Book Image

Artificial Intelligence with Python - Second Edition

By : Alberto Artasanchez, Prateek Joshi
Book Image

Artificial Intelligence with Python - Second Edition

By: Alberto Artasanchez, Prateek Joshi

Overview of this book

Artificial Intelligence with Python, Second Edition is an updated and expanded version of the bestselling guide to artificial intelligence using the latest version of Python 3.x. Not only does it provide you an introduction to artificial intelligence, this new edition goes further by giving you the tools you need to explore the amazing world of intelligent apps and create your own applications. This edition also includes seven new chapters on more advanced concepts of Artificial Intelligence, including fundamental use cases of AI; machine learning data pipelines; feature selection and feature engineering; AI on the cloud; the basics of chatbots; RNNs and DL models; and AI and Big Data. Finally, this new edition explores various real-world scenarios and teaches you how to apply relevant AI algorithms to a wide swath of problems, starting with the most basic AI concepts and progressively building from there to solve more difficult challenges so that by the end, you will have gained a solid understanding of, and when best to use, these many artificial intelligence techniques.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
24
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25
Index

Understanding the building blocks of logic programming

In programming object-oriented or imperative paradigms, a variable always needs to be defined. In logic programming, things work a bit differently. An uninstantiated argument can be passed to a function and the interpreter will instantiate these variables by looking at the facts defined by the user. This is a powerful way of approaching the variable matching problem. The process of matching variables with different items is called unification. This is one of the ways logic programming is different. Relations can also be specified in logic programming. Relations are defined by means of clauses called facts and rules.

Facts are just statements that are truths about the program and the data. The syntax is straightforward. For example, Donald is Allan's son is a fact, whereas Who is Allan's son? is not be a fact. Every logic program needs facts so that it can achieve the given goal based on them.

Rules are...