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* [[cu-Prolog]] - Open Source - Discontinued
* [[cu-Prolog]] - Open Source - Discontinued
* [[LPA Prolog]] - Commercial - Current
* [[LPA Prolog]] - Commercial - Current
*[[PDC Prolog]]- Commercial - Discontinued
* [[Micro Prolog]]- Commercial - Discontinued
*[[Quintus Prolog]] - Commercial - Discontinued
* [[MR Prolog]]- Commercial - Discontinued
*[[SICStus Prolog]] - Commercial - Discontinued
* [[PDC Prolog]]- Commercial - Discontinued
*[[Visual Prolog|Turbo Prolog]] - Commercial - Discontinued
* [[Prolog II]]- Commercial - Discontinued
* [[Prolog V]]- Commercial - Discontinued
* [[Prolog-86+]]- Commercial - Discontinued
* [[Quintus Prolog]] - Commercial - Discontinued
* [[SICStus Prolog]] - Commercial - Discontinued
* [[Visual Prolog|Turbo Prolog]] - Commercial - Discontinued
* [[VML Prolog]]- Commercial - Discontinued


==A list of Prolog implementations that run under WinOS/2==
==A list of Prolog implementations that run under WinOS/2==

Revision as of 12:07, 3 January 2015

Declarative logic programming language developed in France in the latter half of the 1960's and early 70, name is a shortening of "PROgrammation en LOGique" or "Programming in Logic". Unique syntax, derivatives include primarily constraint logic programming languages such as Prolog IV and ECLiPSE but also hybrids such as the strongly typed Mercury and Visual Prolog and even more alien systems such as Erlang.

A list of OS/2 implementations of Prolog

Libraries and bindings

A list of DOS implementations of Prolog

A list of Prolog implementations that run under WinOS/2

A list of Prolog implementations that run under Java

A list of Prolog implementations in JavaScript

Publications

Local articles

Tutorials and other learning material

Links

USENET

Standards

Prolog history

Invented in Marseilles, France in 1972 by Alain Colmerauer and Philippe Rousse, the system is a descendant of a natural language machine translation system called Q-systems that Colmerauer started developing in 1968, but prior and parallel to that he alongside Rousse and others connected to the birth of Prolog such as Jean Trudel and Robert Pasero had participated in the "Traduction Automatique de l’Université de Montréal" project in Canada.