An argument mode 
indicator gives information about the intended direction in which 
information carried by a predicate argument is supposed to flow. Mode 
indicators (and types) are not a formal part of the Prolog language but 
help in explaining intended semantics to the programmer. There is no 
complete agreement on argument mode indicators in the Prolog community. 
We use the following definitions:49These 
definitions are taken from the PlDoc markup language 
description. PldDoc markup is used for source code markup (as 
well as for the commenting tool). The current manual has only one mode 
declaration per predicate and therefore predicates with mode (,+) 
and (-,-) are 
described as (+,?). 
The ?@-mode is often replaced by 
chr+.
| ++ | At call time, the argument must be ground, i.e., the argument may not contain any variables that are still unbound. | 
| + | At call time, the argument must be instantiated to a 
term satisfying some (informal) type specification. The argument need 
not necessarily be ground. For example, the term [_] is a 
list, although its only member is the anonymous variable, which is 
always unbound (and thus nonground).  | 
| - | Argument is an output argument. It may or may 
not be bound at call-time. If the argument is bound at call time, the 
goal behaves as if the argument were unbound, and then unified with that 
term after the goal succeeds. This is what is called being steadfast: 
instantiation of output arguments at call-time does not change the 
semantics of the predicate, although optimizations may be performed. For 
example, the goal findall(X, Goal, [T]) is good style and 
equivalent to findall(X, Goal, Xs), Xs = [T]50The 
ISO standard dictates that findall(X, Goal, 1) raise a type_error 
exception, breaking steadfastness. SWI-Prolog does not follow the 
standard here. Note that any determinism 
specification, e.g., det, only applies if the argument is 
unbound. For the case where the argument is bound or involved in 
constraints, det effectively becomes
semidet, and multi effectively becomes
nondet.  | 
| -- | At call time, the argument must be unbound. This is typically used by predicates that create‘something' and return a handle to the created object, such as open/3, which creates a stream. | 
| ? | At call time, the argument must be bound to a partial 
term (a term which may or may not be ground) satisfying some 
(informal) type specification. Note that an unbound variable is 
a partial term. Think of the argument as either providing input or 
accepting output or being used for both input and output. For example, 
in stream_property(S, reposition(Bool)), the
reposition part of the term provides input and the 
unbound-at-call-time Bool variable accepts output.  | 
| : | Argument is a meta-argument, for example a 
term that can be called as goal. The predicate is thus a meta-predicate. 
This flag implies .  | 
| @ | Argument will not be further instantiated than it is at call-time. Typically used for type tests. | 
| ! | Argument contains a mutable structure that may be modified using setarg/3 or nb_setarg/3. | 
See also section 4.8 for examples of meta-predicates, and section 6.5 for mode flags to label meta-predicate arguments in module export declarations.