I wanted to write evaluating predicate in Prolog for arithmetics and I found this:
eval(A+B,CV):-eval(A,AV),eval(B,BV),CV is AV+BV.
eval(A-B,CV):-eval(A,AV),eval(B,BV),CV is AV-BV.
eval(A*B,CV):-eval(A,AV),eval(B,BV),CV is AV*BV.
eval(Num,Num):-number(Num).
Which is great but not very DRY.
I've also found this:
:- op(100,fy,neg), op(200,yfx,and), op(300,yfx,or).
positive(Formula) :-
atom(Formula).
positive(Formula) :-
Formula =.. [_,Left,Right],
positive(Left),
positive(Right).
?- positive((p or q) and (q or r)).
Yes
?- positive(p and (neg q or r)).
No
Operator is here matched with _ and arguments are matched with Left and Right.
So I came up with this:
eval(Formula, Value) :-
Formula =.. [Op, L, R], Value is Op(L,R).
It would be DRY as hell if only it worked but it gives Syntax error: Operator expected
instead.
Is there a way in Prolog to apply operator to arguments in such a case?
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