3 Initialising and Managing a Prolog Project

Prolog text-books give you an overview of the Prolog language. The manual tells you what predicates are provided in the system and what they do. This chapter explains how to run a project. There is no ultimate‘right' way to do this. Over the years we developed some practice in this area and SWI-Prolog's commands are there to support this practice. This chapter describes the conventions and supporting commands.

The first two sections (section 3.1 and section 3.2) only require plain Prolog. The remainder discusses the use of the built-in graphical tools that require the XPCE graphical library installed on your system.


Section Index


3.1 The project source files
3.1.1 File Names and Locations
3.1.1.1 File Name Extensions
3.1.1.2 Project Directories
3.1.1.3 Sub-projects using search paths
3.1.2 Project Special Files
3.1.3 International source files
3.2 Using modules
3.3 The test-edit-reload cycle
3.3.1 Locating things to edit
3.3.2 Editing and incremental compilation
3.4 Using the PceEmacs built-in editor
3.4.1 Activating PceEmacs
3.4.2 Bluffing through PceEmacs
3.4.2.1 Edit modes
3.4.2.2 Frequently used editor commands
3.4.3 Prolog Mode
3.4.3.1 Finding your way around
3.5 The Graphical Debugger
3.5.1 Invoking the window-based debugger
3.6 The Prolog Navigator
3.7 Cross-referencer
3.8 Accessing the IDE from your program
3.9 Summary of the IDE