
local +SpecList

   Declare all items specified by SpecList as local to the context module.

Arguments
   SpecList            One or a comma-separated sequence of valid local specifications

Type
   Modules

Description

    This declaration is used to declare the visibility of procedures
    and other items as local to the context module.  SpecList is a
    comma-separated sequence of one or more items of the following form:

Name/Arity
        procedure specification

domain(Spec)
	domain declaration

struct(Prototype)
	structure declaration

variable(Name)
	non-logical variable declaration

variable(Name,InitialValue)
	non-logical variable declaration with initial value

reference(Name,InitialValue)
	reference declaration with initial value (ground term)

array(Name)
	untyped non-logical array declaration

array(Name,Type)
	typed non-logical array declaration

record(Name)
	record key declaration

shelf(Name,InitialValue)
	shelf name declaration with initial value

store(Name)
	store name declaration

op(Prec,Assoc,Name)
	operator declaration

chtab(Char,Class)
	character class declaration

syntax_option(Option)
	syntax option setting

macro(Functor,Transformation,Options)
	macro (input transformation) declaration

portray(Functor,Transformation,Options)
	portray (output transformation) declaration

initialization(Goal)
	goal to be executed just after the module has been loaded

finalization(Goal)
	goal to be executed just before the module is erased (whether
	explicitly, or implicitly during recompilation or exiting ECLiPSe)


   The effect of the local-declaration is that the declared items are
   only visible inside the module where they have been declared.

   Local Procedures

   For procedures, the local-declaration is normally redundant because
   local visibility is the default.  However, it might be necessary to
   explicitly declare a procedure as local to resolve a name conflict
   when an imported module exports a procedure of the same name.

   Local declarations should be placed at the beginning of a module text.
   They must occur before the first reference to the declared prodecure:

   A procedure can have four kinds of visibility in a given module:
   local, exported, imported or reexported.  A local-declaration is
   silently ignored if the procedure has already been exported before.
   If a procedure of the given name has already been imported or
   reexported, the local-declaration raises an error 94.
   If there is one or more imported modules which export a procedure of
   the same name, these all get hidden silently by the local declaration.

   A local procedure can only be called from within the module where it is
   defined, even when explicit module qualification via :/2 is used.

   Local Initialization and Finalization

   The local initialization declaration is used to specify an initialization
   goal. All initialization goals which occur within a compilation unit
   (file or module), will be executed just after this compilation unit
   has been loaded by the system.

   A finalization goal will be executed just before the module containing
   the declaration gets erased. This can happen either explicitly through
   erase_module/1, or implicitly when the module gets recompiled or when
   ECLiPSe exits. Finalisation goals should not do any I/O because in the
   case of an embedded ECLiPSe, I/O may no longer be available at
   finalisation time.

   Other Local Items

   All other local declarations also have an effect only in the module
   where they occur.  Some of them have corresponding export-variants.

   Further Hints

   The local/1 primitive can not only occur as a directive but can also
   be called at runtime.

   Duplicate local declarations are accepted silently.


Modes and Determinism
   local(++) is det

Modules
   This predicate is sensitive to its module context (tool predicate, see @/2).

Exceptions
     4 --- SpecList is not instantiated.
     5 --- SpecList is instantiated, but not to a sequence of valid local specifications.
    94 --- SpecList is already imported.

Examples
   
% Normally, local declarations for predicates are redundant:
  :- module(m).

  :- local p/1.         % can be omitted since the default is local
  p(99).


% Redefining a built-in predicate:

    :- module(m)
    :- local writeln/1.   % stop writeln/1 from being imported

    main :-
       writeln(hello).    % local-declaration must be before this use!

    writeln(X) :-         % the local version
       printf("I don't like the normal writeln/1 predicate: %w%n",[X]).


% Redefining an imported predicate:

    :- module(m)
    :- lib(lists).        % module 'lists' defines a predicate subtract/3
    :- local subtract/3.  % stop subtract/3 being imported from 'lists'

    decr(N, N1) :-
       subtract(N,1,N1).  % local-declaration must be before this use!

    subtract(X,Y,Z) :-    % the local version of subtract/3
       Z is X-Y.


% Other local declarations:

   :- local
   	op(500, xfx, before),
	struct(book(author,title,publisher)).

   :- local initialization(writeln("I am being initialized!")).


% Error cases:

  :- local P.                           (Error 4).
  :- local p/a.                         (Error 5).
  :- (import p/0 from m), local(p/0)    (Error 94).


See Also
   export / 1, reexport / 1, import / 1, module / 1, array / 1, array / 2, domain / 1, macro / 3, op / 3, portray / 3, reference / 2, set_flag / 2, store / 1, struct / 1, variable / 1, variable / 2
