I'm trying to use a DCG to split a string into two parts separated by spaces. E.g. 'abc def' should give me back "abc" & "def". The program & DCG are below.
main:-
prompt(_, ''),
repeat,
read_line_to_codes(current_input, Codes),
(
Codes = end_of_file
->
true
;
processData(Codes),
fail
).
processData(Codes):-
(
phrase(data(Part1, Part2), Codes)
->
format('~s, ~s\n', [ Part1, Part2 ])
;
format('Didn''t recognize data.\n')
).
data([ P1 | Part1 ], [ P2 | Part2 ]) --> [ P1 | Part1 ], spaces(_), [ P2 | Part2 ].
spaces([ S | S1 ]) --> [ S ], { code_type(S, space) }, (spaces(S1); "").
This works correctly. But I found that having to type [ P1 | Part1 ] & [ P2 | Part2 ] was really verbose. So, I tried replacing all instances of [ P1 | Part1 ] w/ Part1 & likewise w/ [ P2 | Part2 ] in the definition of data, i.e. the following.
data(Part1, Part2) --> Part1, spaces(_), Part2.
That's much easier to type, but that gave me an Arguments are not sufficiently instantiated error. So it looks like an unbound variable isn't automatically interpreted as a list of codes in a DCG. Is there any other way to make this less verbose? My intent is to use DCG's where I would use regular expressions in other programming languages.