The Janus System: Multi-paradigm Programming in Prolog and Python

Theresa Swift
(Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab)
Carl Andersen

Python and Prolog express different programming paradigms, with different strengths. Python is wildly popular because it is well-structured, easy to use, and mixes well with thousands of scientific and machine learning programs written in C. Prolog's logic-based approach provides powerful reasoning capabilities, especially when combined with constraint evaluation, probabilistic reasoning, well-founded negation, and other advances. Both languages have commonalities as well: both are usually written in C, both are dynamically typed, and both use data structures based on a small number of recursive types.

This paper describes the design and implementation of Janus, a system that tightly combines Prolog and Python into a single process. Janus bi-translates data structures and offers performance of many hundreds of thousands of round-trip inter-language calls per second. Although Janus is still new, it has been used in commercial applications including natural language processing, visual query answering and robotic automation. Janus was developed for XSB, but porting Janus code to a second Prolog has been straightforward, indicating that Janus is a tool that other Prologs may easily adopt.

In Enrico Pontelli, Stefania Costantini, Carmine Dodaro, Sarah Gaggl, Roberta Calegari, Artur D'Avila Garcez, Francesco Fabiano, Alessandra Mileo, Alessandra Russo and Francesca Toni: Proceedings 39th International Conference on Logic Programming (ICLP 2023), Imperial College London, UK, 9th July 2023 - 15th July 2023, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 385, pp. 241–255.
Published: 12th September 2023.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.385.24 bibtex PDF
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