[go: up one dir, main page]

Skip to content

A tool for the translation of First-Order Logic (FOL) theories to Answer Set programs (logic programs)

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

MatthiasNickles/fol2asp

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

30 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

fol2asp

Introduction

fol2asp translates encondings consisting of formulas in First-Order Logic (FOL) syntax (under stable model semantics) into Answer Set Programs (Logic Programs). The input can also comprise answer set rules - these are copied unmodified to the output. Besides supporting the usual FOL syntax, fol2asp can also translate Markov Logic Network (MLN)-style hard (non-probabilistic) rules into ASP syntax.

The resulting answer set program can be grounded and solved using, e.g., Clingo or Lparse/Smodels (depending to the ASP features used).

fol2asp is inspired by F2LP and uses almost the same logic conversion rules (see references below). However, besides running on the Java Virtual Machine (JVM), fol2asp provides better compatibility with recent versions of Gringo/Clingo compared to F2LP 1.3 and several additional features (see under Sect. Usage). Input syntax is similar but not identical (see next section).

References:

  • [1] Joohyung Lee, Ravi Palla (‎2012): "Reformulating the Situation Calculus and the Event Calculus in the General Theory of Stable Models and in Answer Set Programming". In Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research 43, 571-620.
  • [2] Joohyung Lee, Ravi Palla (2009) "System f2lp – Computing Answer Sets of First-Order Formulas". In: Erdem E., Lin F., Schaub T. (Eds) Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Reasoning (LPNMR 2009). Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS), vol 5753. Springer.
  • [3] Pedro Cabalar, David Pearce, Agustin Valverde (‎2005): "Reducing Propositional Theories in Equilibrium Logic to Logic Programs". In Bento C., Cardoso A., Dias G. (eds) Progress in Artificial Intelligence. EPIA 2005. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 3808. Springer.
    (for NNF, rules L1-L5, R1-R5).
    [3] references [4] for some of the transformation rules:
  • [4] Vladimir Lifschitz, Lappoon R. Tang, Hudson Turner (1999): "Nested Expressions in Logic Programs". In Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence (1999) 25: 369.

Installation and call

fol2asp is written in Scala and runs on the JVM (JRE/JDK 8 or higher). A ready-to-run JAR file can be found under Releases.

Executable binaries for Linux, MacOS or Windows can probably be generated using GraalVM, but I haven't tried that yet.

To build from sources, use, e.g., sbt and sbt plugin assembly (just install sbt and enter "sbt assembly" on the commandline), or, e.g., Maven (since there are no dependencies besides the Scala standard library, this should be straightforward).

Run fol2asp like this. The result is written to file example1.lp:

java -jar fol2asp.jar examples/example1.fol > example1.lp

The list of available commandline parameters is shown with --help and in more detail in the following section.

Usage

Command line usage:

java -jar fol2asp.jar [<file1> ... <fileN>] [--mlnrules] [--prefixnp p] [--prefixnv p] [--gringo3] [--retainfol] [--omitcomments] [--version|-v] [--help|-h]

If no input file(s) <file1> ... are specified, input is read from STDIN

--version|-v prints version and license information, then exits

--help|-h prints a help text and exits

--prefixnp p prepends p to newly introduced predicate names

--prefixnv p prepends p to newly introduced variable names

--mlnrules enables support for MLN-style unweighted clause and rule syntax (see below)

--strongexcl changes the meaning of operator ! from default negation to strong negation

--retainfol copies the original FOL formulas to the ouput as comments in front of their translations

--omitcomments omits user-specified comments in the output

--gringo3 increases compatibility of the output with Lparse and older versions of Potassco gringo/clingo. Also, without --gringo3, any #domain declarations will be commented in the output (even though fol2asp can still use them to obtain information about variable bindings).

fol2asp recognizes the following FOL connectives and quantifiers (ordered by precedence, lowest first):

FORALL X,Y,Z,dx(X),dy(Y),dz(Z):f represents universal quantification, where predicates dx/1, dy/1 and dz/1 specify the domains (ranges) of variables X, Y and Z, and f is a subformula.

EXIST X,Y,Z,dx(X),dy(Y),dz(Z):f (existential quantification, arguments analogously to FORALL)

f <-> g biconditional

f <- g converse implication

f -> g implication

f | g disjunction

f & g conjunction

not f default negation

!f negation (default negation by default, or strong negation with switch --strongexcl)

-f strong (classical) negation

Quantifier syntax FORALL X,Y,Z: and EXIST X,Y,Z: where the variables are bound to ranges somewhere else (e.g., using certain atoms, or #domain declarations for older gringo versions) is supported too.

Variable domains need to be finite.

Parentheses can be used to change precedences or to make precedence explicit. All formulas must end with a period mark (full stop), e.g., p(a,9) & FORALL A, number(A): not even(A).

Integers and "strings" are allowed in term positions. Terms have a syntax as expected by common ASP grounders, e.g., foo(fun(a,X),b) is a valid (non-ground) term if the target grounder is gringo/clingo. However, (tuples) are currently not supported in FOL formulas (but in ASP rules).

Comments have the form %... or //... (single line comment) and %*...*% or /*...*/ (multiline).

Any Clingo script (e.g., Python or Lua) needs to be placed at the beginning of the input. Only one script is allowed. The script is simply copied to the output (unchecked).

ASP and FOL syntax should not be mixed within the same formula or rule (though fol2asp does not check that and keeps unrecognized formula parts unmodified in the output).

If switch --mlnrules is provided, formulas can also have the following syntax (in addition to FOL formulas using the syntax above and ASP rules). fol2asp does not require such formulas to end with a period (.) but recall that in MLN, the period is used to indicate infinite weight (hard rule).

p1, p2, ... => q1 v q2 v ...

(MLN-style rule without weight. , or ^ denotes conjunction, v is disjunction (observe that spaces are required around v), the pi and qi are atoms. Any free variables are here considered to be universally quantified ASP variables.)

EXIST X,Y,... p1, p2, ... => q1 v q2 v ...

(as above but with existentially quantified variables X,Y,...)

l1 v l2 v l3 v ...

(MLN-style clause without weight. The li are literals. Use !p for negative literals; note that the meaning of !p is, by default, default negation, can be switched to classical negation using --strongexcl. Observe the required spaces around v.

EXIST X,Y,... l1 v l2 v l3 v ... (as above but with existentially quantified variables X,Y,...)

Note (1) that even in MLN-style formulas the first letter in a variable name must be uppercase and the first letter in a term must be lower case letters, as required by most ASP grounders. The first letter in predicates should be lower case.

Note (2) that using MLN-style syntax for hard rules and clauses does not give these formulas MLN semantics; they just use different symbols for connectives compared to our default syntax. Still, they might make the translation of MLN encodings easier.

Note (3) that MLN-style formulas require that variable domains are specified (as usual in Markov Logic Network programs). You can do this in fol2asp using #domain declarations. fol2asp will generate the correct "inline" bindings (using atoms in rule bodies) from these. If flag --gringo3 is not specified, the #domain declarations do not appear in the resulting logic program (useful with current Clingo/Gringo versions as these do not understand #domain declarations).

Example for MLN-style input:

d(10;20;30;40).  // domain d
#domain d(X;Y).  // "predicate schema". X and Y are variables.    
EXIST X,Y p(X) v !p(Y) v q(Y,X).  // MLN-style hard clause

Symbol prefixes __aux_, __strlit_, _npred_ (fresh predicate) and _NVAR_ (fresh variable) are reserved by default and should not be used in any symbols in the input. However, it is possible to define different prefixes for fresh predicates and variables using console arguments --prefixnp and --prefixnv. fol2asp might use and emit definitions for predicates true/0 and false/0 (truth and falsity).

Observe that the syntax supported by fol2asp is similar but not identical to that used by software F2LP. E.g., precedences of connectives are different (fol2asp uses precedences closer to those usually used with Boolean expressions in programming languages), and in fol2asp the scope of quantifiers always extends to the right as far as possible (e.g., FORALL X: a(X) -> b(X) means FORALL X: (a(X) -> b(X))). There is no special position for <- (it can be used anywhere in a formula where a connective is allowed). Aggregates in FOL formulas are not parsed and treated as black-box atoms (and should be completely avoided within FOL formulas). - is always treated as strong negation. - and ! can extend over arbitrary subformulas (using parentheses, e.g., -(a & not b)).

Observe that any parts of the input which are not recognized are copied to the output unchecked and unmodified (including any unrecognized parts of formulas and terms).

Author contact details

Author: Matthias Nickles

matthiasDOTnicklesATgmxDOTnet

Web: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Matthias_Nickles

Feedback and bug reports are welcome.

fol2asp copyright & license

Copyright (c) 2016-2019 by Matthias Nickles

License: Apache License, Version 2.0

fol2asp is open source research software.