- Documentation
- Reference manual
- Built-in Predicates
- Notation of Predicate Descriptions
- Character representation
- Loading Prolog source files
- Editor Interface
- Verify Type of a Term
- Comparison and Unification of Terms
- Control Predicates
- Meta-Call Predicates
- Delimited continuations
- Exception handling
- Printing messages
- Handling signals
- DCG Grammar rules
- Database
- Declaring predicate properties
- Examining the program
- Input and output
- Status of streams
- Primitive character I/O
- Term reading and writing
- Analysing and Constructing Terms
- Analysing and Constructing Atoms
- Localization (locale) support
- Character properties
- Operators
- Character Conversion
- Arithmetic
- Misc arithmetic support predicates
- Built-in list operations
- Finding all Solutions to a Goal
- Forall
- Formatted Write
- Global variables
- Terminal Control
- Operating System Interaction
- File System Interaction
- User Top-level Manipulation
- Creating a Protocol of the User Interaction
- Debugging and Tracing Programs
- Debugging and declaring determinism
- Obtaining Runtime Statistics
- Execution profiling
- Memory Management
- Windows DDE interface
- Miscellaneous
- Built-in Predicates
- Packages
- Reference manual
4.11 Printing messages
The predicate print_message/2 is used to print a message term in a human-readable format. The other predicates from this section allow the user to refine and extend the message system. A common usage of print_message/2 is to print error messages from exceptions. The code below prints errors encountered during the execution of Goal, without further propagating the exception and without starting the debugger.
..., catch(Goal, E, ( print_message(error, E), fail )), ...
Another common use is to define message_hook/3 for printing messages that are normally silent, suppressing messages, redirecting messages or make something happen in addition to printing the message.
- print_message(+Kind, +Term)
- The predicate print_message/2
is used by the system and libraries to print messages. Kind
describes the nature of the message, while
Term is a Prolog term that describes the content. Printing
messages through this indirection instead of using format/3
to the stream
user_error
allows displaying the message appropriate to the application (terminal, logfile, graphics), acting on messages based on their content instead of a string (see message_hook/3) and creating language specific versions of the messages. See also section 4.11.1. The following message kinds are known:- banner
- The system banner message. Banner messages can be suppressed by setting
the Prolog flag verbose
to
silent
. - debug(Topic)
- Message from library(debug). See debug/3.
- error
- The message indicates an erroneous situation. This kind is used to print
uncaught exceptions of type
error(Formal, Context)
. See section introduction (section 4.11). An error message causes the process to halt with status 1 if the Prolog flag on_error is set tohalt
and the message is not intercepted by message_hook/3. Not intercepted error messages increment theerrors
key for statistics/2. - help
- User requested help message, for example after entering‘h’or‘?’to a prompt.
- information
- Information that is requested by the user. An example is statistics/0.
- informational
- Typically messages of events and progress that are considered useful to
a developer. Such messages can be suppressed by setting the Prolog flag verbose
to
silent
. - silent
- Message that is normally not printed. Applications may define message_hook/3 to act upon such messages.
- trace
- Messages from the (command line) tracer.
- warning
- The message indicates something dubious that is not considered fatal.
For example, discontiguous predicates (see discontiguous/1).
A warning message causes the process to halt with status 1 if the Prolog
flag
on_warning is set
to
halt
and the message is not intercepted by message_hook/3. Not intercepted warning messages increment thewarnings
key for statistics/2.
The predicate print_message/2 first translates the Term into a list of‘message lines’(see print_message_lines/3 for details). Next, it calls the hook message_hook/3 to allow the user to intercept the message. If message_hook/3 fails it prints the message unless Kind is
silent
.The print_message/2 predicate and its rules are in the file
<plhome>/boot/messages.pl
, which may be inspected for more information on the error messages and related error terms. If you need to write messages from your own predicates, it is recommended to reuse the existing message terms if applicable. If no existing message term is applicable, invent a fairly unique term that represents the event and define a rule for the multifile predicate prolog:message//1. See section 4.11.1 for a deeper discussion and examples.See also message_to_string/2.
- print_message_lines(+Stream, +Prefix, +Lines)
- Print a message (see print_message/2)
that has been translated to a list of message elements. The elements of
this list are:
- <Format>-<Args>
- Where Format is an atom and Args is a list of format arguments. Handed to format/3.
- flush
- If this appears as the last element, Stream is flushed (see flush_output/1)
and no final newline is generated. This is combined with a subsequent
message that starts with
at_same_line
to complete the line. - at_same_line
- If this appears as first element, no prefix is printed for the first
line and the line position is not forced to 0 (see format/1,
~N
). - ansi(+Attributes, +Format, +Args)
- This message may be intercepted by means of the hook
prolog:message_line_element/2.
The library
library(ansi_term)
implements this hook to achieve coloured output. If it is not intercepted it invokesformat(Stream, Format, Args)
. - url(Location)
- Print a source location. Location is one of the terms
File:Line:Column
,File:Line
orFile
. When using librarylibrary(ansi_term)
, this is translated into a hyperlink for modern terminals. - url(URL, Label)
- Print Label. When using library
library(ansi_term)
, this is translated into a hyperlink for modern terminals. - nl
- A new line is started. If the message is not complete, Prefix is printed before the remainder of the message.
- begin(Kind, Var)
- end(Var)
- The entire message is headed by
begin(Kind, Var)
and ended byend(Var)
. This feature is used by, e.g., librarylibrary(ansi_term)
to colour entire messages. - <Format>
- Handed to format/3
as
format(Stream, Format,[])
. Deprecated because it is ambiguous if Format collides with one of the atomic commands.
See also print_message/2 and message_hook/3.
- message_hook(+Term, +Kind, +Lines)
- Hook predicate that may be defined in the module
user
to intercept messages from print_message/2. Term and Kind are the same as passed to print_message/2. Lines is a list of format statements as described with print_message_lines/3. See also message_to_string/2.This predicate must be defined dynamic and multifile to allow other modules defining clauses for it too.
- thread_message_hook(+Term, +Kind, +Lines)
- As message_hook/3, but this predicate is local to the calling thread (see thread_local/1). This hook is called before message_hook/3. The‘pre-hook’is indented to catch messages they may be produced by calling some goal without affecting other threads.
- message_property(+Kind, ?Property)
- This hook can be used to define additional message kinds and the way
they are displayed. The following properties are defined:
- color(-Attributes)
- Print message using ANSI terminal attributes. See ansi_format/3
for details. Here is an example, printing help messages in blue:
:- multifile user:message_property/2. user:message_property(help, color([fg(blue)])).
- prefix(-Prefix)
- Prefix printed before each line. This argument is handed to format/3.
The default is
'~N'
. For example, messages of kindwarning
use'~NWarning: '
. - tag(-Tag)
- Defines the text part for the
prefix
property for error and warning messages. - location_prefix(+Location, -FirstPrefix, -ContinuePrefix)
- Used for printing messages that are related to a source location.
Currently, Location is a term File:Line.
FirstPrefix is the prefix for the first line and
-ContinuePrefix is the prefix for continuation lines. For
example, the default for errors is
location_prefix(File:Line, '~NERROR: ~w:~d:'-[File,Line], '~N\t')).
- stream(-Stream)
- Stream to which to print the message. Default is
user_error
. - wait(-Seconds)
- Amount of time to wait after printing the message. Default is not to wait.
- prolog:message_line_element(+Stream, +Term)
- This hook is called to print the individual elements of a message from
print_message_lines/3.
This hook is used by e.g., library
library(ansi_term)
to colour messages on ANSI-capable terminals. - prolog:message_prefix_hook(+ContextTerm, -Prefix)
- This hook is called to add context to the message prefix. ContextTerm is a member of the list provided by the message_context. Prefix must be unified with an atomic value that is added to the message prefix.
- message_to_string(+Term, -String)
- Translates a message term into a string object (see section 5.2).
- version
- Write the SWI-Prolog banner message as well as additional messages registered using version/1. This is the default initialization goal which can be modified using -g.
- version(+Message)
- Register additional messages to be printed by version/0. Each registered message is handed to the message translation DCG and can thus be defined using the hook prolog:message//1. If not defined, it is simply printed.
4.11.1 Printing from libraries
Libraries should not use format/3
or other output predicates directly. Libraries that print informational
output directly to the console are hard to use from code that depend on
your textual output, such as a CGI script. The predicates in section
4.11 define the API for dealing with messages. The idea behind this
is that a library that wants to provide information about its status,
progress, events or problems calls print_message/2.
The first argument is the
level. The supported levels are described with print_message/2.
Libraries typically use informational
and warning
,
while libraries should use exceptions for errors (see throw/1, type_error/2,
etc.).
The second argument is an arbitrary Prolog term that carries the information of the message, but not the precise text. The text is defined by the grammar rule prolog:message//1. This distinction is made to allow for translations and to allow hooks processing the information in a different way (e.g., to translate progress messages into a progress bar).
For example, suppose we have a library that must download data from the Internet (e.g., based on http_open/3). The library wants to print the progress after each downloaded file. The code below is a good skeleton:
download_urls(List) :- length(List, Total), forall(nth1(I, List, URL), ( download_url(URL), print_message(informational, download_url(URL, I, Total)))).
The programmer can now specify the default textual output using the rule below. Note that this rule may be in the same file or anywhere else. Notably, the application may come with several rule sets for different languages. This, and the user-hook example below are the reason to represent the message as a compound term rather than a string. This is similar to using message numbers in non-symbolic languages. The documentation of print_message_lines/3 describes the elements that may appear in the output list.
:- multifile prolog:message//1. prolog:message(download_url(URL, I, Total)) --> { Perc is round(I*100/Total) }, [ 'Downloaded ~w; ~D from ~D (~d%)'-[URL, I, Total, Perc] ].
A user of the library may define rules for message_hook/3. The rule below acts on the message content. Other applications can act on the message level and, for example, popup a message box for warnings and errors.
:- multifile user:message_hook/3. message_hook(download_url(URL, I, Total), _Kind, _Lines) :- <send this information to a GUI component>
In addition, using the command line option -q, the user can disable all informational messages.