SLD resolution (Selective Linear Definite clause resolution) is the basic inference rule used in logic programming. It is a refinement of resolution, which is both sound and refutation complete for Horn clauses.
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Given a goal clause:

with selected literal
,
and an input definite clause:

whose positive literal (atom)
unifies with the
atom
of the selected literal
,
SLD resolution derives another goal clause, in which the selected
literal is replaced by the negative literals of the input clause
and the unifying substitution
is applied:

In the simplest case, in propositional logic, the atoms
and
are identical, and the unifying substitution
is vacuous. However, in the more general case, the unifying
substitution is necessary to make the two literals identical.
The name "SLD resolution" was given by Maarten van Emden for the unnamed inference rule introduced by Robert Kowalski.[1] Its name is derived from SL resolution,[2] which is both sound and refutation complete for the unrestricted clausal form of logic. "SLD" stands for "SL resolution with Definite clauses".
In both, SL and SLD, "L" stands for the fact that a resolution proof can be restricted to a linear sequence of clauses:

where the "top clause"
is an input clause, and every other clause
is a resolvent one of whose parents is the previous clause
.
The proof is a refutation if the last clause
is the empty clause.
In SLD, all of the clauses in the sequence are goal clauses, and the other parent is an input clause. In SL resolution, the other parent is either an input clause or an ancestor clause earlier in the sequence.
In both SL and SLD, "S" stands for the fact that the only
literal resolved upon in any clause
is one that is uniquely selected by a selection rule or selection
function. In SL resolution, the selected literal is restricted to
one which has been most recently introduced into the clause. In the
simplest case, such a last-in-first-out selection function can be
specified by the order in which literals are written, as in Prolog. However, the selection
function in SLD resolution is more general than in SL resolution
and in Prolog. There is no restriction on the literal that can be
selected.
In clausal logic, an SLD refutation demonstrates that the input
set of clauses is unsatisfiable. In logic programming, however, an SLD
refutation also has a computational interpretation. The top clause
can be interpreted as the denial of a conjunction of subgoals
.
The derivation of clause
from
is the derivation, by means of backward
reasoning, of a new set of sub-goals using an input clause as a
goal-reduction procedure. The unifying substitution
both passes input from the selected subgoal to the body of the
procedure and simultaneously passes output from the head of the
procedure to the remaining unselected subgoals. The empty clause is
simply an empty set of subgoals, which signals that the initial
conjunction of subgoals in the top clause has been solved.
SLD resolution implicitly defines a search tree of alternative computations, in which the initial goal clause is associated with the root of the tree. For every node in the tree and for every definite clause in the program whose positive literal unifies with the selected literal in the goal clause associated with the node, there is a child node associated with the goal clause obtained by SLD resolution.
A leaf node, which has no children, is a success node if its associated goal clause is the empty clause. It is a failure node if its associated goal clause is non-empty but its selected literal unifies with the positive literal of no input clause.
SLD resolution is non-deterministic in the sense that it does not determine the search strategy for exploring the search tree. Prolog searches the tree depth-first, one branch at a time, using backtracking when it encounters a failure node. Depth-first search is very efficient in its use of space, but is incomplete if the search space contains infinite branches and the search strategy searches these in preference to finite branches. Other search strategies, including breadth-first, best-first, and branch-and-bound search are also possible. Moreover, the search can be carried out sequentially, one node at a time, or in parallel, many nodes simultaneously.
SLD resolution is also non-deterministic in the sense, mentioned earlier, that the selection rule is not determined by the inference rule, but is determined by a separate decision procedure, which can be sensitive to the dynamics of the program execution process.
The SLD resolution search space is an or-tree, in which different branches represent alternative computations. In the case of propositional logic programs, SLD can be generalised so that the search space is an and-or tree, whose nodes are labelled by single literals, representing subgoals, and nodes are joined either by conjunction or by disjunction. In the general case, where conjoint subgoals share variables, the and-or tree representation is more complicated.
Given the logic program:
q :- p
p
and the top-level goal:
q
the search space consists of a single branch, in which
q is reduced to p which is reduced to the
empty set of subgoals, signalling a successful computation. In this
case, the program is so simple that there is no role for the
selection function and no need for any search.
In clausal logic, the program is represented by the set of clauses:


and top-level goal is represented by the goal clause with a single negative literal:

The search space consists of the single refutation:

where
represents the empty clause.
If the following clause were added to the program:
q :- r
then there would be an additional branch in the search space,
whose leaf node r is a failure node. In Prolog, if
this clause were added to the front of the original program, then
Prolog would use the order in which the clauses are written to
determine the order in which the branches of the search space are
investigated. Prolog would try this new branch first, fail, and
then backtrack to investigate the single branch of the original
program and succeed.
If the clause
p :- p
were now added to the program, then the search tree would contain an infinite branch. If this clause were tried first, then Prolog would go into an infinite loop and not find the successful branch.
SLDNF[3] is an
extension of SLD resolution to deal with negation as
failure. In SLDNF, goal clauses can contain negation as failure
literals, say of the form
,
which can be selected only if they contain no variables. When such
a variable-free literal is selected, a subproof (or subcomputation)
is attempted to determine whether there is an SLDNF refutation
starting from the corresponding unnegated literal
as top clause. The selected subgoal
succeeds if the subproof fails, and it fails if the subproof
succeeds.
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