Easy Prolog installation on Windows, Linux, macOS

Kai Brooks
3 min readJan 14, 2020

--

Installing SWI Prolog with its web UI and running some test code. This system is functionally similar to how Jupyter Notebook runs, except with Prolog.

Install Docker

Install Docker (requires a free account). This installation is a standalone on Windows and macOS, but requires the command line on Linux:

Pull the Prolog image

docker pull swipl/swish

We only need to pull this once. This version includes the web interface!

Run the image

docker run -it -p 3050:3050 --name prolog swipl/swish

Anytime we want to work in Prolog, we run the above. We can then access the web GUI by pointing our browser to http://localhost:3050

Prolog Web Interface

A Sample Program

Click on Create a Program here. The interface changes to a program on the left, and the query box on the right.

If we clicked on Create a Notebook here instead, the prolog interface would resemble Jupyter Notebook, and let us run cells of code individually (similar to Jupyter Notebook for Python).

In the left, program section, type:

loves(vincent, mia).
loves(marcellus, mia).
loves(pumpkin, honey_bunny).
loves(honey_bunny, pumpkin).
jealous(X, Y) :-
loves(X, Z),
loves(Y, Z).

This sets up the logic and axioms of our program. In the right, query section, type:

loves(X, mia).

and hit Run. This query asks, who loves Mia? From up top, we see that it’s Vincent and Marcellus. Our output follows:

Who loves Mia?

Here we only see Vincent. To see the rest, click the next button:

Clicking next shows the rest of the output

For a different query, run:

jealous(X,Y).

Click through next (or the numbers) to reveal the entire output:

A love dodecahedron

The final window looks like so:

Output for both queries

Note that Prolog is case-sensitive, so if we define X with a capital, we need to use a capital in the query.

In addition, we can still run Prolog from the command line:

Prolog in the CLI

Stopping the server

The Prolog server stays open until we exit it with Control+C twice in the command line.

List of errors and fixes

docker: Error response from daemon: driver failed programming external connectivity on endpoint …: Bind for 0.0.0.0:3050 failed: port is already allocated.

Prolog is still running the server. You can access it at http://localhost:3050.

If you want to stop Prolog but closed the window and can’t use the Control+C method, here’s some options:

This command will stop all Docker containers:

docker rm -f $(docker ps -a -q)

If you want to close a single container, use:

docker container ls

to display all running containers. Take note of the Container ID, then run

docker stop CONTAINERID
Stopping a container. Note that we only need the first character(s) of the container ID

--

--

No responses yet