Opens a query and returns an identifier for it. ctx is the context
module of the goal. When NULL
, the context module of
the calling context will be used, or user
if there is no
calling context (as may happen in embedded systems). Note that the
context module only matters for meta-predicates. See meta_predicate/1,
context_module/1
and module_transparent/1.
The term reference t0 is the first of a vector of term
references as returned by
PL_new_term_refs(n).
Raise a resource exception and returns
(qid_t)0
on failure.
Every use of PL_open_query()
must have a corresponding call to
PL_cut_query()
or PL_close_query()
before the foreign predicate returns either TRUE
or FALSE
.
The flags arguments provides some additional options
concerning debugging and exception handling. It is a bitwise or
of the following values below. Note that exception propagation is
defined by the flags PL_Q_NORMAL
, PL_Q_CATCH_EXCEPTION
and
PL_Q_PASS_EXCEPTION
. Exactly one of these flags must be
specified (if none of them is specified, the behavior is as if
PL_Q_NODEBUG
is specified)..
PL_Q_NORMAL
- Normal operation. It is named "normal" because it makes a call to Prolog behave as it did before exceptions were implemented, i.e., an error (now uncaught exception) triggers the debugger. See also the Prolog flag debug_on_error. This mode is still useful when calling Prolog from C if the C code is not willing to handle exceptions.
PL_Q_NODEBUG
- Switch off the debugger while executing the goal. This option is used by
many calls to hook-predicates to avoid tracing the hooks. An example is print/1
calling portray/1
from foreign code. This is the default if flags is
0
. PL_Q_CATCH_EXCEPTION
- If an exception is raised while executing the goal, make it available by
calling
PL_exception(qid)
, whereqid
is theqid_t
returned by PL_open_query(). The exception is implicitly cleared from the environment when the query is closed and the exception term returned fromPL_exception(qid)
becomes invalid. UsePL_Q_PASS_EXCEPTION
if you wish to propagate the exception. PL_Q_PASS_EXCEPTION
- As
PL_Q_CATCH_EXCEPTION
, making the exception on the inner environment available usingPL_exception(0)
in the parent environment. If PL_next_solution() returnsFALSE
, you must call PL_cut_query() or PL_close_query(). After that you may verify whether failure was due to logical failure of the called predicate or an exception by callingPL_exception(0)
. If the predicate failed due to an exception you should return withFALSE
from the foreign predicate or call PL_clear_exception() to clear it. If you wish to process the exception in C, it is advised to usePL_Q_CATCH_EXCEPTION
instead, but only if you have no need to raise an exception or re-raise the caught exception.Note that
PL_Q_PASS_EXCEPTION
is used by the debugger to decide whether the exception is caught. If there is no matching catch/3 call in the current query and the query was started usingPL_Q_PASS_EXCEPTION
the debugger searches the parent queries until it either finds a matching catch/3, a query withPL_Q_CATCH_EXCEPTION
(in which case it considers the exception handled by C) or the top of the query stack (in which case it considers the exception uncaught). Uncaught exceptions use thelibrary(library(prolog_stack))
to add a backtrace to the exception and start the debugger as soon as possible if the Prolog flag debug_on_error istrue
. PL_Q_ALLOW_YIELD
- Support the
I_YIELD
instruction for engine-based coroutining. See $engine_yield/2 inboot/init.pl
for details. PL_Q_EXT_STATUS
- Make PL_next_solution()
return extended status. Instead of only
TRUE
orFALSE
extended status as illustrated in the following table:Extended Normal PL_S_EXCEPTION FALSE Exception available through PL_exception() PL_S_FALSE FALSE Query failed PL_S_TRUE TRUE Query succeeded with choicepoint PL_S_LAST TRUE Query succeeded without choicepoint
PL_open_query()
can return the query identifier 0
if there is not enough
space on the environment stack (and makes the exception available
through PL_exception(0)
).
This function succeeds, even if the referenced predicate is not defined.
In this case, running the query using PL_next_solution()
may return an existence_error. See
PL_exception().
The example below opens a query to the predicate is_a/2 to find the ancestor of‘me’. The reference to the predicate is valid for the duration of the process or until PL_cleanup() is called (see PL_predicate() for details) and may be cached by the client.
char * ancestor(const char *me) { term_t a0 = PL_new_term_refs(2); static predicate_t p; if ( !p ) p = PL_predicate("is_a", 2, "database"); PL_put_atom_chars(a0, me); PL_open_query(NULL, PL_Q_PASS_EXCEPTION, p, a0); ... }