An existence error occurs when a predicate attempts to access something that does not exist. For example, trying to compile a file that does not exist, erasing a database reference that has already been erased.
The SICStus_Error term associated with an existence error is
existence_error(Goal, ArgNo, ObjectType, Culprit, Message)
0 or '', or
some additional information provided by the operating system or other
support system indicating why Culprit is thought not to exist.
For example, ‘see('../brother/niece')’ might throw the exception
error(existence_error(source_sink,'../brother/niece'),
existence_error(see('../brother/niece'),1,file,'../brother/niece',0))
An existence error does not necessarily cause an exception to be thrown.
For I/O predicates,
the behavior can be controlled with the fileerrors Prolog flag
(see ref-lps-flg) or with the fileerrors/1 alias
file_errors/1 option to absolute_file_name/3. The
following values are possible:
on (fileerrors flag value)error (absolute_file_name/3 fileerrors value)off (fileerrors flag value)fail (absolute_file_name/3 fileerrors value)