{"categories":["Prolog","\u3081\u3082"],"title":" Prolog \u3060\u3063\u3066 Key-Value \u3092\u6271\u3044\u305f\u3044","author_url":"https://blog.hatena.ne.jp/E_Mattsan/","image_url":"https://images-fe.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51VwZ5p-1cL._SL160_.jpg","published":"2017-01-09 08:57:52","type":"rich","width":"100%","blog_url":"https://blog.emattsan.org/","height":"190","description":"\u4e0d\u601d\u8b70\u306a\u8a18\u8ff0\u3092\u898b\u3064\u3051\u307e\u3057\u305f\u3002 An object in JSON is presented as a bunch of keys and values within curly braces, in Prolog I have used a function and a KV list like so: obj([key1-value1, key2-value2, ...]). Present your terms like that and everything should be fine. See the source file json_encode.pl for a full exp\u2026","version":"1.0","author_name":"E_Mattsan","provider_name":"Hatena Blog","provider_url":"https://hatena.blog","html":"<iframe src=\"https://hatenablog-parts.com/embed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fblog.emattsan.org%2Fentry%2F20170109%2F1483919872\" title=\" Prolog \u3060\u3063\u3066 Key-Value \u3092\u6271\u3044\u305f\u3044 - \u30a8\u30f3\u30b8\u30cb\u30a2\u306e\u30bd\u30d5\u30c8\u30a6\u30a7\u30a2\u7684\u611b\u60c5\" class=\"embed-card embed-blogcard\" scrolling=\"no\" frameborder=\"0\" style=\"display: block; width: 100%; height: 190px; max-width: 500px; margin: 10px 0px;\"></iframe>","url":"https://blog.emattsan.org/entry/20170109/1483919872","blog_title":"\u30a8\u30f3\u30b8\u30cb\u30a2\u306e\u30bd\u30d5\u30c8\u30a6\u30a7\u30a2\u7684\u611b\u60c5"}