record normally stores a continuation
    and a backtrack point, to be used when the goal
    succeeds or fails respectively.
  • p - q, r.
  • p - s.
  • LCO avoids allocating a new activation record for
    s, but rather reuses one for p.

10
Caching intermediate results
  • Instead of explicitly modifying the code to
    improve performance, XSB uses tabling to store
    intermediate results and avoids recomputing
    earlier goals.
  • Ironically, double-recursive (exponential-time)
    Fibonacci Number definition serves as a benchmark
    for testing efficiency of implementation of
    recursion!

11
Different Lists Motivation
STACK push pop
Array-Impl. O(1) O(1)
Linked-list Impl. O(1) O(1)
QUEUE enqueue dequeue
Circular Buffer or Linked List Impl. (front rear pointer) O(1) O(1)
Linked-List Impl. (front but no rear pointer) O(1) O(n)
12
(contd)
  • In Prolog, pointers implementing list structures
    are not available for inspection/manipulation.
    Hence, complexity of enqueue (resp. dequeue) is
    O(1) and that of dequeue (resp. enqueue) is
    O(n).
  • enqueue(Q,E,EQ).
  • dequeue(E,E).
  • dequeue(_FT,E) - dequeue(FT,E).
  • Difference list is a techqniue to get O(1)
    complexity for both the operations.

13
Difference Lists Details
  • Represent list L as a difference of two lists L1
    and L2
  • E.g., consider L a,b,c and various L1-L2
    combinations given below.

L1 L2
a,b,c
a,b,c,d,e d,e
a,b,cT T
a,b,c,dT dT
14
Benefit
  • L L1 L2
  • Both enqueue and dequeue are O(1) operations
    obtained by cons-ing an element to L1 and L2
    respectively.
  • enqueue(L1-L2, E, EL1 L2).
  • dequeue(L1-L2, E, L1 EL2).
  • E.g.,
  • enqueue(a-, b, b,a ).
  • dequeue(a-, a, aa).

15
Append using Difference Lists
  • append(X-Y, Y-Z, X-Z).
  • Ordinary append complexity O(length of first
    list)
  • Difference list append complexity O(1)

X-Z
X
X-Y
Y
Y
Y-Z
Z
Z
Z
16
(contd)
  • append(X-Y, Y-Z, X-Z).
  • ?-append(a,b,cL-L, 1,2M-M, N).
  • Xa,b,cL
  • Y L
  • Y 1,2M
  • Z M
  • X Z N
  • N a,b,c1,2Z-Z
  • N a,b,c,1,2Z-Z

17
Restriction
  • append(X-Y, Y-Z, X-Z).
  • ?-append(a,b,cd-d, 1,2-, N).
  • Fails because the second lists must be a
    variable. Incomplete data structure is a
    necessity.

18
Interpreter-based Semantics vs Declarative
Semantics
  • IS is an over-specification but may provide an
    efficient implementation.
  • DS specifies correctness criteria and may permit
    further optimization.
  • Overall research goal Characterize classes of
    programs for which the declarative and the
    procedural semantics coincide.

19
Relational Algebra (Operations on Relations)
  • Select, Project, Join, Union, Intersection,
    difference
  • Transitive closure cannot be expressed in terms
    of these operations.
  • A query language is relationally complete if it
    can perform the above operations.

20
Deductive Databases Datalog (Function-free/Fini
te Domain Prolog)
  • Datalog Negation is relationally complete.
  • What effects query evaluation efficiency?
  • Characteristics of data (cyclic vs acyclic)
  • Ordering of rules and body literals
  • Search strategy (top-down vs bottom-up)
  • Tuple-at-a-time vs Set-at-a-time

21
Middle GroundTop-down vs Bottom-up
  • Improve efficiency by caching. (cf. tabling)
  • Remove Incompleteness by loop detection.
  • Focused search.
  • Propagate bindings in the query. (cf. Magic sets)

In general, the efficiency of query evaluation
can be improved by sequencing goals on the basis
of their bindings and dependencies among rule
literals.
22
Heuristics for rearranging rules and body
literals for efficiency
  • Order body literals by decreasing values of
    failure probability
  • Order rules by decreasing values of success
    probability
  • Order body literals to maximize dependencies
    among adjacent literals.
  • Metric for comparison e.g., extent of base
    relation graphs inspected

23
Backtracking
  • Chronological
  • Dependency directed
  • focus on the reason for backtracking
  • ans(X,Y) - p(X), q(Y), r(X).
  • p(1). p(2). p(3).
  • q(1). q(2). q(3).
  • r(3).

24
Data Dependency Graph
p(X), r(X),
ans(X,Y) -
q(Y),
If r(X) fails, then backtrack to p(X) rather
than q(Y).
25
Indexing
  • Prolog indexes on
  • predicate symbol and arity
  • principal functor of first argument (cf. constant
    -gt hash)
  • Randomly accessed rule groups
  • p(a) -
  • p(22) -
  • p(f(X)) -
  • p() - , p(a) - ,

26
  • Robert Kowalski
  • Algorithm Logic Control
  • Niklaus Wirth
  • Programs Data Structures Algorithms
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