SWI-Prolog offers two comprehensive predicates for classifying 
characters and character codes. These predicates are defined as built-in 
predicates to exploit the C-character classification's handling of
locale (handling of local character sets). These predicates are 
fast, logical and deterministic if applicable.
In addition, there is the library library(ctypes) 
providing compatibility with some other Prolog systems. The predicates 
of this library are defined in terms of code_type/2.
- char_type(?Char, 
?Type)
 - Tests or generates alternative Types or Chars. The 
character types are inspired by the standard C 
<ctype.h> 
primitives. The types are sensititve to the active locale, see setlocale/3. 
Most of the Types are mapped to the Unicode classification 
functions from <wctype.h>, e.g., alnum 
uses iswalnum(). The types prolog_var_start, prolog_atom_start,
prolog_identifier_continue and prolog_symbol 
are based on the locale-independent built-in classification routines 
that are also used by read/1 
and friends.
Note that the mode (-,+) is only efficient if the Type has 
a parameter, e.g., char_type(C, digit(8)). If Type 
is a atomic, the whole unicode range (0..0x1ffff) is generated and 
tested against the character classification function.
- alnum
 - Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase) or digit.
 
- alpha
 - Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase).
 
- csym
 - Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase), digit or the 
underscore (
_). These are valid C and Prolog symbol 
characters. 
- csymf
 - Char is a letter (upper- or lowercase) or the underscore (
_). 
These are valid first characters for C and Prolog symbols. 
- ascii
 - Char is a 7-bit ASCII character (0..127).
 
- white
 - Char is a space or tab, i.e. white space inside a line.
 
- cntrl
 - Char is an ASCII control character (0..31), ASCII DEL 
character (127), or non-ASCII character in the range 128..159 or 
8232..8233.
 
- digit
 - Char is a digit, i.e., Char is in 0 .... 
See also 
decimal. 
- digit(Weight)
 - Char is a digit with value Weight. I.e. 
char_type(X, 
digit(6)) yields X = ’6'. Useful 
for parsing numbers. 
- xdigit(Weight)
 - Char is a hexadecimal digit with value Weight. 
I.e. 
char_type(a, xdigit(X)) yields X = ’10'. 
Useful for parsing numbers. 
- decimal
 - Char is a decimal digit in any script. This implies it has 
the Unicode general category Nd).
 
- decimal(Weight)
 - Char is a decimal digit in any script with Weight 0 
....
 
- print
 - Char is printable character.
 
- graph
 - Char produces a visible mark on a page when printed. Note 
that the space is not included!
 
- lower
 - Char is a lowercase letter.
 
- lower(Upper)
 - Char is a lowercase version of Upper. Only true if
Char is lowercase and Upper uppercase.
 
- to_lower(Upper)
 - Char is a lowercase version of Upper. For 
non-letters, or letter without case, Char and Lower 
are the same. See also upcase_atom/2 
and downcase_atom/2.
 
- upper
 - Char is an uppercase letter.
 
- upper(Lower)
 - Char is an uppercase version of Lower. Only true 
if
Char is uppercase and Lower lowercase.
 
- to_upper(Lower)
 - Char is an uppercase version of Lower. For 
non-letters, or letter without case, Char and Lower 
are the same. See also upcase_atom/2 
and downcase_atom/2.
 
- punct
 - Char is a punctuation character. This is a 
graph 
character that is not a letter or digit. 
- space
 - Char is some form of layout character (tab, vertical tab, 
newline, etc.).
 
- end_of_file
 - Char is -1.
 
- end_of_line
 - Char ends a line (ASCII: 10..13).
 
- newline
 - Char is a newline character (10).
 
- period
 - Char counts as the end of a sentence (.,!,?).
 
- quote
 - Char is a quote character (
", ', `). 
- paren(Close)
 - Char is an open parenthesis and Close is the 
corresponding close parenthesis.
 
- prolog_var_start
 - Char can start a Prolog variable name.
 
- prolog_atom_start
 - Char can start a unquoted Prolog atom that is not a symbol.
 
- prolog_identifier_continue
 - Char can continue a Prolog variable name or atom.
 
- prolog_symbol
 - Char is a Prolog symbol character. Sequences of Prolog symbol 
characters glue together to form an unquoted atom. Examples are 
=.., \=, 
etc. 
 
- code_type(?Code, 
?Type)
 - As char_type/2, 
but uses character codes rather than one-character atoms. Please note 
that both predicates are as flexible as possible. They handle either 
representation if the argument is instantiated and will instantiate only 
with an integer code or a one-character atom, depending of the version 
used. See also the Prolog flag
double_quotes, atom_chars/2 
and atom_codes/2.
 
There is nothing in the Prolog standard for converting case in 
textual data. The SWI-Prolog predicates code_type/2 
and char_type/2 
can be used to test and convert individual characters. We have started 
some additional support:
- downcase_atom(+AnyCase, 
-LowerCase)
 - Converts the characters of AnyCase into lowercase as char_type/2 
does (i.e. based on the defined locale if Prolog provides 
locale support on the hosting platform) and unifies the lowercase atom 
with LowerCase.
 
- upcase_atom(+AnyCase, 
-UpperCase)
 - Converts, similar to downcase_atom/2, 
an atom to uppercase.
 
- normalize_space(-Out, 
+In)
 - Normalize white space in In. All leading and trailing white 
space is removed. All non-empty sequences for Unicode white space 
characters are replaced by a single space (
\u0020) 
character. Out uses the same conventions as with_output_to/2 
and format/3. 
This 
section deals with predicates for language-specific string comparison 
operations.
- collation_key(+Atom, 
-Key)
 - Create a Key from Atom for locale-specific 
comparison. The key is defined such that if the key of atom A 
precedes the key of atom B in the standard order of terms, A 
is alphabetically smaller than B using the sort order of the 
current locale.
The predicate collation_key/2 
is used by locale_sort/2 
from library(sort). Please examine the implementation of locale_sort/2 
as an example of using this call.
The Key is an implementation-defined and generally 
unreadable string. On systems that do not support locale handling, Key 
is simply unified with Atom.
 
- locale_sort(+List, 
-Sorted)
 - Sort a list of atoms using the current locale. List is a list 
of atoms or string objects (see section 
5.2). Sorted is unified with a list containing all atoms 
of List, sorted to the rules of the current locale. See also collation_key/2 
and
setlocale/3.