Using SWISH to realise interactive web based tutorials for logic based languages

August 24, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Theory and Practice of Logic Programming

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Authors Jan Wielemaker, Fabrizio Riguzzi, Bob Kowalski, TorbjΓΆrn Lager, Fariba Sadri, Miguel Calejo arXiv ID 1808.08042 Category cs.PL: Programming Languages Citations 3 Venue Theory and Practice of Logic Programming Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Programming environments have evolved from purely text based to using graphical user interfaces, and now we see a move towards web based interfaces, such as Jupyter. Web based interfaces allow for the creation of interactive documents that consist of text and programs, as well as their output. The output can be rendered using web technology as, e.g., text, tables, charts or graphs. This approach is particularly suitable for capturing data analysis workflows and creating interactive educational material. This article describes SWISH, a web front-end for Prolog that consists of a web server implemented in SWI-Prolog and a client web application written in JavaScript. SWISH provides a web server where multiple users can manipulate and run the same material, and it can be adapted to support Prolog extensions. In this paper we describe the architecture of SWISH, and describe two case studies of extensions of Prolog, namely Probabilistic Logic Programming (PLP) and Logic Production System (LPS), which have used SWISH to provide tutorial sites.
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