- Documentation
- Reference manual
- Built-in Predicates
- Notation of Predicate Descriptions
- Character representation
- Loading Prolog source files
- Editor Interface
- List the program, predicates or clauses
- Verify Type of a Term
- Comparison and Unification of Terms
- Control Predicates
- Meta-Call Predicates
- Delimited continuations
- Exception handling
- Handling signals
- DCG Grammar rules
- Database
- Declaring predicate properties
- Examining the program
- Input and output
- Status of streams
- Primitive character I/O
- Term reading and writing
- Analysing and Constructing Terms
- Analysing and Constructing Atoms
- Localization (locale) support
- Character properties
- Operators
- Character Conversion
- Arithmetic
- Misc arithmetic support predicates
- Built-in list operations
- Finding all Solutions to a Goal
- Forall
- Formatted Write
- Global variables
- Terminal Control
- Operating System Interaction
- File System Interaction
- User Top-level Manipulation
- Creating a Protocol of the User Interaction
- Debugging and Tracing Programs
- Obtaining Runtime Statistics
- Execution profiling
- Memory Management
- Windows DDE interface
- Miscellaneous
- Built-in Predicates
- Packages
- Reference manual
4.4 Editor Interface
SWI-Prolog offers an extensible interface which allows the user to edit objects of the program: predicates, modules, files, etc. The editor interface is implemented by edit/1 and consists of three parts: locating, selecting and starting the editor. Any of these parts may be customized. See section 4.4.1.
The built-in edit specifications for edit/1 (see prolog_edit:locate/3) are described in the table below:
Fully specified objects | |
<Module>:<Name>/<Arity> | Refers to a predicate |
module(<Module>) | Refers to a module |
file(<Path>) | Refers to a file |
source_file(<Path>) | Refers to a loaded source file |
Ambiguous specifications | |
<Name>/<Arity> | Refers to this predicate in any module |
<Name> | Refers to (1) the named predicate in any module with any arity, (2) a (source) file, or (3) a module. |
- edit(+Specification)
- First, exploit prolog_edit:locate/3 to translate Specification into a list of Locations. If there is more than one `hit', the user is asked to select from the locations found. Finally, prolog_edit:edit_source/1 is used to invoke the user's preferred editor. Typically, edit/1 can be handed the name of a predicate, module, basename of a file, XPCE class, XPCE method, etc.
- edit
- Edit the `default' file using edit/1. The default file is the file loaded with the command line option -s or, in Windows, the file loaded by double-clicking from the Windows shell.
4.4.1 Customizing the editor interface
The predicates described in this section are hooks that can be defined to disambiguate specifications given to edit/1, find the related source, and open an editor at the given source location.
- prolog_edit:locate(+Spec, -FullSpec, -Location)
- Where Spec is the specification provided through edit/1.
This multifile predicate is used to enumerate locations where an object
satisfying the given Spec can be found. FullSpec
is unified with the complete specification for the object. This
distinction is used to allow for ambiguous specifications. For example,
if Spec is an atom, which appears as the basename of a loaded
file and as the name of a predicate, FullSpec will be bound
to
file(Path)
or Name/Arity.Location is a list of attributes of the location. Normally, this list will contain the term
file(File)
and, if available, the termline(Line)
. - prolog_edit:locate(+Spec, -Location)
- Same as prolog_edit:locate/3, but only deals with fully specified objects.
- prolog_edit:edit_source(+Location)
- Start editor on Location. See prolog_edit:locate/3 for the
format of a location term. This multifile predicate is normally not
defined. If it succeeds, edit/1
assumes the editor is started.
If it fails, edit/1 uses its internal defaults, which are defined by the Prolog flag editor and/or the environment variable
EDITOR
. The following rules apply. If the Prolog flag editor is of the format$
<name>, the editor is determined by the environment variable <name>. Else, if this flag ispce_emacs
orbuilt_in
and XPCE is loaded or can be loaded, the built-in Emacs clone is used. Else, if the environmentEDITOR
is set, this editor is used. Finally, vi is used as default on Unix systems and notepad on Windows.See the default user preferences file
dotfiles/dotswiplrc
for examples. - prolog_edit:edit_command(+Editor, -Command)
- Determines how Editor is to be invoked using shell/1. Editor
is the determined editor (see qpredrefprolog_editedit_source1), without
the full path specification, and without a possible (
.exe
) extension. Command is an atom describing the command. The following %-sequences are replaced in Command before the result is handed to shell/1:%e Replaced by the (OS) command name of the editor %f Replaced by the (OS) full path name of the file %d Replaced by the line number If the editor can deal with starting at a specified line, two clauses should be provided. The first pattern invokes the editor with a line number, while the second is used if the line number is unknown.
The default contains definitions for vi, emacs, emacsclient, vim, notepad^* and wordpad^*. Starred editors do not provide starting at a given line number.
Please contribute your specifications to bugs@swi-prolog.org.
- prolog_edit:load
- Normally an undefined multifile predicate. This predicate may be defined
to provide loading hooks for user extensions to the edit module. For
example, XPCE provides the code below to load
library(swi_edit)
, containing definitions to locate classes and methods as well as to bind this package to the PceEmacs built-in editor.:- multifile prolog_edit:load/0. prolog_edit:load :- ensure_loaded(library(swi_edit)).