English

Semantics and Termination of Simply-Moded Logic Programs with Dynamic Scheduling

Logic in Computer Science 2007-05-23 v1 Programming Languages

Abstract

In logic programming, dynamic scheduling refers to a situation where the selection of the atom in each resolution (computation) step is determined at runtime, as opposed to a fixed selection rule such as the left-to-right one of Prolog. This has applications e.g. in parallel programming. A mechanism to control dynamic scheduling is provided in existing languages in the form of delay declarations. Input-consuming derivations were introduced to describe dynamic scheduling while abstracting from the technical details. In this paper, we first formalise the relationship between delay declarations and input-consuming derivations, showing in many cases a one-to-one correspondence. Then, we define a model-theoretic semantics for input-consuming derivations of simply-moded programs. Finally, for this class of programs, we provide a necessary and sufficient criterion for termination.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cs/0101022,
  title  = {Semantics and Termination of Simply-Moded Logic Programs with Dynamic Scheduling},
  author = {Annalisa Bossi and Sandro Etalle and Sabina Rossi and Jan-Georg Smaus},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cs/0101022},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

25 pages, long version of paper with same title at ESOP 2001