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TPLP pearls submission guidelines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 April 2001

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Abstract

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Errors, like straws, upon the surface flow; He who would search for pearls must dive below.

– John Dryden

I am honoured to be the editor of the Logic Programming Pearls section of the journal Theory and Practice of Logic Programming. Below are some brief guidelines for submission of papers to this section. Note that submissions of pearls in logic programming languages other than Prolog are welcome. Functional programming language pearls, although similar in spirit, are more appropriately submitted to another journal such as the Journal of Functional Programming.

A programming pearl is a short piece of self-contained code of outstanding quality. Ideally it should be clearly correct, elegant, concise, efficient, etc., though in some cases a (small) subset of these may not apply. It may be a useful application or may primarily be an example of a useful programming technique. Portability is not so important in this context, but if it can be achieved without sacrificing other qualities, so much the better.

Accompanying text explains the code and its qualities. These may be exposed by describing how a programmer could derive the code. Ideally, a logic programming pearl should also showcase the logic programming paradigm, for example, declarative semantics, nondeterminism, logic variables, definite clause grammars, meta programming, and so forth.

The following classification may help clarify what is considered to be a logic programming pearl.

Type
Addendum
Copyright
© 2001 Cambridge University Press