Availability:built-in
:^+-?- 0..9
- The argument is a term that is used to reference a predicate with N 
more arguments than the given argument term. For example: call(0)ormaplist(1, +).
- :
- The argument is module-sensitive, but does not directly refer to a 
predicate. For example: consult(:).
- -
- The argument is not module-sensitive and unbound on entry.
- ?
- The argument is not module-sensitive and the mode is unspecified.
- *
- The argument is not module-sensitive and the mode is unspecified. The 
specification *?*?
- +
- The argument is not module-sensitive and bound (i.e., nonvar) on entry.
- ^
- This extension is used to denote the possibly ^-annotated goal of setof/3, bagof/3, aggregate/3 and aggregate/4. It is processed similar to `0', but leaving the^
- //
- The argument is a DCG body. See phrase/3.
Each argument that is module-sensitive (i.e., marked 0..9, :^:/2
:- meta_predicate
        meta(0, +).
meta(Module:Term, _Arg) :-
        format('Module=~w, Term = ~q~n', [Module, Term]).
?- meta(test, x). Module=user, Term = test ?- meta(m1:test, x). Module=m1, Term = test ?- m2:meta(test, x). Module=m2, Term = test ?- m1:meta(m2:test, x). Module=m2, Term = test ?- meta(m1:m2:test, x). Module=m2, Term = test ?- meta(m1:42:test, x). Module=42, Term = test
The meta_predicate/1 declaration is the portable mechanism for defining meta-predicates and replaces the old SWI-Prolog specific mechanism provided by the deprecated predicates module_transparent/1, context_module/1 and strip_module/3. See also section 6.15.