Shameless plug: you should check out my podcast The Search Space for a view of the broader landscape of Prolog and logic programming: https://thesearch.space/
I don't publish episodes often but I have a lot of good interviewees lined up :)
In general, I would advice you to look beyond Prolog and explore Answer Set Programming, the Picat language, and the connections between logic programming and databases (SQL, RDF or otherwise). Not instead of Prolog, but in parallel. Prolog is awesome!
I don't publish episodes often but I have a lot of good interviewees lined up :)
In general, I would advice you to look beyond Prolog and explore Answer Set Programming, the Picat language, and the connections between logic programming and databases (SQL, RDF or otherwise). Not instead of Prolog, but in parallel. Prolog is awesome!