This simple example shows the basic definition of the predicate hello/1 and how a Prolog argument is converted to C-data:
PREDICATE(hello, 1) { cout << "Hello " << A1.as_string() << endl; return true; }
The arguments to PREDICATE() are the name and arity of the predicate.
The macros A<n> provide access to the predicate
arguments by position and are of the type PlTerm
. The C or
C++ string for a PlTerm
can be extracted using as_string(),
or as_wstring() methods;18The
C-string values can be extracted from std::string
by using
c_str(), but you must be careful to not return a pointer to a
local/stack value, so this isn't recommende. and similar
access methods provide an easy type-conversion for most Prolog
data-types, using the output of write/1
otherwise:
?- hello(world). Hello world Yes ?- hello(X) Hello _G170 X = _G170