09-09-2009
In my opinion: experience, ability to adapt to different environments, stress resistance, problem solving skills, willingness to keep learning, willingness to work late because of service windows, maybe ability to speak "manager-speak" (ROI, TCO, business impact, ....)
Personally, i find that a bit of laziness and OCD help (because if you write a script to do that mundane task it might as well run without supervision for the next 2-3 years)
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CLASP(1) General Commands Manual CLASP(1)
NAME
clasp - a conflict-driven nogood learning answer set solver
SYNOPSIS
clasp [number][options]
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the clasp command.
clasp is an answer set solver for (extended) normal logic programs. It combines the high-level modeling capacities of answer set program-
ming (ASP) with state-of-the-art techniques from the area of Boolean constraint solving. The primary clasp algorithm relies on conflict-
driven nogood learning, a technique that proved very successful for satisfiability checking (SAT). Unlike other learning ASP solvers, clasp
does not rely on legacy software, such as a SAT solver or any other existing ASP solver. Rather, clasp has been genuinely developed for
answer set solving based on conflict-driven nogood learning. clasp can be applied as an ASP solver (on LPARSE output format), as a SAT
solver (on simplified DIMACS/CNF format), or as a PB solver (on OPB format).
OPTIONS
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is
included below. For a complete description, see <http://www.cs.uni-potsdam.de/clasp/>.
-h, --help
Show summary of options.
-v, --version
Show version of program.
SEE ALSO
gringo(1).
AUTHOR
clasp was written by Benjamin Kaufmann <kaufmann@cs.uni-potsdam.de>.
This manual page was written by Thomas Krennwallner <tkren@kr.tuwien.ac.at>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
March 4, 2010 CLASP(1)