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Home/ Questions/Q 3273060
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T18:53:32+00:00 2026-05-17T18:53:32+00:00

I can easily write a predicate to get unique elements from a given list

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I can easily write a predicate to get unique elements from a given list in Prolog e.g.

no_doubles( [], [] ).
no_doubles( [H|T], F ) :-
 member( H, T ),
 no_doubles( T, F ).
no_doubles( [H|T], [H|F] ) :-
 \+ member( H, T ),
 no_doubles( T, F ).

However, how can you do the same thing but for something other than a normal list i.e. not something like [a,b,c…]? So in my case, I want to extract unique atoms for a propositional formula e.g. unique_atoms(and(x,and(x,y),z),[x,y,z]). is satisfied. Do you use recursion just like in my no_doubles example but for a formula like this?

Any ideas are welcomed :). Thanks.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T18:53:33+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 6:53 pm
    ?- setof(X, member(X,[a,b,c,a,b,c]), L).
    L = [a, b, c].
    
    ?- sort([a,b,c,a,b,c], L).
    L = [a, b, c].
    

    Propositional formulas:

    get_atoms(X,[X]) :-
        atom(X).
    get_atoms(and(P,Q),Atoms) :-
        get_atoms(P,Left),
        get_atoms(Q,Right),
        append(Left,Right,Atoms).
    

    etc. Optimize using difference lists if necessary.

    unique_atoms(P,UniqueAtoms) :- get_atoms(P,Atoms), sort(Atoms,UniqueAtoms).
    

    A more direct way is to use sets.

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