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diff man/lispref/variables.texi @ 428:3ecd8885ac67 r21-2-22
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date | Mon, 13 Aug 2007 11:28:15 +0200 |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/man/lispref/variables.texi Mon Aug 13 11:28:15 2007 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,1348 @@ +@c -*-texinfo-*- +@c This is part of the XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual. +@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +@c See the file lispref.texi for copying conditions. +@setfilename ../../info/variables.info +@node Variables, Functions, Control Structures, Top +@chapter Variables +@cindex variable + + A @dfn{variable} is a name used in a program to stand for a value. +Nearly all programming languages have variables of some sort. In the +text of a Lisp program, variables are written using the syntax for +symbols. + + In Lisp, unlike most programming languages, programs are represented +primarily as Lisp objects and only secondarily as text. The Lisp +objects used for variables are symbols: the symbol name is the variable +name, and the variable's value is stored in the value cell of the +symbol. The use of a symbol as a variable is independent of its use as +a function name. @xref{Symbol Components}. + + The Lisp objects that constitute a Lisp program determine the textual +form of the program---it is simply the read syntax for those Lisp +objects. This is why, for example, a variable in a textual Lisp program +is written using the read syntax for the symbol that represents the +variable. + +@menu +* Global Variables:: Variable values that exist permanently, everywhere. +* Constant Variables:: Certain "variables" have values that never change. +* Local Variables:: Variable values that exist only temporarily. +* Void Variables:: Symbols that lack values. +* Defining Variables:: A definition says a symbol is used as a variable. +* Accessing Variables:: Examining values of variables whose names + are known only at run time. +* Setting Variables:: Storing new values in variables. +* Variable Scoping:: How Lisp chooses among local and global values. +* Buffer-Local Variables:: Variable values in effect only in one buffer. +* Variable Aliases:: Making one variable point to another. +@end menu + +@node Global Variables +@section Global Variables +@cindex global variable + + The simplest way to use a variable is @dfn{globally}. This means that +the variable has just one value at a time, and this value is in effect +(at least for the moment) throughout the Lisp system. The value remains +in effect until you specify a new one. When a new value replaces the +old one, no trace of the old value remains in the variable. + + You specify a value for a symbol with @code{setq}. For example, + +@example +(setq x '(a b)) +@end example + +@noindent +gives the variable @code{x} the value @code{(a b)}. Note that +@code{setq} does not evaluate its first argument, the name of the +variable, but it does evaluate the second argument, the new value. + + Once the variable has a value, you can refer to it by using the symbol +by itself as an expression. Thus, + +@example +@group +x @result{} (a b) +@end group +@end example + +@noindent +assuming the @code{setq} form shown above has already been executed. + + If you do another @code{setq}, the new value replaces the old one: + +@example +@group +x + @result{} (a b) +@end group +@group +(setq x 4) + @result{} 4 +@end group +@group +x + @result{} 4 +@end group +@end example + +@node Constant Variables +@section Variables That Never Change +@vindex nil +@vindex t +@kindex setting-constant + +In XEmacs Lisp, some symbols always evaluate to themselves: the two +special symbols @code{nil} and @code{t}, as well as @dfn{keyword +symbols}, that is, symbols whose name begins with the character +@samp{@code{:}}. These symbols cannot be rebound, nor can their value +cells be changed. An attempt to change the value of @code{nil} or +@code{t} signals a @code{setting-constant} error. + +@example +@group +nil @equiv{} 'nil + @result{} nil +@end group +@group +(setq nil 500) +@error{} Attempt to set constant symbol: nil +@end group +@end example + +@node Local Variables +@section Local Variables +@cindex binding local variables +@cindex local variables +@cindex local binding +@cindex global binding + + Global variables have values that last until explicitly superseded +with new values. Sometimes it is useful to create variable values that +exist temporarily---only while within a certain part of the program. +These values are called @dfn{local}, and the variables so used are +called @dfn{local variables}. + + For example, when a function is called, its argument variables receive +new local values that last until the function exits. The @code{let} +special form explicitly establishes new local values for specified +variables; these last until exit from the @code{let} form. + +@cindex shadowing of variables + Establishing a local value saves away the previous value (or lack of +one) of the variable. When the life span of the local value is over, +the previous value is restored. In the mean time, we say that the +previous value is @dfn{shadowed} and @dfn{not visible}. Both global and +local values may be shadowed (@pxref{Scope}). + + If you set a variable (such as with @code{setq}) while it is local, +this replaces the local value; it does not alter the global value, or +previous local values that are shadowed. To model this behavior, we +speak of a @dfn{local binding} of the variable as well as a local value. + + The local binding is a conceptual place that holds a local value. +Entry to a function, or a special form such as @code{let}, creates the +local binding; exit from the function or from the @code{let} removes the +local binding. As long as the local binding lasts, the variable's value +is stored within it. Use of @code{setq} or @code{set} while there is a +local binding stores a different value into the local binding; it does +not create a new binding. + + We also speak of the @dfn{global binding}, which is where +(conceptually) the global value is kept. + +@cindex current binding + A variable can have more than one local binding at a time (for +example, if there are nested @code{let} forms that bind it). In such a +case, the most recently created local binding that still exists is the +@dfn{current binding} of the variable. (This is called @dfn{dynamic +scoping}; see @ref{Variable Scoping}.) If there are no local bindings, +the variable's global binding is its current binding. We also call the +current binding the @dfn{most-local existing binding}, for emphasis. +Ordinary evaluation of a symbol always returns the value of its current +binding. + + The special forms @code{let} and @code{let*} exist to create +local bindings. + +@defspec let (bindings@dots{}) forms@dots{} +This special form binds variables according to @var{bindings} and then +evaluates all of the @var{forms} in textual order. The @code{let}-form +returns the value of the last form in @var{forms}. + +Each of the @var{bindings} is either @w{(i) a} symbol, in which case +that symbol is bound to @code{nil}; or @w{(ii) a} list of the form +@code{(@var{symbol} @var{value-form})}, in which case @var{symbol} is +bound to the result of evaluating @var{value-form}. If @var{value-form} +is omitted, @code{nil} is used. + +All of the @var{value-form}s in @var{bindings} are evaluated in the +order they appear and @emph{before} any of the symbols are bound. Here +is an example of this: @code{Z} is bound to the old value of @code{Y}, +which is 2, not the new value, 1. + +@example +@group +(setq Y 2) + @result{} 2 +@end group +@group +(let ((Y 1) + (Z Y)) + (list Y Z)) + @result{} (1 2) +@end group +@end example +@end defspec + +@defspec let* (bindings@dots{}) forms@dots{} +This special form is like @code{let}, but it binds each variable right +after computing its local value, before computing the local value for +the next variable. Therefore, an expression in @var{bindings} can +reasonably refer to the preceding symbols bound in this @code{let*} +form. Compare the following example with the example above for +@code{let}. + +@example +@group +(setq Y 2) + @result{} 2 +@end group +@group +(let* ((Y 1) + (Z Y)) ; @r{Use the just-established value of @code{Y}.} + (list Y Z)) + @result{} (1 1) +@end group +@end example +@end defspec + + Here is a complete list of the other facilities that create local +bindings: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +Function calls (@pxref{Functions}). + +@item +Macro calls (@pxref{Macros}). + +@item +@code{condition-case} (@pxref{Errors}). +@end itemize + + Variables can also have buffer-local bindings (@pxref{Buffer-Local +Variables}). These kinds of bindings work somewhat like ordinary local +bindings, but they are localized depending on ``where'' you are in +Emacs, rather than localized in time. + +@defvar max-specpdl-size +@cindex variable limit error +@cindex evaluation error +@cindex infinite recursion + This variable defines the limit on the total number of local variable +bindings and @code{unwind-protect} cleanups (@pxref{Nonlocal Exits}) +that are allowed before signaling an error (with data @code{"Variable +binding depth exceeds max-specpdl-size"}). + + This limit, with the associated error when it is exceeded, is one way +that Lisp avoids infinite recursion on an ill-defined function. + + The default value is 600. + + @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} provides another limit on depth of nesting. +@xref{Eval}. +@end defvar + +@node Void Variables +@section When a Variable is ``Void'' +@kindex void-variable +@cindex void variable + + If you have never given a symbol any value as a global variable, we +say that that symbol's global value is @dfn{void}. In other words, the +symbol's value cell does not have any Lisp object in it. If you try to +evaluate the symbol, you get a @code{void-variable} error rather than +a value. + + Note that a value of @code{nil} is not the same as void. The symbol +@code{nil} is a Lisp object and can be the value of a variable just as any +other object can be; but it is @emph{a value}. A void variable does not +have any value. + + After you have given a variable a value, you can make it void once more +using @code{makunbound}. + +@defun makunbound symbol +This function makes the current binding of @var{symbol} void. +Subsequent attempts to use this symbol's value as a variable will signal +the error @code{void-variable}, unless or until you set it again. + +@code{makunbound} returns @var{symbol}. + +@example +@group +(makunbound 'x) ; @r{Make the global value} + ; @r{of @code{x} void.} + @result{} x +@end group +@group +x +@error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x +@end group +@end example + +If @var{symbol} is locally bound, @code{makunbound} affects the most +local existing binding. This is the only way a symbol can have a void +local binding, since all the constructs that create local bindings +create them with values. In this case, the voidness lasts at most as +long as the binding does; when the binding is removed due to exit from +the construct that made it, the previous or global binding is reexposed +as usual, and the variable is no longer void unless the newly reexposed +binding was void all along. + +@smallexample +@group +(setq x 1) ; @r{Put a value in the global binding.} + @result{} 1 +(let ((x 2)) ; @r{Locally bind it.} + (makunbound 'x) ; @r{Void the local binding.} + x) +@error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x +@end group +@group +x ; @r{The global binding is unchanged.} + @result{} 1 + +(let ((x 2)) ; @r{Locally bind it.} + (let ((x 3)) ; @r{And again.} + (makunbound 'x) ; @r{Void the innermost-local binding.} + x)) ; @r{And refer: it's void.} +@error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x +@end group + +@group +(let ((x 2)) + (let ((x 3)) + (makunbound 'x)) ; @r{Void inner binding, then remove it.} + x) ; @r{Now outer @code{let} binding is visible.} + @result{} 2 +@end group +@end smallexample +@end defun + + A variable that has been made void with @code{makunbound} is +indistinguishable from one that has never received a value and has +always been void. + + You can use the function @code{boundp} to test whether a variable is +currently void. + +@defun boundp variable +@code{boundp} returns @code{t} if @var{variable} (a symbol) is not void; +more precisely, if its current binding is not void. It returns +@code{nil} otherwise. + +@smallexample +@group +(boundp 'abracadabra) ; @r{Starts out void.} + @result{} nil +@end group +@group +(let ((abracadabra 5)) ; @r{Locally bind it.} + (boundp 'abracadabra)) + @result{} t +@end group +@group +(boundp 'abracadabra) ; @r{Still globally void.} + @result{} nil +@end group +@group +(setq abracadabra 5) ; @r{Make it globally nonvoid.} + @result{} 5 +@end group +@group +(boundp 'abracadabra) + @result{} t +@end group +@end smallexample +@end defun + +@node Defining Variables +@section Defining Global Variables +@cindex variable definition + + You may announce your intention to use a symbol as a global variable +with a @dfn{variable definition}: a special form, either @code{defconst} +or @code{defvar}. + + In XEmacs Lisp, definitions serve three purposes. First, they inform +people who read the code that certain symbols are @emph{intended} to be +used a certain way (as variables). Second, they inform the Lisp system +of these things, supplying a value and documentation. Third, they +provide information to utilities such as @code{etags} and +@code{make-docfile}, which create data bases of the functions and +variables in a program. + + The difference between @code{defconst} and @code{defvar} is primarily +a matter of intent, serving to inform human readers of whether programs +will change the variable. XEmacs Lisp does not restrict the ways in +which a variable can be used based on @code{defconst} or @code{defvar} +declarations. However, it does make a difference for initialization: +@code{defconst} unconditionally initializes the variable, while +@code{defvar} initializes it only if it is void. + + One would expect user option variables to be defined with +@code{defconst}, since programs do not change them. Unfortunately, this +has bad results if the definition is in a library that is not preloaded: +@code{defconst} would override any prior value when the library is +loaded. Users would like to be able to set user options in their init +files, and override the default values given in the definitions. For +this reason, user options must be defined with @code{defvar}. + +@defspec defvar symbol [value [doc-string]] +This special form defines @var{symbol} as a value and initializes it. +The definition informs a person reading your code that @var{symbol} is +used as a variable that programs are likely to set or change. It is +also used for all user option variables except in the preloaded parts of +XEmacs. Note that @var{symbol} is not evaluated; the symbol to be +defined must appear explicitly in the @code{defvar}. + +If @var{symbol} already has a value (i.e., it is not void), @var{value} +is not even evaluated, and @var{symbol}'s value remains unchanged. If +@var{symbol} is void and @var{value} is specified, @code{defvar} +evaluates it and sets @var{symbol} to the result. (If @var{value} is +omitted, the value of @var{symbol} is not changed in any case.) + +When you evaluate a top-level @code{defvar} form with @kbd{C-M-x} in +Emacs Lisp mode (@code{eval-defun}), a special feature of +@code{eval-defun} evaluates it as a @code{defconst}. The purpose of +this is to make sure the variable's value is reinitialized, when you ask +for it specifically. + +If @var{symbol} has a buffer-local binding in the current buffer, +@code{defvar} sets the default value, not the local value. +@xref{Buffer-Local Variables}. + +If the @var{doc-string} argument appears, it specifies the documentation +for the variable. (This opportunity to specify documentation is one of +the main benefits of defining the variable.) The documentation is +stored in the symbol's @code{variable-documentation} property. The +XEmacs help functions (@pxref{Documentation}) look for this property. + +If the first character of @var{doc-string} is @samp{*}, it means that +this variable is considered a user option. This lets users set the +variable conveniently using the commands @code{set-variable} and +@code{edit-options}. + +For example, this form defines @code{foo} but does not set its value: + +@example +@group +(defvar foo) + @result{} foo +@end group +@end example + +The following example sets the value of @code{bar} to @code{23}, and +gives it a documentation string: + +@example +@group +(defvar bar 23 + "The normal weight of a bar.") + @result{} bar +@end group +@end example + +The following form changes the documentation string for @code{bar}, +making it a user option, but does not change the value, since @code{bar} +already has a value. (The addition @code{(1+ 23)} is not even +performed.) + +@example +@group +(defvar bar (1+ 23) + "*The normal weight of a bar.") + @result{} bar +@end group +@group +bar + @result{} 23 +@end group +@end example + +Here is an equivalent expression for the @code{defvar} special form: + +@example +@group +(defvar @var{symbol} @var{value} @var{doc-string}) +@equiv{} +(progn + (if (not (boundp '@var{symbol})) + (setq @var{symbol} @var{value})) + (put '@var{symbol} 'variable-documentation '@var{doc-string}) + '@var{symbol}) +@end group +@end example + +The @code{defvar} form returns @var{symbol}, but it is normally used +at top level in a file where its value does not matter. +@end defspec + +@defspec defconst symbol [value [doc-string]] +This special form defines @var{symbol} as a value and initializes it. +It informs a person reading your code that @var{symbol} has a global +value, established here, that will not normally be changed or locally +bound by the execution of the program. The user, however, may be +welcome to change it. Note that @var{symbol} is not evaluated; the +symbol to be defined must appear explicitly in the @code{defconst}. + +@code{defconst} always evaluates @var{value} and sets the global value +of @var{symbol} to the result, provided @var{value} is given. If +@var{symbol} has a buffer-local binding in the current buffer, +@code{defconst} sets the default value, not the local value. + +@strong{Please note:} Don't use @code{defconst} for user option +variables in libraries that are not standardly preloaded. The user +should be able to specify a value for such a variable in the +@file{.emacs} file, so that it will be in effect if and when the library +is loaded later. + +Here, @code{pi} is a constant that presumably ought not to be changed +by anyone (attempts by the Indiana State Legislature notwithstanding). +As the second form illustrates, however, this is only advisory. + +@example +@group +(defconst pi 3.1415 "Pi to five places.") + @result{} pi +@end group +@group +(setq pi 3) + @result{} pi +@end group +@group +pi + @result{} 3 +@end group +@end example +@end defspec + +@defun user-variable-p variable +@cindex user option +This function returns @code{t} if @var{variable} is a user option---a +variable intended to be set by the user for customization---and +@code{nil} otherwise. (Variables other than user options exist for the +internal purposes of Lisp programs, and users need not know about them.) + +User option variables are distinguished from other variables by the +first character of the @code{variable-documentation} property. If the +property exists and is a string, and its first character is @samp{*}, +then the variable is a user option. +@end defun + + If a user option variable has a @code{variable-interactive} property, +the @code{set-variable} command uses that value to control reading the +new value for the variable. The property's value is used as if it were +the argument to @code{interactive}. + + @strong{Warning:} If the @code{defconst} and @code{defvar} special +forms are used while the variable has a local binding, they set the +local binding's value; the global binding is not changed. This is not +what we really want. To prevent it, use these special forms at top +level in a file, where normally no local binding is in effect, and make +sure to load the file before making a local binding for the variable. + +@node Accessing Variables +@section Accessing Variable Values + + The usual way to reference a variable is to write the symbol which +names it (@pxref{Symbol Forms}). This requires you to specify the +variable name when you write the program. Usually that is exactly what +you want to do. Occasionally you need to choose at run time which +variable to reference; then you can use @code{symbol-value}. + +@defun symbol-value symbol +This function returns the value of @var{symbol}. This is the value in +the innermost local binding of the symbol, or its global value if it +has no local bindings. + +@example +@group +(setq abracadabra 5) + @result{} 5 +@end group +@group +(setq foo 9) + @result{} 9 +@end group + +@group +;; @r{Here the symbol @code{abracadabra}} +;; @r{is the symbol whose value is examined.} +(let ((abracadabra 'foo)) + (symbol-value 'abracadabra)) + @result{} foo +@end group + +@group +;; @r{Here the value of @code{abracadabra},} +;; @r{which is @code{foo},} +;; @r{is the symbol whose value is examined.} +(let ((abracadabra 'foo)) + (symbol-value abracadabra)) + @result{} 9 +@end group + +@group +(symbol-value 'abracadabra) + @result{} 5 +@end group +@end example + +A @code{void-variable} error is signaled if @var{symbol} has neither a +local binding nor a global value. +@end defun + +@node Setting Variables +@section How to Alter a Variable Value + + The usual way to change the value of a variable is with the special +form @code{setq}. When you need to compute the choice of variable at +run time, use the function @code{set}. + +@defspec setq [symbol form]@dots{} +This special form is the most common method of changing a variable's +value. Each @var{symbol} is given a new value, which is the result of +evaluating the corresponding @var{form}. The most-local existing +binding of the symbol is changed. + +@code{setq} does not evaluate @var{symbol}; it sets the symbol that you +write. We say that this argument is @dfn{automatically quoted}. The +@samp{q} in @code{setq} stands for ``quoted.'' + +The value of the @code{setq} form is the value of the last @var{form}. + +@example +@group +(setq x (1+ 2)) + @result{} 3 +@end group +x ; @r{@code{x} now has a global value.} + @result{} 3 +@group +(let ((x 5)) + (setq x 6) ; @r{The local binding of @code{x} is set.} + x) + @result{} 6 +@end group +x ; @r{The global value is unchanged.} + @result{} 3 +@end example + +Note that the first @var{form} is evaluated, then the first +@var{symbol} is set, then the second @var{form} is evaluated, then the +second @var{symbol} is set, and so on: + +@example +@group +(setq x 10 ; @r{Notice that @code{x} is set before} + y (1+ x)) ; @r{the value of @code{y} is computed.} + @result{} 11 +@end group +@end example +@end defspec + +@defun set symbol value +This function sets @var{symbol}'s value to @var{value}, then returns +@var{value}. Since @code{set} is a function, the expression written for +@var{symbol} is evaluated to obtain the symbol to set. + +The most-local existing binding of the variable is the binding that is +set; shadowed bindings are not affected. + +@example +@group +(set one 1) +@error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: one +@end group +@group +(set 'one 1) + @result{} 1 +@end group +@group +(set 'two 'one) + @result{} one +@end group +@group +(set two 2) ; @r{@code{two} evaluates to symbol @code{one}.} + @result{} 2 +@end group +@group +one ; @r{So it is @code{one} that was set.} + @result{} 2 +(let ((one 1)) ; @r{This binding of @code{one} is set,} + (set 'one 3) ; @r{not the global value.} + one) + @result{} 3 +@end group +@group +one + @result{} 2 +@end group +@end example + +If @var{symbol} is not actually a symbol, a @code{wrong-type-argument} +error is signaled. + +@example +(set '(x y) 'z) +@error{} Wrong type argument: symbolp, (x y) +@end example + +Logically speaking, @code{set} is a more fundamental primitive than +@code{setq}. Any use of @code{setq} can be trivially rewritten to use +@code{set}; @code{setq} could even be defined as a macro, given the +availability of @code{set}. However, @code{set} itself is rarely used; +beginners hardly need to know about it. It is useful only for choosing +at run time which variable to set. For example, the command +@code{set-variable}, which reads a variable name from the user and then +sets the variable, needs to use @code{set}. + +@cindex CL note---@code{set} local +@quotation +@b{Common Lisp note:} In Common Lisp, @code{set} always changes the +symbol's special value, ignoring any lexical bindings. In XEmacs Lisp, +all variables and all bindings are (in effect) special, so @code{set} +always affects the most local existing binding. +@end quotation +@end defun + + One other function for setting a variable is designed to add +an element to a list if it is not already present in the list. + +@defun add-to-list symbol element +This function sets the variable @var{symbol} by consing @var{element} +onto the old value, if @var{element} is not already a member of that +value. It returns the resulting list, whether updated or not. The +value of @var{symbol} had better be a list already before the call. + +The argument @var{symbol} is not implicitly quoted; @code{add-to-list} +is an ordinary function, like @code{set} and unlike @code{setq}. Quote +the argument yourself if that is what you want. + +Here's a scenario showing how to use @code{add-to-list}: + +@example +(setq foo '(a b)) + @result{} (a b) + +(add-to-list 'foo 'c) ;; @r{Add @code{c}.} + @result{} (c a b) + +(add-to-list 'foo 'b) ;; @r{No effect.} + @result{} (c a b) + +foo ;; @r{@code{foo} was changed.} + @result{} (c a b) +@end example +@end defun + + An equivalent expression for @code{(add-to-list '@var{var} +@var{value})} is this: + +@example +(or (member @var{value} @var{var}) + (setq @var{var} (cons @var{value} @var{var}))) +@end example + +@node Variable Scoping +@section Scoping Rules for Variable Bindings + + A given symbol @code{foo} may have several local variable bindings, +established at different places in the Lisp program, as well as a global +binding. The most recently established binding takes precedence over +the others. + +@cindex scope +@cindex extent +@cindex dynamic scoping + Local bindings in XEmacs Lisp have @dfn{indefinite scope} and +@dfn{dynamic extent}. @dfn{Scope} refers to @emph{where} textually in +the source code the binding can be accessed. Indefinite scope means +that any part of the program can potentially access the variable +binding. @dfn{Extent} refers to @emph{when}, as the program is +executing, the binding exists. Dynamic extent means that the binding +lasts as long as the activation of the construct that established it. + + The combination of dynamic extent and indefinite scope is called +@dfn{dynamic scoping}. By contrast, most programming languages use +@dfn{lexical scoping}, in which references to a local variable must be +located textually within the function or block that binds the variable. + +@cindex CL note---special variables +@quotation +@b{Common Lisp note:} Variables declared ``special'' in Common Lisp +are dynamically scoped, like variables in XEmacs Lisp. +@end quotation + +@menu +* Scope:: Scope means where in the program a value is visible. + Comparison with other languages. +* Extent:: Extent means how long in time a value exists. +* Impl of Scope:: Two ways to implement dynamic scoping. +* Using Scoping:: How to use dynamic scoping carefully and avoid problems. +@end menu + +@node Scope +@subsection Scope + + XEmacs Lisp uses @dfn{indefinite scope} for local variable bindings. +This means that any function anywhere in the program text might access a +given binding of a variable. Consider the following function +definitions: + +@example +@group +(defun binder (x) ; @r{@code{x} is bound in @code{binder}.} + (foo 5)) ; @r{@code{foo} is some other function.} +@end group + +@group +(defun user () ; @r{@code{x} is used in @code{user}.} + (list x)) +@end group +@end example + + In a lexically scoped language, the binding of @code{x} in +@code{binder} would never be accessible in @code{user}, because +@code{user} is not textually contained within the function +@code{binder}. However, in dynamically scoped XEmacs Lisp, @code{user} +may or may not refer to the binding of @code{x} established in +@code{binder}, depending on circumstances: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +If we call @code{user} directly without calling @code{binder} at all, +then whatever binding of @code{x} is found, it cannot come from +@code{binder}. + +@item +If we define @code{foo} as follows and call @code{binder}, then the +binding made in @code{binder} will be seen in @code{user}: + +@example +@group +(defun foo (lose) + (user)) +@end group +@end example + +@item +If we define @code{foo} as follows and call @code{binder}, then the +binding made in @code{binder} @emph{will not} be seen in @code{user}: + +@example +(defun foo (x) + (user)) +@end example + +@noindent +Here, when @code{foo} is called by @code{binder}, it binds @code{x}. +(The binding in @code{foo} is said to @dfn{shadow} the one made in +@code{binder}.) Therefore, @code{user} will access the @code{x} bound +by @code{foo} instead of the one bound by @code{binder}. +@end itemize + +@node Extent +@subsection Extent + + @dfn{Extent} refers to the time during program execution that a +variable name is valid. In XEmacs Lisp, a variable is valid only while +the form that bound it is executing. This is called @dfn{dynamic +extent}. ``Local'' or ``automatic'' variables in most languages, +including C and Pascal, have dynamic extent. + + One alternative to dynamic extent is @dfn{indefinite extent}. This +means that a variable binding can live on past the exit from the form +that made the binding. Common Lisp and Scheme, for example, support +this, but XEmacs Lisp does not. + + To illustrate this, the function below, @code{make-add}, returns a +function that purports to add @var{n} to its own argument @var{m}. +This would work in Common Lisp, but it does not work as intended in +XEmacs Lisp, because after the call to @code{make-add} exits, the +variable @code{n} is no longer bound to the actual argument 2. + +@example +(defun make-add (n) + (function (lambda (m) (+ n m)))) ; @r{Return a function.} + @result{} make-add +(fset 'add2 (make-add 2)) ; @r{Define function @code{add2}} + ; @r{with @code{(make-add 2)}.} + @result{} (lambda (m) (+ n m)) +(add2 4) ; @r{Try to add 2 to 4.} +@error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: n +@end example + +@cindex closures not available + Some Lisp dialects have ``closures'', objects that are like functions +but record additional variable bindings. XEmacs Lisp does not have +closures. + +@node Impl of Scope +@subsection Implementation of Dynamic Scoping +@cindex deep binding + + A simple sample implementation (which is not how XEmacs Lisp actually +works) may help you understand dynamic binding. This technique is +called @dfn{deep binding} and was used in early Lisp systems. + + Suppose there is a stack of bindings: variable-value pairs. At entry +to a function or to a @code{let} form, we can push bindings on the stack +for the arguments or local variables created there. We can pop those +bindings from the stack at exit from the binding construct. + + We can find the value of a variable by searching the stack from top to +bottom for a binding for that variable; the value from that binding is +the value of the variable. To set the variable, we search for the +current binding, then store the new value into that binding. + + As you can see, a function's bindings remain in effect as long as it +continues execution, even during its calls to other functions. That is +why we say the extent of the binding is dynamic. And any other function +can refer to the bindings, if it uses the same variables while the +bindings are in effect. That is why we say the scope is indefinite. + +@cindex shallow binding + The actual implementation of variable scoping in XEmacs Lisp uses a +technique called @dfn{shallow binding}. Each variable has a standard +place in which its current value is always found---the value cell of the +symbol. + + In shallow binding, setting the variable works by storing a value in +the value cell. Creating a new binding works by pushing the old value +(belonging to a previous binding) on a stack, and storing the local value +in the value cell. Eliminating a binding works by popping the old value +off the stack, into the value cell. + + We use shallow binding because it has the same results as deep +binding, but runs faster, since there is never a need to search for a +binding. + +@node Using Scoping +@subsection Proper Use of Dynamic Scoping + + Binding a variable in one function and using it in another is a +powerful technique, but if used without restraint, it can make programs +hard to understand. There are two clean ways to use this technique: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +Use or bind the variable only in a few related functions, written close +together in one file. Such a variable is used for communication within +one program. + +You should write comments to inform other programmers that they can see +all uses of the variable before them, and to advise them not to add uses +elsewhere. + +@item +Give the variable a well-defined, documented meaning, and make all +appropriate functions refer to it (but not bind it or set it) wherever +that meaning is relevant. For example, the variable +@code{case-fold-search} is defined as ``non-@code{nil} means ignore case +when searching''; various search and replace functions refer to it +directly or through their subroutines, but do not bind or set it. + +Then you can bind the variable in other programs, knowing reliably what +the effect will be. +@end itemize + + In either case, you should define the variable with @code{defvar}. +This helps other people understand your program by telling them to look +for inter-function usage. It also avoids a warning from the byte +compiler. Choose the variable's name to avoid name conflicts---don't +use short names like @code{x}. + +@node Buffer-Local Variables +@section Buffer-Local Variables +@cindex variables, buffer-local +@cindex buffer-local variables + + Global and local variable bindings are found in most programming +languages in one form or another. XEmacs also supports another, unusual +kind of variable binding: @dfn{buffer-local} bindings, which apply only +to one buffer. XEmacs Lisp is meant for programming editing commands, +and having different values for a variable in different buffers is an +important customization method. + +@menu +* Intro to Buffer-Local:: Introduction and concepts. +* Creating Buffer-Local:: Creating and destroying buffer-local bindings. +* Default Value:: The default value is seen in buffers + that don't have their own local values. +@end menu + +@node Intro to Buffer-Local +@subsection Introduction to Buffer-Local Variables + + A buffer-local variable has a buffer-local binding associated with a +particular buffer. The binding is in effect when that buffer is +current; otherwise, it is not in effect. If you set the variable while +a buffer-local binding is in effect, the new value goes in that binding, +so the global binding is unchanged; this means that the change is +visible in that buffer alone. + + A variable may have buffer-local bindings in some buffers but not in +others. The global binding is shared by all the buffers that don't have +their own bindings. Thus, if you set the variable in a buffer that does +not have a buffer-local binding for it, the new value is visible in all +buffers except those with buffer-local bindings. (Here we are assuming +that there are no @code{let}-style local bindings to complicate the issue.) + + The most common use of buffer-local bindings is for major modes to change +variables that control the behavior of commands. For example, C mode and +Lisp mode both set the variable @code{paragraph-start} to specify that only +blank lines separate paragraphs. They do this by making the variable +buffer-local in the buffer that is being put into C mode or Lisp mode, and +then setting it to the new value for that mode. + + The usual way to make a buffer-local binding is with +@code{make-local-variable}, which is what major mode commands use. This +affects just the current buffer; all other buffers (including those yet to +be created) continue to share the global value. + +@cindex automatically buffer-local + A more powerful operation is to mark the variable as +@dfn{automatically buffer-local} by calling +@code{make-variable-buffer-local}. You can think of this as making the +variable local in all buffers, even those yet to be created. More +precisely, the effect is that setting the variable automatically makes +the variable local to the current buffer if it is not already so. All +buffers start out by sharing the global value of the variable as usual, +but any @code{setq} creates a buffer-local binding for the current +buffer. The new value is stored in the buffer-local binding, leaving +the (default) global binding untouched. The global value can no longer +be changed with @code{setq}; you need to use @code{setq-default} to do +that. + +@ignore +Section about not changing buffers during let bindings. Mly fixed +this for XEmacs. +@end ignore + Local variables in a file you edit are also represented by +buffer-local bindings for the buffer that holds the file within XEmacs. +@xref{Auto Major Mode}. + +@node Creating Buffer-Local +@subsection Creating and Deleting Buffer-Local Bindings + +@deffn Command make-local-variable variable +This function creates a buffer-local binding in the current buffer for +@var{variable} (a symbol). Other buffers are not affected. The value +returned is @var{variable}. + +@c Emacs 19 feature +The buffer-local value of @var{variable} starts out as the same value +@var{variable} previously had. If @var{variable} was void, it remains +void. + +@example +@group +;; @r{In buffer @samp{b1}:} +(setq foo 5) ; @r{Affects all buffers.} + @result{} 5 +@end group +@group +(make-local-variable 'foo) ; @r{Now it is local in @samp{b1}.} + @result{} foo +@end group +@group +foo ; @r{That did not change} + @result{} 5 ; @r{the value.} +@end group +@group +(setq foo 6) ; @r{Change the value} + @result{} 6 ; @r{in @samp{b1}.} +@end group +@group +foo + @result{} 6 +@end group + +@group +;; @r{In buffer @samp{b2}, the value hasn't changed.} +(save-excursion + (set-buffer "b2") + foo) + @result{} 5 +@end group +@end example + +Making a variable buffer-local within a @code{let}-binding for that +variable does not work. This is because @code{let} does not distinguish +between different kinds of bindings; it knows only which variable the +binding was made for. + +@strong{Please note:} do not use @code{make-local-variable} for a hook +variable. Instead, use @code{make-local-hook}. @xref{Hooks}. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command make-variable-buffer-local variable +This function marks @var{variable} (a symbol) automatically +buffer-local, so that any subsequent attempt to set it will make it +local to the current buffer at the time. + +The value returned is @var{variable}. +@end deffn + +@defun local-variable-p variable &optional buffer +This returns @code{t} if @var{variable} is buffer-local in buffer +@var{buffer} (which defaults to the current buffer); otherwise, +@code{nil}. +@end defun + +@defun buffer-local-variables &optional buffer +This function returns a list describing the buffer-local variables in +buffer @var{buffer}. It returns an association list (@pxref{Association +Lists}) in which each association contains one buffer-local variable and +its value. When a buffer-local variable is void in @var{buffer}, then +it appears directly in the resulting list. If @var{buffer} is omitted, +the current buffer is used. + +@example +@group +(make-local-variable 'foobar) +(makunbound 'foobar) +(make-local-variable 'bind-me) +(setq bind-me 69) +@end group +(setq lcl (buffer-local-variables)) + ;; @r{First, built-in variables local in all buffers:} +@result{} ((mark-active . nil) + (buffer-undo-list nil) + (mode-name . "Fundamental") + @dots{} +@group + ;; @r{Next, non-built-in local variables.} + ;; @r{This one is local and void:} + foobar + ;; @r{This one is local and nonvoid:} + (bind-me . 69)) +@end group +@end example + +Note that storing new values into the @sc{cdr}s of cons cells in this +list does @emph{not} change the local values of the variables. +@end defun + +@deffn Command kill-local-variable variable +This function deletes the buffer-local binding (if any) for +@var{variable} (a symbol) in the current buffer. As a result, the +global (default) binding of @var{variable} becomes visible in this +buffer. Usually this results in a change in the value of +@var{variable}, since the global value is usually different from the +buffer-local value just eliminated. + +If you kill the local binding of a variable that automatically becomes +local when set, this makes the global value visible in the current +buffer. However, if you set the variable again, that will once again +create a local binding for it. + +@code{kill-local-variable} returns @var{variable}. + +This function is a command because it is sometimes useful to kill one +buffer-local variable interactively, just as it is useful to create +buffer-local variables interactively. +@end deffn + +@defun kill-all-local-variables +This function eliminates all the buffer-local variable bindings of the +current buffer except for variables marked as ``permanent''. As a +result, the buffer will see the default values of most variables. + +This function also resets certain other information pertaining to the +buffer: it sets the local keymap to @code{nil}, the syntax table to the +value of @code{standard-syntax-table}, and the abbrev table to the value +of @code{fundamental-mode-abbrev-table}. + +Every major mode command begins by calling this function, which has the +effect of switching to Fundamental mode and erasing most of the effects +of the previous major mode. To ensure that this does its job, the +variables that major modes set should not be marked permanent. + +@code{kill-all-local-variables} returns @code{nil}. +@end defun + +@c Emacs 19 feature +@cindex permanent local variable +A local variable is @dfn{permanent} if the variable name (a symbol) has a +@code{permanent-local} property that is non-@code{nil}. Permanent +locals are appropriate for data pertaining to where the file came from +or how to save it, rather than with how to edit the contents. + +@node Default Value +@subsection The Default Value of a Buffer-Local Variable +@cindex default value + + The global value of a variable with buffer-local bindings is also +called the @dfn{default} value, because it is the value that is in +effect except when specifically overridden. + + The functions @code{default-value} and @code{setq-default} access and +change a variable's default value regardless of whether the current +buffer has a buffer-local binding. For example, you could use +@code{setq-default} to change the default setting of +@code{paragraph-start} for most buffers; and this would work even when +you are in a C or Lisp mode buffer that has a buffer-local value for +this variable. + +@c Emacs 19 feature + The special forms @code{defvar} and @code{defconst} also set the +default value (if they set the variable at all), rather than any local +value. + +@defun default-value symbol +This function returns @var{symbol}'s default value. This is the value +that is seen in buffers that do not have their own values for this +variable. If @var{symbol} is not buffer-local, this is equivalent to +@code{symbol-value} (@pxref{Accessing Variables}). +@end defun + +@c Emacs 19 feature +@defun default-boundp symbol +The function @code{default-boundp} tells you whether @var{symbol}'s +default value is nonvoid. If @code{(default-boundp 'foo)} returns +@code{nil}, then @code{(default-value 'foo)} would get an error. + +@code{default-boundp} is to @code{default-value} as @code{boundp} is to +@code{symbol-value}. +@end defun + +@defspec setq-default symbol value +This sets the default value of @var{symbol} to @var{value}. It does not +evaluate @var{symbol}, but does evaluate @var{value}. The value of the +@code{setq-default} form is @var{value}. + +If a @var{symbol} is not buffer-local for the current buffer, and is not +marked automatically buffer-local, @code{setq-default} has the same +effect as @code{setq}. If @var{symbol} is buffer-local for the current +buffer, then this changes the value that other buffers will see (as long +as they don't have a buffer-local value), but not the value that the +current buffer sees. + +@example +@group +;; @r{In buffer @samp{foo}:} +(make-local-variable 'local) + @result{} local +@end group +@group +(setq local 'value-in-foo) + @result{} value-in-foo +@end group +@group +(setq-default local 'new-default) + @result{} new-default +@end group +@group +local + @result{} value-in-foo +@end group +@group +(default-value 'local) + @result{} new-default +@end group + +@group +;; @r{In (the new) buffer @samp{bar}:} +local + @result{} new-default +@end group +@group +(default-value 'local) + @result{} new-default +@end group +@group +(setq local 'another-default) + @result{} another-default +@end group +@group +(default-value 'local) + @result{} another-default +@end group + +@group +;; @r{Back in buffer @samp{foo}:} +local + @result{} value-in-foo +(default-value 'local) + @result{} another-default +@end group +@end example +@end defspec + +@defun set-default symbol value +This function is like @code{setq-default}, except that @var{symbol} is +evaluated. + +@example +@group +(set-default (car '(a b c)) 23) + @result{} 23 +@end group +@group +(default-value 'a) + @result{} 23 +@end group +@end example +@end defun + +@node Variable Aliases +@section Variable Aliases +@cindex variables, indirect +@cindex indirect variables +@cindex variable aliases +@cindex aliases, for variables + +You can define a variable as an @dfn{alias} for another. Any time +you reference the former variable, the current value of the latter +is returned. Any time you change the value of the former variable, +the value of the latter is actually changed. This is useful in +cases where you want to rename a variable but still make old code +work (@pxref{Obsoleteness}). + +@defun defvaralias variable alias +This function defines @var{variable} as an alias for @var{alias}. +Thenceforth, any operations performed on @var{variable} will actually be +performed on @var{alias}. Both @var{variable} and @var{alias} should be +symbols. If @var{alias} is @code{nil}, remove any aliases for +@var{variable}. @var{alias} can itself be aliased, and the chain of +variable aliases will be followed appropriately. If @var{variable} +already has a value, this value will be shadowed until the alias is +removed, at which point it will be restored. Currently @var{variable} +cannot be a built-in variable, a variable that has a buffer-local value +in any buffer, or the symbols @code{nil} or @code{t}. +@end defun + +@defun variable-alias variable +If @var{variable} is aliased to another variable, this function returns +that variable. @var{variable} should be a symbol. If @var{variable} is +not aliased, this function returns @code{nil}. +@end defun + +@defun indirect-variable object +This function returns the variable at the end of @var{object}'s +variable-alias chain. If @var{object} is a symbol, follow all variable +aliases and return the final (non-aliased) symbol. If @var{object} is +not a symbol, just return it. Signal a +@code{cyclic-variable-indirection} error if there is a loop in the +variable chain of symbols. +@end defun + +