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Pack logtalk -- logtalk-3.85.0/manuals/_sources/refman/methods/consistency_error_3.rst.txt |
.. This file is part of Logtalk https://logtalk.org/ SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 1998-2024 Paulo Moura <pmoura@logtalk.org> SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
.. rst-class:: align-right
built-in method
.. index:: pair: consistency_error/3; Built-in method .. _methods_consistency_error_3:
::
consistency_error(Consistency, Argument1, Argument2)
Throws a consistency error. Used when two directive or predicate arguments are individually correct but together are not consistent. For example, a predicate and its alias having different arity in a uses/2 directive. This built-in method is declared private and thus cannot be used as a message to an object. Calling this predicate is equivalent to the following sequence of goals:
::
...,
context(Context)
,
throw(error(consistency_error(Consistency,Argument1,Argument2), Context))
.
This allows the user to generate errors in the same format used by the runtime.
Possible values representing Consistency
checks include:
same_arity
same_number_of_parameters
same_number_of_arguments
same_closure_specification
::
consistency_error(+atom, @nonvar, @nonvar)
- error
| When called:
| consistency_error(Consistency, Argument1, Argument2)
::
% code that will trigger consistency errors when compiled:
% predicates (and non-terminals) aliases must have the same
% arity as the original predicates (and non-terminals)
:- uses(list, [
member/2 as in/1
])
.
% meta-predicate templates should be consistent with how closures
% are used regarding the number of additional arguments
:- public(p/2)
.
:- meta_predicate(p(1, *))
.
p(G, A)
:-
call(G, A, 2)
.
.. seealso::
:ref:methods_catch_3
,
:ref:methods_throw_1
,
:ref:methods_context_1
,
:ref:methods_instantiation_error_0
,
:ref:methods_uninstantiation_error_1
,
:ref:methods_type_error_2
,
:ref:methods_domain_error_2
,
:ref:methods_existence_error_2
,
:ref:methods_permission_error_3
,
:ref:methods_representation_error_1
,
:ref:methods_evaluation_error_1
,
:ref:methods_resource_error_1
,
:ref:methods_syntax_error_1
,
:ref:methods_system_error_0