2.4.3 Naming conventions, utility functions and methods (version 2)
See also section 2.4.1.
The classes all have names starting with "Pl", using CamelCase; this contrasts with the C functions that start with "PL_" and use underscores.
The wrapper classes (PlFunctor
, PlAtom
, PlTerm
)
all contain a field C_
that contains the wrapped value (functor_t
, atom_t
, term_t
respectively).
The wrapper classes (which subclass WrappedC< ...
)
all define the following methods and constants:
- default constructor (sets the wrapped value to
null
) - constructor that takes the wrapped value (e.g., for
PlAtom
, the constructor takes anatom_t
value). C_
- the wrapped value. This can be used directly when calling C functions, for example, ift
anda
are of typePlTerm
andPlAtom
:Plcheck(PL_put_atom(t.C_,a.C_))
.null
- the null value (typically0
, but code should not rely on this)is_null()
,not_null()
- test for the wrapped value beingnull
.reset()
- set the wrapped value tonull
reset(new_value)
- set the wrapped valueverify()
- if the wrapped value (C_
) isnull
, throw a PlFail() exception. Typically, this check is done after an allocation function such as Plnew_term_ref() returns a null value, so the PlFail() is turned into a a resource error. However, if there is no pending exception, this results in simple failure (see section 2.18.2).- The
bool
operator is turned off - you should use not_null() instead.10The reason: abool
conversion causes ambiguity withPlAtom(PlTterm)
andPlAtom(atom_t)
.
The C_
field can be used wherever a atom_t
or
term_t
is used. For example, the PL_scan_options()
example code can be written as follows. Note the use of &callback.C_
to pass a pointer to the wrapped term_t
value.
PREDICATE(mypred, 2) { auto options = A2; int quoted = false; size_t length = 10; PlTerm_var callback; PlCheck(PL_scan_options(options, 0, "mypred_options", mypred_options, "ed, &length, &callback.C_)); callback.record(); // Needed if callback is put in a blob that Prolog doesn't know about. // If it were an atom (OPT_ATOM): register_ref(). <implement mypred> }
For functions in SWI-Prolog.h
that don't have a C++
equivalent in SWI-cpp2.h
, PlCheck() is a convenience
function that checks the return code and throws a PlFail
exception on failure. The
PREDICATE() code catches PlFail
exceptions and
converts them to the foreign_t
return code for failure. If
the failure from the C function was due to an exception (e.g.,
unification failed because of an out-of-memory condition), the foreign
function caller will detect that situation and convert the failure to an
exception.
The "getter" methods for PlTerm
all throw an exception
if the term isn't of the expected Prolog type. Where possible, the
"getters" have the same name as the underlying type; but this isn't
possible for types such as int
or float
, so
for these the name is prepended with "as_".
"Getters" for integers have an additionnal problem, in that C++
doesn't define the sizes of int
and long
, nor
for
size_t
. It seems to be impossible to make an overloaded
method that works for all the various combinations of integer types on
all compilers, so there are specific methods for int64_t
,
uint64_t
, size_t
.
In some cases,it is possible to overload methods; for example, this
allows the following code without knowing the exact definition of
size_t
:
PREDICATE(p, 1) { size_t sz; A1.integer(&sz); ... }
It is strongly recommended that you enable conversion checking.
For example, with GNU C++, these options (possibly with -Werror
:
-Wconversion -Warith-conversion -Wsign-conversion
-Wfloat-conversion
.
There is an additional problem with characters - C promotes them to int
but C++ doesn't. In general, this shouldn't cause any problems, but care
must be used with the various getters for integers.