You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Thanks for the amazing resource! It's greatly apreciated, and I'm learning a lot. One thing that is lacking is a concrete set of exercises that follow the content. Any recommendations would be highly regarded. There are occasional suggestions to improve some predicate as an exercise, but I was usually blocked immediately by lack of knowledge.
I've started on 99 prolog problems, which are very useful, but the problems do show their age somewhat and I recognise that these are not in the same spirit as the Power of Prolog site. Although, maybe improving those exercises could also be seen as an exercise. :)
[EDIT]: PS, this is from the perspective of an absolute beginner. Also, I'm only half way through the book so these comments largely apply to the early material where beginner-friendly exercises would be a great asset.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Thanks for the amazing resource! It's greatly apreciated, and I'm learning a lot. One thing that is lacking is a concrete set of exercises that follow the content. Any recommendations would be highly regarded. There are occasional suggestions to improve some predicate as an exercise, but I was usually blocked immediately by lack of knowledge.
I've started on 99 prolog problems, which are very useful, but the problems do show their age somewhat and I recognise that these are not in the same spirit as the Power of Prolog site. Although, maybe improving those exercises could also be seen as an exercise. :)
[EDIT]: PS, this is from the perspective of an absolute beginner. Also, I'm only half way through the book so these comments largely apply to the early material where beginner-friendly exercises would be a great asset.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: