Availability:built-in
<ctype.h> 
primitives. Note that the mode (-,+) is only efficient if the
Type has a parameter, e.g., char_type(C, digit(8)). 
With an atomic Type the whole unicode range (0..0x1ffff) is 
generated and tested against the C character classification function.
- alnum
- Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase) or digit.
- alpha
- Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase).
- csym
- Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase), digit or the 
underscore (_). These are valid C and Prolog symbol characters.
- csymf
- Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase) or the underscore (_). These are valid first characters for C and Prolog symbols.
- ascii
- Char is a 7-bit ASCII character (0..127).
- white
- Char is a space or tab, i.e. white space inside a line.
- cntrl
- Char is an ASCII control character (0..31).
- digit
- Char is a digit.
- digit(Weight)
- Char is a digit with value Weight. I.e. char_type(X, digit(6)yields X ='6'. Useful for parsing numbers.
- xdigit(Weight)
- Char is a hexadecimal digit with value Weight. 
I.e. char_type(a, xdigit(X)yields X ='10'. Useful for parsing numbers.
- graph
- Char produces a visible mark on a page when printed. Note that the space is not included!
- lower
- Char is a lowercase letter.
- lower(Upper)
- Char is a lowercase version of Upper. Only true if Char is lowercase and Upper uppercase.
- to_lower(Upper)
- Char is a lowercase version of Upper. For non-letters, or letter without case, Char and Lower are the same. See also upcase_atom/2 and downcase_atom/2.
- upper
- Char is an uppercase letter.
- upper(Lower)
- Char is an uppercase version of Lower. Only true if Char is uppercase and Lower lowercase.
- to_upper(Lower)
- Char is an uppercase version of Lower. For non-letters, or letter without case, Char and Lower are the same. See also upcase_atom/2 and downcase_atom/2.
- punct
- Char is a punctuation character. This is a graphcharacter that is not a letter or digit.
- space
- Char is some form of layout character (tab, vertical tab, newline, etc.).
- end_of_file
- Char is -1.
- end_of_line
- Char ends a line (ASCII: 10..13).
- newline
- Char is a newline character (10).
- period
- Char counts as the end of a sentence (.,!,?).
- quote
- Char is a quote character (",',`).
- paren(Close)
- Char is an open parenthesis and Close is the corresponding close parenthesis.
- prolog_var_start
- Char can start a Prolog variable name.
- prolog_atom_start
- Char can start a unquoted Prolog atom that is not a symbol.
- prolog_identifier_continue
- Char can continue a Prolog variable name or atom.
- prolog_symbol
- Char is a Prolog symbol character. Sequences of Prolog symbol 
characters glue together to form an unquoted atom. Examples are =..\=