Prolog is a simple but powerful programming language developed at the University of Marseille, as a practical tool for programming in logic. From a user's point of view the major attraction of the language is ease of programming. Clear, readable, concise programs can be written quickly with few errors.
SICStus Prolog is owned and maintained by the Swedish Institute of Computer Science. Parts of the system were developed by the project "Industrialization of SICStus Prolog" in collaboration with Ericsson Telecom AB, NobelTech Systems AB, Infologics AB and Televerket.
in synch SICStus Prolog follows the mainstream Prolog tradition in
terms of syntax and built-in predicates. As of release
3.8, SICStus Prolog provides two execution modes: the iso
mode,
which is fully compliant with the International Standard ISO/IEC
13211-1 (PROLOG: Part 1--General Core)
(http://webstore.ansi.org/ansidocstore/product.asp?sku=INCITS%2FISO%2FIEC+13211%2D1%2D1995);
and the sicstus
mode,
which is largely compatible with, e.g., C-Prolog and Quintus Prolog,
supports code written in earlier versions of SICStus Prolog.
The main source of information about SICStus Prolog is the WWW-site at
http://www.sics.se/sicstus/.
and in particular the User's Manual, Release Notes, and this FAQ list, at
http://www.sics.se/isl/sicstuswww/site/documentation.html
SICStus runs under most UNIX dialects and under Windows 98/NT/2000. For a current list of supported platforms, see the release notes.
library(tcltk)
you need a Tcl/Tk installation on
your machine, see the release notes for information about what Tcl/Tk
version you need and where you can get it.
library(jasper)
you need a JNI compatible Java
installation. See the release notes for supported versions and where you
can get it.
library(bdb)
you need a Berkeley DB. See the
release notes for supported versions and where you gan get it.
SICStus is a commercial product and licensing information can be found on the WWW-site (http://www.sics.se/sicstus/). Free evaluation licenses are available.
Upon completed license agreement, you will receive a mail containing download instructions including confidential passwords and encryption keys. Be sure to read the Release Notes before installation.
If you are a university student, your department may have acquired the right to sub-license SICStus to its students. If that is the case, your department should provide to you download instructions and license codes for the relevant distributions. Your professor should know.
If you think you've discovered a bug or if you have another problem, first read this FAQ list, the release notes and the list of known bugs, at the Don't Panic page page at http://www.sics.se/sicstus/. If these do not address your problem, submit a bug report by filling in the form:
http://www.sics.se/sicstus/bugreport/bugreport.html.
If you are using an academic license, for example if you are a student, then you should primarily consult with the maintenance contact at your site.