2 A C++ interface to SWI-Prolog (Version 2)
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      • A C++ interface to SWI-Prolog
        • A C++ interface to SWI-Prolog (Version 2)
          • Summary of changes between Versions 1 and 2
          • Introduction (version 2)
          • The life of a PREDICATE (version 2)
          • Overview (version 2)
          • Examples (version 2)
            • Hello(World) (version 2)
            • Adding numbers (version 2)
            • Average of solutions (version 2)
          • Rational for changes from version 1 (version 2)
          • Porting from version 1 to version 2
          • The class PlFail (version 2)
          • The class PlTerm (version 2)
          • The class PlTermv (version 2)
          • The class PlAtom - Supporting Prolog constants (version 2)
          • Unification and foreign frames (version 2)
          • The class PlRegister (version 2)
          • The class PlQuery (version 2)
          • The PREDICATE and PREDICATE_NONDET macros (version 2)
          • Exceptions (version 2)
          • Embedded applications (version 2)
          • Considerations (version 2)
          • Conclusions (version 2)

2.5 Examples (version 2)

Before going into a detailed description of the C++ classes we present a few examples illustrating theā€˜feel' of the interface.

2.5.1 Hello(World) (version 2)

This simple example shows the basic definition of the predicate hello/1 and how a Prolog argument is converted to C-data:

PREDICATE(hello, 1)
{ cout << "Hello " << A1.as_string() << endl;

  return true;
}

The arguments to PREDICATE() are the name and arity of the predicate. The macros A<n> provide access to the predicate arguments by position and are of the type PlTerm. The C or C++ string for a PlTerm can be extracted using as_string(), or as_wstring() methods;11The C-string values can be extracted from std::string by using c_str(), but you must be careful to not return a pointer to a local/stack value. and similar access methods provide an easy type-conversion for most Prolog data-types, using the output of write/1 otherwise:

?- hello(world).
Hello world

Yes
?- hello(X)
Hello _G170

X = _G170

2.5.2 Adding numbers (version 2)

This example shows arithmetic using the C++ interface, including unification, type-checking, and conversion. The predicate add/3 adds the two first arguments and unifies the last with the result.

PREDICATE(add, 3)
{ return A3.unify_integer(A1.as_long() + A2.as_long());
}

You can use your own variable names instead of A1, A2, etc.:

PREDICATE(add, 3)  // add(+X, +Y, +Result)
{ PlTerm x(A1);
  PlTerm y(A2);
  PlTerm result(A3);
  return result.unify_integer(x.as_long() + y.as_long());
}

The as_long() method for a PlTerm performs a PL_get_long_ex() and throws a C++ exception if the Prolog argument is not a Prolog integer or float that can be converted without loss to a long. The unify_integer() method of PlTerm is defined to perform unification and returns true or false depending on the result.

?- add(1, 2, X).

X = 3.
?- add(a, 2, X).
[ERROR: Type error: `integer' expected, found `a']
   Exception: (  7) add(a, 2, _G197) ?

2.5.3 Average of solutions (version 2)

This example is a bit harder. The predicate average/3 is defined to take the template average(+Var, :Goal, -Average) , where Goal binds Var and will unify Average with average of the (integer) results.

PlQuery takes the name of a predicate and the goal-argument vector as arguments. From this information it deduces the arity and locates the predicate. The method next_solution() yields true if there was a solution and false otherwise. If the goal yields a Prolog exception, it is mapped into a C++ exception. A return to Prolog does an implicit "cut" (PL_cut_query()); this can also be done explicitly by the PlQuery::cut() method.

PREDICATE(average, 3) /* average(+Templ, :Goal, -Average) */
{ long sum = 0;
  long n = 0;

  PlQuery q("call", PlTermv(A2));
  while( q.next_solution() )
  { sum += A1.as_long();
    n++;
  }
  return A3.unify_float(double(sum) / double(n));
}
?- [user].
|: p(1).
|: p(10).
|: p(20).
|:
% user://1 compiled 0.00 sec, 3 clauses
true.

?- average(X, p(X), Average).
Average = 10.333333333333334.