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Pack logtalk -- logtalk-3.86.0/manuals/_sources/libraries/hook_objects.rst.txt

.. _library_hook_objects:

hook_objects

This library provides a set of convenient hook objects for defining custom expansion workflows (using e.g. the hook_flows library) and for debugging. They are usable and useful as-is but should also be regarded as term- and goal-expansion examples that you can learn from, clone, and change to fit your application requirements.

API documentation

Open the `../../docs/library_index.html#hook-objects <../../docs/library_index.html#hook-objects>`__ link in a web browser.

Loading

To load all hook objects in this library, load the loader.lgt file:

::

| ?- logtalk_load(hook_objects(loader)).

To load a specific hook object, e.g. the backend_adapter_hook object:

::

| ?- logtalk_load(hook_objects(backend_adapter_hook)).

Testing

To test this library hook objects, load the tester.lgt file:

::

| ?- logtalk_load(hook_objects(tester)).

Usage

The provided hook objects cover different expansion scenarios as follows.

Using the Prolog backend adapter file expansion rules


Useful when defining a custom expansion workflow. This can be
accomplished by loading the ``backend_adapter_hook.lgt`` file, which
defines a ``backend_adapter_hook`` hook object that can be used as a
workflow step.

Restoring the default compiler expansion workflow
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In this case, load the ``default_workflow_hook.lgt`` file, which defines
a ``default_workflow_hook`` hook object, and use the following **goal**
to set the default hook object:

::

   | ?- set_logtalk_flag(hook, default_workflow_hook).

Preventing applying any (other) user-defined expansion rules
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

When compiling a source file, we sometimes want to prevent applying
expansion rules. This can be accomplished by simply loading the
``identity_hook.lgt`` file, which defines the ``identity_hook`` hook
object, whose expansion rules simply succeed without changing the terms
and goals, and setting it as the file specific hook object writing as
the first term in the file the **directive**:

::

   :- set_logtalk_flag(hook, identity_hook).

Note that the compiler will always convert any grammar rules defined in
the file into clauses. Although this conversion can also be performed as
an expansion, grammar rules are part of the Logtalk language. If you
want to preserve the grammar rules, use the hook objects described below
to write them to a stream.

Expanding grammar rules into clauses independently of the compiler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Load the ``grammar_rules_hook.lgt`` and use the term-expansion rules in
the ``grammar_rules_hook`` object. For example:

::

   | ?- grammar_rules_hook::term_expansion((a --> [b],c), Clause).

   Clause = (a([b|T], C) :- c(T, C))
   yes

Using the expansion rules defined in a Prolog module
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Load the ``prolog_module_hook.lgt``, which defines the parametric hook
object ``prolog_module_hook(Module)``. To use this hook object, you need
to instantiate the parameter to the name of the module. For example:

::

   :- set_logtalk_flag(hook, prolog_module_hook(user)).

Wrap the contents of a plain Prolog file as an object

Load the object_wrapper_hook.lgt, which defines the object_wrapper_hook/0-2 hook objects. Use them to wrap the contents of a plain Prolog file as an object named after the file (optionally implementing a protocol) or an object with the given name and object relations. Can be used to apply Logtalk developer tools to plain Prolog code or when porting a Prolog application to Logtalk. For example:

::

| ?- logtalk_load('plain.pl', [hook(object_wrapper_hook)]). ...

| ?- current_object(plain). yes

Or:

::

| ?- logtalk_load('world_1.pl', [hook(object_wrapper_hook(some_protocol))]). ...

| ?- current_object(world_1). yes

| ?- implements_protocol(world_1, Protocol). Protocol = some_protocol yes

Or:

::

| ?- logtalk_load('foo.pl', [hook(object_wrapper_hook(bar,[imports(some_category))]). ...

| ?- current_object(bar). yes

| ?- imports_category(bar, Category). Category = some_category yes

The object_wrapper_hook object sets the context_switching_calls flag to allow for the generated object. This enables calling the predicates using the (<<)/2 context-switching control construct. But it's usually better to define a protocol for the predicates being encapsulated and use instead the object_wrapper_hook/1-2 objects.

Outputting term-expansion results to a stream or a file ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Load the write_to_stream_hook.lgt file and using the write_to_stream_hook(Stream) or write_to_stream_hook(Stream, Options) hook objects. Alternatively, you can load the write_to_file_hook.lgt file and use the write_to_file_hook(File) or write_to_file_hook(File, Options) hook objects. The terms are not modified and thus these hook objects may be used at any point in an expansion workflow. The terms are written followed by a period and a new line.

For example, assume that we want to expand all terms in a input.pl source file, writing the resulting terms to a output.pl file, using the expansion rules defined in a expansions hook object. Taking advantage of the hook_flows library hook_pipeline/1 object, we can write:

::

| ?- logtalk_compile( 'input.pl', [hook(hook_pipeline([ expansions, write_to_file_hook('output.pl') ]))] ).

Printing entity predicate goals before or after calling them ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This is helpful for quick debugging. Load the print_goal_hook.lgt file and use the print_goal_hook hook object. For example, we can set this hook object as the default hook:

::

| ?- set_logtalk_flag(hook, print_goal_hook).

Then, edit the entity source code to print selected goals:

::

foo :-

  • bar, % print goal before calling it + baz, % print goal after calling it
  • quux. % print goal before and after calling it

Suppressing goals ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The suppress_goal_hook.lgt file provides the suppress_goal_hook hook object that supports suppressing a goal in a clause body by prefixing it using the -- operator. We can set this hook object as the default hook using the goal:

::

| ?- set_logtalk_flag(hook, suppress_goal_hook).

If the expansion is only to be used in a single file, use instead the source file directive:

::

:- set_logtalk_flag(hook, suppress_goal_hook).

Then, edit entity predicates to suppress goals. For example:

::

foo :- bar, -- baz, quux.

The suppressed goals are replaced by calls to true/0.