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Language peer sets for Goedel: United Kingdom↑ United Kingdom/1994↑ Designed 1994 ↑ 1990s languages ↑ Fifth generation↑ Post-Cold War↑ Goedel(ID:1762/goe001)alternate simple viewCountry: United Kingdom Designed 1994 Published: 1994 Declarative language for AI, based on many-sorted logic. Strongly typed, polymorphic, declarative, with a module system. Supports bignums and sets. from CMU AI gloss: "GOEDEL is intended to be a declarative successor to Prolog. The main design aim of Goedel is to have functionality and expressiveness similar to Prolog, but to have greatly improved declarative semantics compared with Prolog. This improved declarative semantics has substantial benefits for program construction, compilation, verification, debugging, analysis, transformation, and so on. Considerable emphasis is placed on Goedel's meta-logical facilities, since this is where Prolog is most deficient. In particular, Goedel has declarative replacements for Prolog's var, nonvar, assert, and retract. Goedel is a strongly typed language, its type system being based on many-sorted logic with parametric polymorphism. Goedel's features include a module system, support for infinite precision integers, infinite precision rationals, and floating-point numbers, and support for processing of finite sets. It can solve constraints over finite domains of integers and also linear rational constraints. It supports processing of finite sets. It also has a flexible computation rule and a pruning operator which generalizes the commit of the concurrent logic programming languages. The release includes the Goedel system, the SAGE partial evaluator for Godel, a user manual, and 50 example programs. " Structures: Related languages
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