library(prolog_stack)
to force backtraces in case of an
uncaught exception. library(pce_main)
, which
starts the GUI and processes events until all windows have gone.
This library is intended for supporting PrologScript on Unix using
the
#!
magic sequence for scripts using commandline options.
The entry point main/0 calls
the user-supplied predicate main/1 passing
a list of commandline options. Below is a simle echo
implementation in Prolog.
#!/usr/bin/env swipl :- initialization(main, main). main(Argv) :- echo(Argv). echo([]) :- nl. echo([Last]) :- !, write(Last), nl. echo([H|T]) :- write(H), write(' '), echo(T).
SIGINT
(Control-C) that terminates the process
with status 1.
When main/0 is called interactively it simply calls main/1 with the arguments. This allows for debugging scripts as follows:
$ swipl -l script.pl -- arg ... ?- gspy(suspect/1). % setup debugging ?- main. % run program
When guided, three predicates are called in the calling module. opt_type/3 must be defined, the others need not. Note that these three predicates may be defined as multifile to allow multiple modules contributing to the provided commandline options. Defining them as discontiguous allows for creating blocks that describe a group of related options.
-
.
A single character implies a short option, multiple a long option. Long
options use _
as word separator, user options may
use either _
or -
. Type is one of:
|
Bnonneg|boolean
, for an option http
handles --http
as http(true)
, --no-http
as http(false)
and --http=3000
as http(3000)
. Note that with
an optional boolean a option is considered boolean unless it has a value
written as
--longopt=value
.--opt=value
notation. This explicit value
specification converts true
, True
,
TRUE
, on
, On
, ON
, 1
and the obvious false equivalents to Prolog true
or false
.
If the option is specified, Default is used. If --no-opt
or
--noopt
is used, the inverse of Default is used.integer
. Requires value >=
0.integer
. Requires value >=
1.float
,
else convert as integer
. Then check the range.atom
, but requires the value to be a member of List
(enum type).file
file
, and check access using access_file/2.
A value -
is not checked for access, assuming the
application handles this as standard input or output.directory
, and check access. Access is one of read
write
or create
. In the latter case the parent
directory must exist and have write access.term
, but passes Options to term_string/3.
If the option
variable_names(Bindings)
is given the option value is set
to the pair Term-Bindings
.FILE
in e.g. -f FILE
.
By default, -h
, -?
and --help
are bound to help. If
opt_type(Opt, help, boolean)
is true for some Opt,
the default help binding and help message are disabled and the normal
user rules apply. In particular, the user should also provide a rule for
opt_help(help, String)
.
halt(Code)
, exit with Code. Other
goals are currently not supported.false
(default true
), stop parsing after
the first positional argument, returning options that follow this
argument as positional arguments. E.g, -x file -y
results
in positional arguments [file, '-y']
debug
. Other meaningful
options are informational
or warning
. The help
page consists of four sections, two of which are optional:
opt_help(help(header), String)
.
It is optional.Usage: <command>
is by default [options]
and can be overruled using opt_help(help(usage), String)
.opt_help(help(footer), String)
.
It is optional.
The help provided by help(header)
, help(usage)
and help(footer)
are either a simple string or a list of
elements as defined by
print_message_lines/3.
In the latter case, the construct \Callable
can be used to
call a DCG rule in the module from which the user calls argv_options/3.
For example, we can add a bold title using
opt_help(help(header), [ansi(bold, '~w', ['My title'])]).
--debug='http(_)'
.
opt_type(..., ..., ...). % application types opt_type(Flag, Opt, Type) :- cli_debug_opt_type(Flag, Opt, Type). % similar for opt_help/2 and opt_meta/2 main(Argv) :- argv_options(Argv, Positional, Options0), cli_parse_debug_options(Options0, Options), ...
This predicate may be called from main/1 to enter the Prolog toplevel rather than terminating the application after main/1 completes.