Given the following facts in a database:
foo(a, 3).
foo(b, 2).
foo(c, 4).
foo(d, 3).
foo(e, 2).
foo(f, 6).
foo(g, 3).
foo(h, 2).
I want to collect all first arguments that have the smallest second argument, plus the value of the second argument. First try:
find_min_1(Min, As) :-
setof(B-A, foo(A, B), [Min-_|_]),
findall(A, foo(A, Min), As).
?- find_min_1(Min, As).
Min = 2,
As = [b, e, h].
Instead of setof/3
, I could use aggregate/3
:
find_min_2(Min, As) :-
aggregate(min(B), A^foo(A, B), Min),
findall(A, foo(A, Min), As).
?- find_min_2(Min, As).
Min = 2,
As = [b, e, h].
NB
This only gives the same results if I am looking for the minimum of a number. If an arithmetic expression in involved, the results might be different. If a non-number is involved, aggregate(min(...), ...)
will throw an error!
Or, instead, I can use the full key-sorted list:
find_min_3(Min, As) :-
setof(B-A, foo(A, B), [Min-First|Rest]),
min_prefix([Min-First|Rest], Min, As).
min_prefix([Min-First|Rest], Min, [First|As]) :-
!,
min_prefix(Rest, Min, As).
min_prefix(_, _, []).
?- find_min_3(Min, As).
Min = 2,
As = [b, e, h].
Finally, to the question(s):
Can I do this directly with library(aggregate)? It feels like it should be possible....
Or is there a predicate like std::partition_point
from the C++ standard library?
Or is there some easier way to do this?
EDIT:
To be more descriptive. Say there was a (library) predicate partition_point/4
:
partition_point(Pred_1, List, Before, After) :-
partition_point_1(List, Pred_1, Before, After).
partition_point_1([], _, [], []).
partition_point_1([H|T], Pred_1, Before, After) :-
( call(Pred_1, H)
-> Before = [H|B],
partition_point_1(T, Pred_1, B, After)
; Before = [],
After = [H|T]
).
(I don't like the name but we can live with it for now)
Then:
find_min_4(Min, As) :-
setof(B-A, foo(A, B), [Min-X|Rest]),
partition_point(is_min(Min), [Min-X|Rest], Min_pairs, _),
pairs_values(Min_pairs, As).
is_min(Min, Min-_).
?- find_min_4(Min, As).
Min = 2,
As = [b, e, h].
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