4.0 KiB
Output Format
plasp
3 translates SAS and PDDL files into the same ASP fact format.
In a Nutshell
The following illustrates plasp
’s output format for the problem of turning switches on and off.
% declares the type "type(switch)"
type(type(switch)).
% introduces a switch "constant(a)"
constant(constant(a)).
has(constant(a), type(switch)).
% introduces another switch "constant(a)"
constant(constant(b)).
has(constant(b), type(switch)).
% declares a variable "variable(on(X))" for each switch X
variable(variable(on(X))) :- has(X, type(switch)).
% the variable may be true or false
contains(variable(on(X)), value(on(X)), true)) :- has(X, type(switch)).
contains(variable(on(X)), value(on(X)), false)) :- has(X, type(switch)).
% declares the action "action(turnOn(X))", which requires switch X to be off and then turns it on
action(action(turnOn(X))) :- has(X, type(switch)).
precondition(action(turnOn(X)), variable(on(X)), value(on(X), false)) :- has(X, type(switch)).
postcondition(action(turnOn(X)), effect(0), variable(on(X)), value(on(X), true)) :- has(X, type(switch)).
% declares the action "action(turnOff(X))", which requires switch X to be on and then turns it off
action(action(turnOff(X))) :- has(X, type(switch)).
precondition(action(turnOff(X)), variable(on(X)), value(on(X), true)) :- has(X, type(switch)).
postcondition(action(turnOff(X)), effect(0), variable(on(X)), value(on(X), false)) :- has(X, type(switch)).
% initially, switch a is off and switch b is on
initialState(variable(on(constant(a))), value(on(constant(a)), false)).
initialState(variable(on(constant(b))), value(on(constant(b)), true)).
% in the end, switch a should be on and switch b should be off
goal(variable(on(constant(a))), value(on(constant(a)), true)).
goal(variable(on(constant(b))), value(on(constant(b)), false)).
When translating SAS or PDDL problems, plasp
structures the translated ASP facts into multiple sections, which are explained in the following.
Feature Requirements
This section declares advanced features required by the input planning problem, such as conditional effects and axiom rules.
Feature requirements may be used in meta encodings to warn about unsupported features.
Syntax
syntax | description |
---|---|
requiresFeature(<feature name>). |
declares the feature <feature name> to be required by the input problem |
Currently, feature requirements are only recognized with SAS problems.
plasp
supports the following feature requirements:
SAS feature | description |
---|---|
actionCosts |
actions have associated costs |
axiomRules |
immediate actions are used, which are executed as soon as the preconditions are satisfied |
conditionalEffects |
some effects of an action may have additional conditions |
Example
The following specifies that the input problem has the two requirements actionCosts
and conditionalEffects
.
% requirements
requiresFeature(actionCosts).
requiresFeature(conditionalEffects).
Types
This section specifies all object types used by the problem (only with PDDL and if typing is enabled).
Syntax
syntax | description |
---|---|
type(type(<type name>)). |
declares the type type(<type name>) |
Example
The following declares the type type(block)
for later usage by the problem:
% types
type(type(block)).
Constants/Objects
These two sections specify domain-specific (global) constants and problem-specific (local) objects (such as the blocks in a Blocks World puzzle).
Constants and objects are not distinguished by plasp
.
Syntax
syntax | description |
---|---|
constant(constant(<constant name>)). |
declares the constant or object constant(<constant name>) |
has(constant(<constant name>), type(<type name>)). |
declares constant or object constant(<constant name>) to be of type type(<type name>) |
Example
The following declares a constant constant(a)
of type type(block)
:
% objects
constant(constant(a)).
has(constant(a), type(block)).