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Prolog

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-14 3:20

We've been using Prolog in one of my classes this semester.  It's pretty neat!

So far, our assignments have been writing evaluators and a super-shitty compiler for Little Languages represented as Prolog lists -- essentially S-expressions.

It's amazing how much one can do with three or four lines of code!

Anyhow, what do you guys think of /b/rolog?

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 6:55

>>40
Fuck humanity and fuck you.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 8:03

>>39
Sounds like Mentifex.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 8:09

>>39
I want an AI that would hack some military and fire a couple nuclear weapons.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 8:10

>>42
So you've finally figured it out. Now that you know, you cannot be allowed to spread this knowledge.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 9:19

>>44
NOW THAT YOU KNOW, YOU CANNOT BE ALLOWED TO SPREAD MY ASSCHEEKS

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 9:36

>>42,44
OH MY FUCKING GOD

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 9:49

Artificial Intelligence has already been achieved, they're called humans.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 9:52

http://www.nothingisreal.com/mentifex_faq.html
In a nutshell, Murray believes that the mind contains at its foundation a two-dimensional matrix where the columns represent senses (smell, touch, taste, etc.) and the rows represent time. As time passes, the brain stores the sensory input it receives in successive rows of this matrix. Thus each row constitutes the aggregate sensory memory at a particular moment in time. Running through each time-slice row of the matrix, across the sensory columns, is an “associative tag” leading to the core of the mind. The core is like a telephone switchboard which joins the sensory input matrix to a motor output matrix, where each row of the latter represents some combination of motor responses necessary to carry out a given action. Thus any given row of the sensory column is a stimulus which is linked by the core to a particular response.

So basically, Murray invented a Relational Database? Why so much fuzz about it?

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 10:01

My opinion: Arthur T. Murray is a talented and aspiring person, who, given a good education and environment, could had became a great scientist or a sci-fi artist. But all university positions are already taken by Jews and no goy is allowed to MIT, so Murray was left behind and became a crank. Thank you, Jews.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 11:03

>>49
Arthur T. Murray is a talented and aspiring person
I love Javashit and PHP too!

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 11:42

>>50
he loves forth and js though

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 16:05

>>49
that's what you tell yourself too, ain't it?

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-15 16:23

>>52
Yes. Jews put down many goys.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 1:47

It's very different from other languages I've learned, but I'm really starting to see its power as I get more familiar with it.

Does a Smug Prolog Froggie rank above a Lisp Weenie?

Name: Alexander Dubček 2013-03-18 1:48

/prague/ spring

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 3:04

>>54
It depends on how well they are able to apply lisp and prolog. A bilingual lisper-prologer will outrank both, with the test being writing a prolog in lisp and writing a non deterministic lisp evaluator in prolog.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 3:09

>>56

With extra credit if the Lisp-in-Prolog can run the Prolog-in-Lisp and vice versa!

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 3:16

>>57
A happy marriage.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 4:00

>>57
Oh god, that would be so slow.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 4:47

>>59 It's a good optimizing compiler test.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 7:01

>>56
You can write deterministic code in Prolog.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-18 19:02

>>61
Too bad it's shit for Kruegers.

Krueger is an Ashkenazi JEWish surname.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-20 1:02

I feel like I'm the only person who ``got'' Prolog before ``getting'' functional programming.

Sure, I've used Lisp before, but I've just used it procedurally with recursion in stead of loops.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-20 11:02

>>63
I “got” Prolog first too, but I stuck with Lisp.

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