All predicatesShow sourceportray_text.pl -- Portray text

SWI-Prolog has the special string data type. However, in Prolog, text may be represented more traditionally as a list of character-codes, i.e. (small) integers (in SWI-Prolog specifically, those are Unicode code points). This results in output like the following (here using the backquote notation which maps text to a list of codes):

?- writeln(`hello`).
[104, 101, 108, 108, 111]

?- atom_codes("hello",X).
X = [104,101,108,108,111].

Unless you know the Unicode tables by heart, this is pretty unpleasant for debugging. Loading library(portray_text) makes the toplevel and debugger consider certain lists of integers as text and print them as text. This is called "portraying". Of course, interpretation is imperfect as there is no way to tell in general whether [65,66] should written as `AB` or as [65,66]. Therefore it is important that the user be aware of the fact that this conversion is enabled. This is why this library must be loaded explicitly.

To be able to copy the printed representation and paste it back, printed text is enclosed in back quotes if current_prolog_flag/2 for the flag back_quotes is codes (the default), and enclosed in double quotes otherwise. Certain control characters are printed out in backslash-escaped form.

The default heuristic only considers list of codes as text if the codes are all from the set of 7-bit ASCII without most of the control characters. A code is classified as text by text_code/1, which in turn calls is_text_code/1. Define portray_text:is_text_code/1 to succeed on additional codes for more flexibility (by default, that predicate succeeds nowhere). For example:

?- maplist([C,R]>>(portray_text:text_code(C)->R=y;R=n),
           `G\u00e9n\u00e9rateur`,Results).
Results = [y,n,y,n,y,y,y,y,y,y].

Now make is_text_code/1 accept anything:

?- [user].
|: portray_text:is_text_code(_).
|: ^D
% user://3 compiled 0.00 sec, 1 clauses
true.

Then:

?- maplist([C,R]>>(portray_text:text_code(C)->R=y;R=n),
           `G\u00e9n\u00e9rateur`,Results).
Results = [y,y,y,y,y,y,y,y,y,y].
Source portray_text(+OnOff:boolean) is det
Switch portraying on or off. If true, consider lists of integers as list of Unicode code points and print them as corresponding text inside quotes: `text` or "text". Quoting depends on the value of current_prolog_flag/2 back_quotes. Same as
?- set_portray_text(enabled, true).
Source set_portray_text(+Key, +Value) is det
Source set_portray_text(+Key, ?Old, +New) is det
Set options for portraying. Defined Keys are:
enabled
Enable/disable portray text
min_length
Only consider for conversion lists of integers that have a length of at least Value. Default is 3.
ellipsis
When converting a list that is longer than Value, elide the output at the start using ellipsis, leaving only Value number of non-elided characters: `...end`
Source is_text_code(+Code:nonneg) is semidet[multifile]
Multifile hook that can be used to extend the set of character codes that is recognised as likely text. By default, is_text_code/1 fails everywhere and internally, only non-control ASCII characters (32-126) and the the control codes (9,10,13) are accepted.
To be done
- we might be able to use the current locale to include the appropriate code page. (Does that really make sense?)

Undocumented predicates

The following predicates are exported, but not or incorrectly documented.

Source $portray_text_enabled(Arg1)
Source set_portray_text(Arg1, Arg2, Arg3)