built-in predicate
implements_protocol/2-3
ï
Descriptionï
implements_protocol(Object, Protocol)
implements_protocol(Category, Protocol)
implements_protocol(Object, Protocol, Scope)
implements_protocol(Category, Protocol, Scope)
Enumerates, by backtracking, all pairs of entities such that an object
or a category implements a protocol. The relation scope is represented
by the atoms public
, protected
, and private
. This predicate
only returns direct implementation relations. For a transitive closure,
see the conforms_to_protocol/2-3 predicate.
Modes and number of proofsï
implements_protocol(?object_identifier, ?protocol_identifier) - zero_or_more
implements_protocol(?category_identifier, ?protocol_identifier) - zero_or_more
implements_protocol(?object_identifier, ?protocol_identifier, ?scope) - zero_or_more
implements_protocol(?category_identifier, ?protocol_identifier, ?scope) - zero_or_more
Errorsï
Object
is neither a variable nor a valid object identifier:type_error(object_identifier, Object)
Category
is neither a variable nor a valid category identifier:type_error(category_identifier, Category)
Protocol
is neither a variable nor a valid protocol identifier:type_error(protocol_identifier, Protocol)
Scope
is neither a variable nor an atom:type_error(atom, Scope)
Scope
is an atom but an invalid entity scope:domain_error(scope, Scope)
Examplesï
% check that the list object implements the listp protocol:
| ?- implements_protocol(list, listp).
% check that the list object publicly implements the listp protocol:
| ?- implements_protocol(list, listp, public).
% enumerate only objects that implement the listp protocol:
| ?- current_object(Object), implements_protocol(Object, listp).
% enumerate only categories that implement the serialization protocol:
| ?- current_category(Category), implements_protocol(Category, serialization).