[comp.lang.prolog] PROLOG DIGEST V6 #45

restivo@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU (Chuck Restivo) (07/12/88)

Date: Monday, 10 July 1988 02:53-PST
From: Chuck Restivo (The Moderator) <PROLOG-REQUEST@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU>
Reply-to: PROLOG@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU>
US-Mail: P.O. Box 4584, Stanford CA  94305
Subject: PROLOG Digest   V6 #45
To: PROLOG@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU


PROLOG Digest           Monday, 11 July 1988      Volume 6 : Issue 45

Today's Topics:
                                              Query - Clue,
                        Announcement - Poplog Conference
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Date: 1 Jul 88 07:11:00 EDT
From: "CUGINI, JOHN" <cugini@ecf.icst.nbs.gov>
Subject: Free code for Clue ?

Didn't someone somewhere once submit a Prolog Clue-player?
  (Prof. Pum did it with a Rope in the Ballroom...)
 Whether or not he did, does anyone have such code they'd
like to share?  I started trying to do this and I figured
it would take a while, not because of the deductive part of
the game, but because of the board moves (which room to aim
for next ?).

Thank you.

-- John Cugini  

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Date: 1 Jul 88 14:30:12 GMT
From: mcvax!ukc!reading!onion!henry!jadwa@uunet.uu.net  (James Anderson)
Subject: POPLOG Conference

You are probably aware of POPLOG. It is a software environment
running on many UNIX and VMS machines. If you would like to see
POPLOG in action then come to the POPLOG Users' Forum conference
at Reading University, Berkshire, England this July 19 and 20.
Day attendance costs ten pounds, accommodation twenty pounds and
an evening "banquet" ten pounds. So the conference is a very cost
effective way of getting information about a very effective
software environment. If you would like more details then please
mail me.

Here are some of the things that POPLOG provides.

    1) Full on-line documentation. Includes teaching material,
       help files, reference files and system documentation. The
       teaching material covers basic programming techniques and
       AI subjects such as linguistics and vision.

    2) The incrementally compiled languages: POP11, PROLOG and
       COMMON LISP.  Object oriented programming is also
       supported. ML comes as an optional extra.

    3) A visual editor which is:
       a) Sensitive to the languages' syntax, to aid editing.
       b) Interfaced to the incremental compilers and
          de-bugging tools, to aid program development.
       c) Interfaced to the UNIX/VMS command line interpreters to
          allow system administration from within the POPLOG
          environment.

    4) A generic, networked window interface which is supported
       by the host 

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End of PROLOG Digest