A.9.17.6 Reflection predicates
Reflection predicates let us obtain, in a well-defined way, information that is normally internal to this library. In addition to the predicates explained below, also take a look at call_residue_vars/2 and copy_term/3 to reason about CLP(FD) constraints that arise in programs. This can be useful in program analyzers and declarative debuggers.
- fd_var(+Var)
- True iff Var is a CLP(FD) variable.
- fd_inf(+Var, -Inf)
- Inf is the infimum of the current domain of Var.
- fd_sup(+Var, -Sup)
- Sup is the supremum of the current domain of Var.
- fd_size(+Var, -Size)
- Reflect the current size of a domain. Size is the number of elements of the current domain of Var, or the atom sup if the domain is unbounded.
- fd_dom(+Var, -Dom)
- Dom is the current domain (see in/2)
of Var. This predicate is useful if you want to reason about
domains. It is not needed if you only want to display remaining
domains; instead, separate your model from the search part and let the
toplevel display this information via residual goals.
For example, to implement a custom labeling strategy, you may need to inspect the current domain of a finite domain variable. With the following code, you can convert a finite domain to a list of integers:
dom_integers(D, Is) :- phrase(dom_integers_(D), Is). dom_integers_(I) --> { integer(I) }, [I]. dom_integers_(L..U) --> { numlist(L, U, Is) }, Is. dom_integers_(D1\/D2) --> dom_integers_(D1), dom_integers_(D2).
Example:
?- X in 1..5, X #\= 4, fd_dom(X, D), dom_integers(D, Is). D = 1..3\/5, Is = [1,2,3,5], X in 1..3\/5.
- [det]fd_degree(+Var, -Degree)
- Degree is the number of constraints currently attached to Var.