- library
- http
- http_unix_daemon.pl -- Run SWI-Prolog HTTP server as a Unix system daemon
- thread_httpd.pl -- Threaded HTTP server
- http_wrapper.pl -- Server processing of an HTTP request
- http_header.pl -- Handling HTTP headers
- html_write.pl -- Write HTML text
- html_quasiquotations.pl -- HTML quasi quotations
- http_dispatch.pl -- Dispatch requests in the HTTP server
- mimetype.pl -- Determine mime-type for a file
- http_path.pl -- Abstract specification of HTTP server locations
- http_host.pl -- Obtain public server location
- http_exception.pl -- Map Prolog exceptions to HTTP errors
- mimepack.pl -- Create a MIME message
- http_stream.pl -- HTTP Streams
- http_ssl_plugin.pl -- SSL plugin for HTTP libraries
- http_parameters.pl -- Extract parameters (GET and POST) from HTTP requests
- http_client.pl -- HTTP client library
- http_open.pl -- HTTP client library
- http_multipart_plugin.pl -- Multipart form-data plugin
- http_hook.pl -- HTTP library hooks
- html_head.pl -- Automatic inclusion of CSS and scripts links
- term_html.pl -- Represent Prolog terms as HTML
- jquery.pl -- Provide JQuery
- http_server_files.pl -- Serve files needed by modules from the server
- json.pl -- Reading and writing JSON serialization
- http_session.pl -- HTTP Session management
- http_openid.pl -- OpenID consumer and server library
- yadis.pl -- Yadis discovery
- ax.pl -- Attribute Exchange library
- http_authenticate.pl -- Authenticate HTTP connections using 401 headers
- http_json.pl -- HTTP JSON Plugin module
- http_dirindex.pl -- HTTP directory listings
- js_write.pl -- Utilities for including JavaScript
- js_grammar.pl -- JavaScript grammar
- http_cors.pl -- Enable CORS: Cross-Origin Resource Sharing
- json_convert.pl -- Convert between JSON terms and Prolog application terms
- http_error.pl -- Decorate uncaught HTTP exceptions with stack-trace
- hub.pl -- Manage a hub for websockets
- websocket.pl -- WebSocket support
- http_log.pl -- HTTP Logging module
- http
- json_write(+Stream, +Term) is det
- json_write(+Stream, +Term, +Options) is det
- Write a JSON term to Stream. The JSON object is of the same
format as produced by json_read/2, though we allow for some more
flexibility with regard to pairs in objects. All of Name=Value,
Name-Value and Name(Value) produce the same output.
Values can be of the form #(Term), which causes Term to be stringified if it is not an atom or string. Stringification is based on term_string/2.
The version 7 dict type is supported as well. If the dicts has a tag, a property "type":"tag" is added to the object. This behaviour can be changed using the
tag
option (see below). For example:?- json_write(current_output, point{x:1,y:2}). { "type":"point", "x":1, "y":2 }
In addition to the options recognised by json_read/3, we process the following options are recognised:
- width(+Width)
- Width in which we try to format the result. Too long lines switch from horizontal to vertical layout for better readability. If performance is critical and human readability is not an issue use Width = 0, which causes a single-line output.
- step(+Step)
- Indentation increnment for next level. Default is 2.
- tab(+TabDistance)
- Distance between tab-stops. If equal to Step, layout is generated with one tab per level.
- serialize_unknown(+Boolean)
- If
true
(defaultfalse
), serialize unknown terms and print them as a JSON string. The default raises a type error. Note that this option only makes sense if you can guarantee that the passed value is not an otherwise valid Prolog reporesentation of a Prolog term.
If a string is emitted, the sequence
</
is emitted as<\/
. This is valid JSON syntax which ensures that JSON objects can be safely embedded into an HTML<script>
element.