
option.pl -- Option list processing
The library(option) provides some utilities for processing option lists. Option lists are commonly used as an alternative for many arguments. Examples of built-in predicates are open/4 and write_term/3. Naming the arguments results in more readable code, and the list nature makes it easy to extend the list of options accepted by a predicate. Option lists come in two styles, both of which are handled by this library.
- Name(Value)
This is the preferred style. - Name = Value
This is often used, but deprecated.
SWI-Prolog dicts provide a convenient and efficient alternative to option lists. For this reason, both built-in predicates and predicates that use this library support dicts transparantly.
Processing option lists inside time-critical code (loops) can cause serious overhead. The above mentioned dicts is the preferred mitigation. A more portable alternative is to define a record using library(record) and initialise this using make_<record>/2. In addition to providing good performance, this also provides type-checking and central declaration of defaults.
Options typically have exactly one argument. The library does support options with 0 or more than one argument with the following restrictions:
- The predicate option/3 and select_option/4, involving default are
meaningless. They perform an
arg(1, Option, Default)
, causing failure without arguments and filling only the first option-argument otherwise. - meta_options/3 can only qualify options with exactly one argument.
option(?Option, +Options) is semidet
- Get an Option from Options. Fails silently if the option does not appear in Options. If Option appears multiple times in Options, the first value is used.
option(?Option, +Options, +Default) is det
- Get an Option from Options. If Option does not appear in Options,
unify the value with Default. If Option appears multiple times in
Options, the first value is used. For example
?- option(max_depth(D), [x(a), max_depth(20)], 10). D = 20. ?- option(max_depth(D), [x(a)], 10). D = 10.
select_option(?Option, +Options, -RestOptions) is semidet
- Get and remove Option from Options. As option/2, removing the matching option from Options and unifying the remaining options with RestOptions. If Option appears multiple times in Options, the first value is used. Note that if Options contains multiple terms that are compatible to Option, the first is used to set the value of Option and the duplicate appear in RestOptions.
select_option(?Option, +Options, -RestOptions, +Default) is det
- Get and remove Option with default value. As select_option/3, but if Option is not in Options, its value is unified with Default and RestOptions with Options.
merge_options(+New, +Old, -Merged) is det
- Merge two option sets. If Old is a dict, Merged is a dict. Otherwise
Merged is a sorted list of options using the canonical format
Name(Value) holding all options from New and Old, after removing
conflicting options from Old.
Multi-values options (e.g.,
proxy(Host, Port)
) are allowed, where both option-name and arity define the identity of the option. canonicalise_options(+OptionsIn, -OptionsOut) is det[private]
- Rewrite option list from possible Name=Value to Name(Value)
meta_options(+IsMeta, :Options0, -Options) is det
- Perform meta-expansion on options that are module-sensitive.
Whether an option name is module-sensitive is determined by
calling
call(IsMeta, Name)
. Here is an example:meta_options(is_meta, OptionsIn, Options), ... is_meta(callback).
Meta-options must have exactly one argument. This argument will be qualified.
dict_options(?Dict, ?Options) is det
- Convert between an option list and a dictionary. One of the
arguments must be instantiated. If the option list is created,
it is created in canonical form, i.e., using Option(Value) with
the Options sorted in the standard order of terms. Note that the
conversion is not always possible due to different constraints
and conversion may thus lead to (type) errors.
- Dict keys can be integers. This is not allowed in canonical option lists.
- Options can hold multiple options with the same key. This is not allowed in dicts. This predicate removes all but the first option on the same key.
- Options can have more than one value (
name(V1,V2)
). This is not allowed in dicts.
Also note that most system predicates and predicates using this library for processing the option argument can both work with classical Prolog options and dicts objects.