FS-rules provide a powerful monotonic extension for Horn clauses that supports monotonic aggregates in recursion by reasoning on the multiplicity of occurrences satisfying existential goals. The least fixpoint semantics, and its equivalent least model semantics, hold for logic programs with FS-rules; moreover, generalized notions of stratification and stable models are easily derived when negated goals are allowed. Finally, the generalization of techniques such as seminaive fixpoint and magic sets, make possible the efficient implementation of DatalogFS, i.e., Datalog with rules with Frequency Support (FS-rules) and stratified negation. A large number of applications that could not be supported efficiently, or could not be expressed at all ...
International audienceAbstract In a previous paper, we have shown that clause sets belonging to the ...
This paper summarizes results on a recently introduced family of Datalog-based languages, called Dat...
Motivated by applications in declarative data analysis, we study DatalogZ-an extension of Datalog wi...
FS-rules provide a powerful monotonic extension for Horn clauses that supports monotonic aggregates ...
Supporting aggregates in recursive logic rules represents a very important problem for Datalog. To s...
Abstract Supporting aggregates in recursive logic rules represents a very important problem for Data...
We define a higher-order extension of Datalog based on the Horn fragment of higher-order logic intr...
AbstractIn this paper a new class of Datalog programs with negation called subsumption-stratified Da...
Limit Datalog is a fragment of Datalogℤ—the extension of Datalog with arithmetic functions over the ...
We present an extension of Horn-clause logic which can hypothetically add and delete tuples from a d...
Datalog may be considered either an unusually powerful query language or a carefully limited logic p...
AbstractWe present an extension of Horn-clause logic which can hypothetically add and delete tuples ...
There has recently been an increasing interest in declarative data analysis, where analytic tasks ar...
AbstractThis paper presents hornlog, a general Horn-clause proof procedure that can be used to inter...
We extend the Datalog engine VLog to develop a column-oriented implementation of the skolem and the ...
International audienceAbstract In a previous paper, we have shown that clause sets belonging to the ...
This paper summarizes results on a recently introduced family of Datalog-based languages, called Dat...
Motivated by applications in declarative data analysis, we study DatalogZ-an extension of Datalog wi...
FS-rules provide a powerful monotonic extension for Horn clauses that supports monotonic aggregates ...
Supporting aggregates in recursive logic rules represents a very important problem for Datalog. To s...
Abstract Supporting aggregates in recursive logic rules represents a very important problem for Data...
We define a higher-order extension of Datalog based on the Horn fragment of higher-order logic intr...
AbstractIn this paper a new class of Datalog programs with negation called subsumption-stratified Da...
Limit Datalog is a fragment of Datalogℤ—the extension of Datalog with arithmetic functions over the ...
We present an extension of Horn-clause logic which can hypothetically add and delete tuples from a d...
Datalog may be considered either an unusually powerful query language or a carefully limited logic p...
AbstractWe present an extension of Horn-clause logic which can hypothetically add and delete tuples ...
There has recently been an increasing interest in declarative data analysis, where analytic tasks ar...
AbstractThis paper presents hornlog, a general Horn-clause proof procedure that can be used to inter...
We extend the Datalog engine VLog to develop a column-oriented implementation of the skolem and the ...
International audienceAbstract In a previous paper, we have shown that clause sets belonging to the ...
This paper summarizes results on a recently introduced family of Datalog-based languages, called Dat...
Motivated by applications in declarative data analysis, we study DatalogZ-an extension of Datalog wi...