AbstractThree semantics have been proposed as the most promising candidates for a declarative interpretation for logic programs and pure Prolog programs: the least Herbrand model, the least term model, i.e., the C-semantics, and the I-semantics. Previous results show that a strictly increasing information ordering between these semantics exists for the class of all programs. In particular, the I-semantics allows us to model the computed answer substitutions, which is not the case for the other two.We study here the relationship between these three semantics for specific classes of programs. We show that for a large class of programs (which is Turing complete), these three semantics are isomorphic. As a consequence, given a query, we can ext...
In this paper, we present an account of classical Logic Programming fixed-point semantics in terms o...
We introduce model-theoretic semantics [6] for Higher-Order Horn logic programming language. One adv...
AbstractThree extensions of the standard Prolog fixpoint semantics are presented (called sat, strong...
AbstractThree semantics have been proposed as the most promising candidates for a declarative interp...
The paper defines a new declarative semantics for logic programs, which is based on interpretations ...
The coincidence of the declarative and procedural interpretations of logic programs does not apply t...
AbstractThe paper defines a new declarative semantics for logic programs, which is based on interpre...
AbstractThe coincidence of the declarative and procedural interpretations of logic programs does not...
AbstractIn this paper, we investigate the decidability problem of logic program semantics and observ...
AbstractThis paper shows that Tamaki-Sato's unfold/fold transformation of Prolog programs preserves ...
In this paper, we investigate the decidability problem of logic program semantics and observables, f...
AbstractSome transformation operations for logic programs, basic for partial deduction, program spec...
AbstractThis paper is a general overview of an approach to the semantics of logic programs whose aim...
AbstractThe development of logic programs sometimes takes the following course. We begin with an int...
AbstractIn this paper we define a new notion or truth on Herbrand interpretations extended with vari...
In this paper, we present an account of classical Logic Programming fixed-point semantics in terms o...
We introduce model-theoretic semantics [6] for Higher-Order Horn logic programming language. One adv...
AbstractThree extensions of the standard Prolog fixpoint semantics are presented (called sat, strong...
AbstractThree semantics have been proposed as the most promising candidates for a declarative interp...
The paper defines a new declarative semantics for logic programs, which is based on interpretations ...
The coincidence of the declarative and procedural interpretations of logic programs does not apply t...
AbstractThe paper defines a new declarative semantics for logic programs, which is based on interpre...
AbstractThe coincidence of the declarative and procedural interpretations of logic programs does not...
AbstractIn this paper, we investigate the decidability problem of logic program semantics and observ...
AbstractThis paper shows that Tamaki-Sato's unfold/fold transformation of Prolog programs preserves ...
In this paper, we investigate the decidability problem of logic program semantics and observables, f...
AbstractSome transformation operations for logic programs, basic for partial deduction, program spec...
AbstractThis paper is a general overview of an approach to the semantics of logic programs whose aim...
AbstractThe development of logic programs sometimes takes the following course. We begin with an int...
AbstractIn this paper we define a new notion or truth on Herbrand interpretations extended with vari...
In this paper, we present an account of classical Logic Programming fixed-point semantics in terms o...
We introduce model-theoretic semantics [6] for Higher-Order Horn logic programming language. One adv...
AbstractThree extensions of the standard Prolog fixpoint semantics are presented (called sat, strong...