Logic Programming: Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Logic Programming June 21-24, 1993, Budapest, Hungary
David S. Warren is Professor of Computer Science at the State University of New York, Stony Brook.
The Tenth International Conference on Logic Programming, sponsored by the Association for Logic Programming, is a major forum for presentations of research, applications, and implementations in this important area of computer science. Logic programming is one of the most promising steps toward declarative programming and forms the theoretical basis of the programming language Prolog and it svarious extensions. Logic programming is also fundamental to work in artificial intelligence, where it has been used for nonmonotonic and commonsense reasoning, expert systems implementation, deductive databases, and applications such as computer-aided manufacturing.
Topics Theory and Foundations • Programming Methodologies and Tools • Meta and Higher-order Programming • Parallelism • Concurrency • Deductive Databases • Implementations and Architectures • Applications • Artificial Intelligence • Constraints • Partial Deduction • Bottom-Up Evaluation • Compilation Techniques
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Table of Contents
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Invited Talks
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Higher-Order Extensions to Prolog
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Freeness
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Parallel Implementations 1
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Actions
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Parallel Implementations 2
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Fixpoints
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Implementation
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Program Synthesis
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Constraint Solving
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Semantics 1
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Constraints
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Semantics 2
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Compilation
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Databases
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Poster Abstracts
- Open Access
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