2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
9 A @dfn{variable} is a name used in a program to stand for a value.
10 In Lisp, each variable is represented by a Lisp symbol
11 (@pxref{Symbols}). The variable name is simply the symbol's name, and
12 the variable's value is stored in the symbol's value cell@footnote{To
13 be precise, under the default @dfn{dynamic scoping} rule, the value
14 cell always holds the variable's current value, but this is not the
15 case under the @dfn{lexical scoping} rule. @xref{Variable Scoping},
16 for details.}. @xref{Symbol Components}. In Emacs Lisp, the use of a
17 symbol as a variable is independent of its use as a function name.
19 As previously noted in this manual, a Lisp program is represented
20 primarily by Lisp objects, and only secondarily as text. The textual
21 form of a Lisp program is given by the read syntax of the Lisp objects
22 that constitute the program. Hence, the textual form of a variable in
23 a Lisp program is written using the read syntax for the symbol
24 representing the variable.
27 * Global Variables:: Variable values that exist permanently, everywhere.
28 * Constant Variables:: Variables that never change.
29 * Local Variables:: Variable values that exist only temporarily.
30 * Void Variables:: Symbols that lack values.
31 * Defining Variables:: A definition says a symbol is used as a variable.
32 * Tips for Defining:: Things you should think about when you
34 * Accessing Variables:: Examining values of variables whose names
35 are known only at run time.
36 * Setting Variables:: Storing new values in variables.
37 * Watching Variables:: Running a function when a variable is changed.
38 * Variable Scoping:: How Lisp chooses among local and global values.
39 * Buffer-Local Variables:: Variable values in effect only in one buffer.
40 * File Local Variables:: Handling local variable lists in files.
41 * Directory Local Variables:: Local variables common to all files in a directory.
42 * Connection Local Variables:: Local variables common for remote connections.
43 * Variable Aliases:: Variables that are aliases for other variables.
44 * Variables with Restricted Values:: Non-constant variables whose value can
45 @emph{not} be an arbitrary Lisp object.
46 * Generalized Variables:: Extending the concept of variables.
49 @node Global Variables
50 @section Global Variables
51 @cindex global variable
53 The simplest way to use a variable is @dfn{globally}. This means that
54 the variable has just one value at a time, and this value is in effect
55 (at least for the moment) throughout the Lisp system. The value remains
56 in effect until you specify a new one. When a new value replaces the
57 old one, no trace of the old value remains in the variable.
59 You specify a value for a symbol with @code{setq}. For example,
66 gives the variable @code{x} the value @code{(a b)}. Note that
67 @code{setq} is a special form (@pxref{Special Forms}); it does not
68 evaluate its first argument, the name of the variable, but it does
69 evaluate the second argument, the new value.
71 Once the variable has a value, you can refer to it by using the
72 symbol itself as an expression. Thus,
81 assuming the @code{setq} form shown above has already been executed.
83 If you do set the same variable again, the new value replaces the old
101 @node Constant Variables
102 @section Variables that Never Change
103 @cindex @code{setting-constant} error
104 @cindex keyword symbol
105 @cindex variable with constant value
106 @cindex constant variables
107 @cindex symbol that evaluates to itself
108 @cindex symbol with constant value
110 In Emacs Lisp, certain symbols normally evaluate to themselves. These
111 include @code{nil} and @code{t}, as well as any symbol whose name starts
112 with @samp{:} (these are called @dfn{keywords}). These symbols cannot
113 be rebound, nor can their values be changed. Any attempt to set or bind
114 @code{nil} or @code{t} signals a @code{setting-constant} error. The
115 same is true for a keyword (a symbol whose name starts with @samp{:}),
116 if it is interned in the standard obarray, except that setting such a
117 symbol to itself is not an error.
126 @error{} Attempt to set constant symbol: nil
130 @defun keywordp object
131 function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a symbol whose name
132 starts with @samp{:}, interned in the standard obarray, and returns
133 @code{nil} otherwise.
136 These constants are fundamentally different from the constants
137 defined using the @code{defconst} special form (@pxref{Defining
138 Variables}). A @code{defconst} form serves to inform human readers
139 that you do not intend to change the value of a variable, but Emacs
140 does not raise an error if you actually change it.
142 @node Local Variables
143 @section Local Variables
144 @cindex binding local variables
145 @cindex local variables
146 @cindex local binding
147 @cindex global binding
149 Global variables have values that last until explicitly superseded
150 with new values. Sometimes it is useful to give a variable a
151 @dfn{local value}---a value that takes effect only within a certain
152 part of a Lisp program. When a variable has a local value, we say
153 that it is @dfn{locally bound} to that value, and that it is a
154 @dfn{local variable}.
156 For example, when a function is called, its argument variables
157 receive local values, which are the actual arguments supplied to the
158 function call; these local bindings take effect within the body of the
159 function. To take another example, the @code{let} special form
160 explicitly establishes local bindings for specific variables, which
161 take effect within the body of the @code{let} form.
163 We also speak of the @dfn{global binding}, which is where
164 (conceptually) the global value is kept.
166 @cindex shadowing of variables
167 Establishing a local binding saves away the variable's previous
168 value (or lack of one). We say that the previous value is
169 @dfn{shadowed}. Both global and local values may be shadowed. If a
170 local binding is in effect, using @code{setq} on the local variable
171 stores the specified value in the local binding. When that local
172 binding is no longer in effect, the previously shadowed value (or lack
175 @cindex current binding
176 A variable can have more than one local binding at a time (e.g., if
177 there are nested @code{let} forms that bind the variable). The
178 @dfn{current binding} is the local binding that is actually in effect.
179 It determines the value returned by evaluating the variable symbol,
180 and it is the binding acted on by @code{setq}.
182 For most purposes, you can think of the current binding as the
183 innermost local binding, or the global binding if there is no
184 local binding. To be more precise, a rule called the @dfn{scoping
185 rule} determines where in a program a local binding takes effect. The
186 default scoping rule in Emacs Lisp is called @dfn{dynamic scoping},
187 which simply states that the current binding at any given point in the
188 execution of a program is the most recently-created binding for that
189 variable that still exists. For details about dynamic scoping, and an
190 alternative scoping rule called @dfn{lexical scoping}, @xref{Variable
193 The special forms @code{let} and @code{let*} exist to create local
196 @defspec let (bindings@dots{}) forms@dots{}
197 This special form sets up local bindings for a certain set of
198 variables, as specified by @var{bindings}, and then evaluates all of
199 the @var{forms} in textual order. Its return value is the value of
200 the last form in @var{forms}.
202 Each of the @var{bindings} is either @w{(i) a} symbol, in which case
203 that symbol is locally bound to @code{nil}; or @w{(ii) a} list of the
204 form @code{(@var{symbol} @var{value-form})}, in which case
205 @var{symbol} is locally bound to the result of evaluating
206 @var{value-form}. If @var{value-form} is omitted, @code{nil} is used.
208 All of the @var{value-form}s in @var{bindings} are evaluated in the
209 order they appear and @emph{before} binding any of the symbols to them.
210 Here is an example of this: @code{z} is bound to the old value of
211 @code{y}, which is 2, not the new value of @code{y}, which is 1.
228 @defspec let* (bindings@dots{}) forms@dots{}
229 This special form is like @code{let}, but it binds each variable right
230 after computing its local value, before computing the local value for
231 the next variable. Therefore, an expression in @var{bindings} can
232 refer to the preceding symbols bound in this @code{let*} form.
233 Compare the following example with the example above for @code{let}.
243 (z y)) ; @r{Use the just-established value of @code{y}.}
250 Here is a complete list of the other facilities that create local
255 Function calls (@pxref{Functions}).
258 Macro calls (@pxref{Macros}).
261 @code{condition-case} (@pxref{Errors}).
264 Variables can also have buffer-local bindings (@pxref{Buffer-Local
265 Variables}); a few variables have terminal-local bindings
266 (@pxref{Multiple Terminals}). These kinds of bindings work somewhat
267 like ordinary local bindings, but they are localized depending on
268 where you are in Emacs.
270 @defopt max-specpdl-size
271 @anchor{Definition of max-specpdl-size}
272 @cindex variable limit error
273 @cindex evaluation error
274 @cindex infinite recursion
275 This variable defines the limit on the total number of local variable
276 bindings and @code{unwind-protect} cleanups (see @ref{Cleanups,,
277 Cleaning Up from Nonlocal Exits}) that are allowed before Emacs
278 signals an error (with data @code{"Variable binding depth exceeds
281 This limit, with the associated error when it is exceeded, is one way
282 that Lisp avoids infinite recursion on an ill-defined function.
283 @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} provides another limit on depth of nesting.
284 @xref{Definition of max-lisp-eval-depth,, Eval}.
286 The default value is 1300. Entry to the Lisp debugger increases the
287 value, if there is little room left, to make sure the debugger itself
292 @section When a Variable is Void
293 @cindex @code{void-variable} error
294 @cindex void variable
296 We say that a variable is void if its symbol has an unassigned value
297 cell (@pxref{Symbol Components}).
299 Under Emacs Lisp's default dynamic scoping rule (@pxref{Variable
300 Scoping}), the value cell stores the variable's current (local or
301 global) value. Note that an unassigned value cell is @emph{not} the
302 same as having @code{nil} in the value cell. The symbol @code{nil} is
303 a Lisp object and can be the value of a variable, just as any other
304 object can be; but it is still a value. If a variable is void, trying
305 to evaluate the variable signals a @code{void-variable} error, instead
306 of returning a value.
308 Under the optional lexical scoping rule, the value cell only holds
309 the variable's global value---the value outside of any lexical binding
310 construct. When a variable is lexically bound, the local value is
311 determined by the lexical environment; hence, variables can have local
312 values even if their symbols' value cells are unassigned.
314 @defun makunbound symbol
315 This function empties out the value cell of @var{symbol}, making the
316 variable void. It returns @var{symbol}.
318 If @var{symbol} has a dynamic local binding, @code{makunbound} voids
319 the current binding, and this voidness lasts only as long as the local
320 binding is in effect. Afterwards, the previously shadowed local or
321 global binding is reexposed; then the variable will no longer be void,
322 unless the reexposed binding is void too.
324 Here are some examples (assuming dynamic binding is in effect):
328 (setq x 1) ; @r{Put a value in the global binding.}
330 (let ((x 2)) ; @r{Locally bind it.}
331 (makunbound 'x) ; @r{Void the local binding.}
333 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x
336 x ; @r{The global binding is unchanged.}
339 (let ((x 2)) ; @r{Locally bind it.}
340 (let ((x 3)) ; @r{And again.}
341 (makunbound 'x) ; @r{Void the innermost-local binding.}
342 x)) ; @r{And refer: it's void.}
343 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x
349 (makunbound 'x)) ; @r{Void inner binding, then remove it.}
350 x) ; @r{Now outer @code{let} binding is visible.}
356 @defun boundp variable
357 This function returns @code{t} if @var{variable} (a symbol) is not
358 void, and @code{nil} if it is void.
360 Here are some examples (assuming dynamic binding is in effect):
364 (boundp 'abracadabra) ; @r{Starts out void.}
368 (let ((abracadabra 5)) ; @r{Locally bind it.}
369 (boundp 'abracadabra))
373 (boundp 'abracadabra) ; @r{Still globally void.}
377 (setq abracadabra 5) ; @r{Make it globally nonvoid.}
381 (boundp 'abracadabra)
387 @node Defining Variables
388 @section Defining Global Variables
389 @cindex variable definition
391 A @dfn{variable definition} is a construct that announces your
392 intention to use a symbol as a global variable. It uses the special
393 forms @code{defvar} or @code{defconst}, which are documented below.
395 A variable definition serves three purposes. First, it informs
396 people who read the code that the symbol is @emph{intended} to be used
397 a certain way (as a variable). Second, it informs the Lisp system of
398 this, optionally supplying an initial value and a documentation
399 string. Third, it provides information to programming tools such as
400 @command{etags}, allowing them to find where the variable was defined.
402 The difference between @code{defconst} and @code{defvar} is mainly a
403 matter of intent, serving to inform human readers of whether the value
404 should ever change. Emacs Lisp does not actually prevent you from
405 changing the value of a variable defined with @code{defconst}. One
406 notable difference between the two forms is that @code{defconst}
407 unconditionally initializes the variable, whereas @code{defvar}
408 initializes it only if it is originally void.
410 To define a customizable variable, you should use @code{defcustom}
411 (which calls @code{defvar} as a subroutine). @xref{Variable
414 @defspec defvar symbol [value [doc-string]]
415 This special form defines @var{symbol} as a variable. Note that
416 @var{symbol} is not evaluated; the symbol to be defined should appear
417 explicitly in the @code{defvar} form. The variable is marked as
418 @dfn{special}, meaning that it should always be dynamically bound
419 (@pxref{Variable Scoping}).
421 If @var{value} is specified, and @var{symbol} is void (i.e., it has no
422 dynamically bound value; @pxref{Void Variables}), then @var{value} is
423 evaluated and @var{symbol} is set to the result. But if @var{symbol}
424 is not void, @var{value} is not evaluated, and @var{symbol}'s value is
425 left unchanged. If @var{value} is omitted, the value of @var{symbol}
426 is not changed in any case.
428 If @var{symbol} has a buffer-local binding in the current buffer,
429 @code{defvar} acts on the default value, which is buffer-independent,
430 rather than the buffer-local binding. It sets the default value if
431 the default value is void. @xref{Buffer-Local Variables}.
433 If @var{symbol} is already lexically bound (e.g., if the @code{defvar}
434 form occurs in a @code{let} form with lexical binding enabled), then
435 @code{defvar} sets the dynamic value. The lexical binding remains in
436 effect until its binding construct exits. @xref{Variable Scoping}.
438 When you evaluate a top-level @code{defvar} form with @kbd{C-M-x} in
439 Emacs Lisp mode (@code{eval-defun}), a special feature of
440 @code{eval-defun} arranges to set the variable unconditionally, without
441 testing whether its value is void.
443 If the @var{doc-string} argument is supplied, it specifies the
444 documentation string for the variable (stored in the symbol's
445 @code{variable-documentation} property). @xref{Documentation}.
447 Here are some examples. This form defines @code{foo} but does not
457 This example initializes the value of @code{bar} to @code{23}, and gives
458 it a documentation string:
463 "The normal weight of a bar.")
468 The @code{defvar} form returns @var{symbol}, but it is normally used
469 at top level in a file where its value does not matter.
472 @cindex constant variables
473 @defspec defconst symbol value [doc-string]
474 This special form defines @var{symbol} as a value and initializes it.
475 It informs a person reading your code that @var{symbol} has a standard
476 global value, established here, that should not be changed by the user
477 or by other programs. Note that @var{symbol} is not evaluated; the
478 symbol to be defined must appear explicitly in the @code{defconst}.
480 The @code{defconst} form, like @code{defvar}, marks the variable as
481 @dfn{special}, meaning that it should always be dynamically bound
482 (@pxref{Variable Scoping}). In addition, it marks the variable as
483 risky (@pxref{File Local Variables}).
485 @code{defconst} always evaluates @var{value}, and sets the value of
486 @var{symbol} to the result. If @var{symbol} does have a buffer-local
487 binding in the current buffer, @code{defconst} sets the default value,
488 not the buffer-local value. (But you should not be making
489 buffer-local bindings for a symbol that is defined with
492 An example of the use of @code{defconst} is Emacs's definition of
493 @code{float-pi}---the mathematical constant @math{pi}, which ought not
494 to be changed by anyone (attempts by the Indiana State Legislature
495 notwithstanding). As the second form illustrates, however,
496 @code{defconst} is only advisory.
500 (defconst float-pi 3.141592653589793 "The value of Pi.")
514 @strong{Warning:} If you use a @code{defconst} or @code{defvar}
515 special form while the variable has a local binding (made with
516 @code{let}, or a function argument), it sets the local binding rather
517 than the global binding. This is not what you usually want. To
518 prevent this, use these special forms at top level in a file, where
519 normally no local binding is in effect, and make sure to load the file
520 before making a local binding for the variable.
522 @node Tips for Defining
523 @section Tips for Defining Variables Robustly
525 When you define a variable whose value is a function, or a list of
526 functions, use a name that ends in @samp{-function} or
527 @samp{-functions}, respectively.
529 There are several other variable name conventions;
530 here is a complete list:
534 The variable is a normal hook (@pxref{Hooks}).
536 @item @dots{}-function
537 The value is a function.
539 @item @dots{}-functions
540 The value is a list of functions.
543 The value is a form (an expression).
546 The value is a list of forms (expressions).
548 @item @dots{}-predicate
549 The value is a predicate---a function of one argument that returns
550 non-@code{nil} for success and @code{nil} for failure.
553 The value is significant only as to whether it is @code{nil} or not.
554 Since such variables often end up acquiring more values over time,
555 this convention is not strongly recommended.
557 @item @dots{}-program
558 The value is a program name.
560 @item @dots{}-command
561 The value is a whole shell command.
563 @item @dots{}-switches
564 The value specifies options for a command.
567 When you define a variable, always consider whether you should mark
568 it as safe or risky; see @ref{File Local Variables}.
570 When defining and initializing a variable that holds a complicated
571 value (such as a keymap with bindings in it), it's best to put the
572 entire computation of the value into the @code{defvar}, like this:
576 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
577 (define-key map "\C-c\C-a" 'my-command)
584 This method has several benefits. First, if the user quits while
585 loading the file, the variable is either still uninitialized or
586 initialized properly, never in-between. If it is still uninitialized,
587 reloading the file will initialize it properly. Second, reloading the
588 file once the variable is initialized will not alter it; that is
589 important if the user has run hooks to alter part of the contents
590 (such as, to rebind keys). Third, evaluating the @code{defvar} form
591 with @kbd{C-M-x} will reinitialize the map completely.
593 Putting so much code in the @code{defvar} form has one disadvantage:
594 it puts the documentation string far away from the line which names the
595 variable. Here's a safe way to avoid that:
598 (defvar my-mode-map nil
601 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
602 (define-key map "\C-c\C-a" 'my-command)
604 (setq my-mode-map map)))
608 This has all the same advantages as putting the initialization inside
609 the @code{defvar}, except that you must type @kbd{C-M-x} twice, once on
610 each form, if you do want to reinitialize the variable.
612 @node Accessing Variables
613 @section Accessing Variable Values
615 The usual way to reference a variable is to write the symbol which
616 names it. @xref{Symbol Forms}.
618 Occasionally, you may want to reference a variable which is only
619 determined at run time. In that case, you cannot specify the variable
620 name in the text of the program. You can use the @code{symbol-value}
621 function to extract the value.
623 @defun symbol-value symbol
624 This function returns the value stored in @var{symbol}'s value cell.
625 This is where the variable's current (dynamic) value is stored. If
626 the variable has no local binding, this is simply its global value.
627 If the variable is void, a @code{void-variable} error is signaled.
629 If the variable is lexically bound, the value reported by
630 @code{symbol-value} is not necessarily the same as the variable's
631 lexical value, which is determined by the lexical environment rather
632 than the symbol's value cell. @xref{Variable Scoping}.
645 ;; @r{Here the symbol @code{abracadabra}}
646 ;; @r{is the symbol whose value is examined.}
647 (let ((abracadabra 'foo))
648 (symbol-value 'abracadabra))
653 ;; @r{Here, the value of @code{abracadabra},}
654 ;; @r{which is @code{foo},}
655 ;; @r{is the symbol whose value is examined.}
656 (let ((abracadabra 'foo))
657 (symbol-value abracadabra))
662 (symbol-value 'abracadabra)
668 @node Setting Variables
669 @section Setting Variable Values
671 The usual way to change the value of a variable is with the special
672 form @code{setq}. When you need to compute the choice of variable at
673 run time, use the function @code{set}.
675 @defspec setq [symbol form]@dots{}
676 This special form is the most common method of changing a variable's
677 value. Each @var{symbol} is given a new value, which is the result of
678 evaluating the corresponding @var{form}. The current binding of the
681 @code{setq} does not evaluate @var{symbol}; it sets the symbol that you
682 write. We say that this argument is @dfn{automatically quoted}. The
683 @samp{q} in @code{setq} stands for ``quoted''.
685 The value of the @code{setq} form is the value of the last @var{form}.
692 x ; @r{@code{x} now has a global value.}
696 (setq x 6) ; @r{The local binding of @code{x} is set.}
700 x ; @r{The global value is unchanged.}
704 Note that the first @var{form} is evaluated, then the first
705 @var{symbol} is set, then the second @var{form} is evaluated, then the
706 second @var{symbol} is set, and so on:
710 (setq x 10 ; @r{Notice that @code{x} is set before}
711 y (1+ x)) ; @r{the value of @code{y} is computed.}
717 @defun set symbol value
718 This function puts @var{value} in the value cell of @var{symbol}.
719 Since it is a function rather than a special form, the expression
720 written for @var{symbol} is evaluated to obtain the symbol to set.
721 The return value is @var{value}.
723 When dynamic variable binding is in effect (the default), @code{set}
724 has the same effect as @code{setq}, apart from the fact that
725 @code{set} evaluates its @var{symbol} argument whereas @code{setq}
726 does not. But when a variable is lexically bound, @code{set} affects
727 its @emph{dynamic} value, whereas @code{setq} affects its current
728 (lexical) value. @xref{Variable Scoping}.
733 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: one
744 (set two 2) ; @r{@code{two} evaluates to symbol @code{one}.}
748 one ; @r{So it is @code{one} that was set.}
750 (let ((one 1)) ; @r{This binding of @code{one} is set,}
751 (set 'one 3) ; @r{not the global value.}
761 If @var{symbol} is not actually a symbol, a @code{wrong-type-argument}
766 @error{} Wrong type argument: symbolp, (x y)
770 @node Watching Variables
771 @section Running a function when a variable is changed.
772 @cindex variable watchpoints
773 @cindex watchpoints for Lisp variables
775 It is sometimes useful to take some action when a variable changes its
776 value. The watchpoint facility provides the means to do so. Some
777 possible uses for this feature include keeping display in sync with
778 variable settings, and invoking the debugger to track down unexpected
779 changes to variables (@pxref{Variable Debugging}).
781 The following functions may be used to manipulate and query the watch
782 functions for a variable.
784 @defun add-variable-watcher symbol watch-function
785 This function arranges for @var{watch-function} to be called whenever
786 @var{symbol} is modified. Modifications through aliases
787 (@pxref{Variable Aliases}) will have the same effect.
789 @var{watch-function} will be called with 4 arguments: (@var{symbol}
790 @var{newval} @var{operation} @var{where}).
792 @var{symbol} is the variable being changed.
793 @var{newval} is the value it will be changed to.
794 @var{operation} is a symbol representing the kind of change, one of:
795 `set', `let', `unlet', `makunbound', and `defvaralias'.
796 @var{where} is a buffer if the buffer-local value of the variable is
797 being changed, nil otherwise.
800 @defun remove-variable-watch symbol watch-function
801 This function removes @var{watch-function} from @var{symbol}'s list of
805 @defun get-variable-watchers symbol
806 This function returns the list of @var{symbol}'s active watcher
810 @subsection Limitations
812 There are a couple of ways in which a variable could be modifed (or at
813 least appear to be modified) without triggering a watchpoint.
815 Since watchpoints are attached to symbols, modification to the
816 objects contained within variables (e.g., by a list modification
817 function @pxref{Modifying Lists}) is not caught by this mechanism.
819 Additionally, C code can modify the value of variables directly,
820 bypassing the watchpoint mechanism.
822 A minor limitation of this feature, again because it targets symbols,
823 is that only variables of dynamic scope may be watched. This poses
824 little difficulty, since modifications to lexical variables can be
825 discovered easily by inspecting the code within the scope of the
826 variable (unlike dynamic variables, which can be modified by any code
827 at all, @pxref{Variable Scoping}).
830 @node Variable Scoping
831 @section Scoping Rules for Variable Bindings
834 When you create a local binding for a variable, that binding takes
835 effect only within a limited portion of the program (@pxref{Local
836 Variables}). This section describes exactly what this means.
840 Each local binding has a certain @dfn{scope} and @dfn{extent}.
841 @dfn{Scope} refers to @emph{where} in the textual source code the
842 binding can be accessed. @dfn{Extent} refers to @emph{when}, as the
843 program is executing, the binding exists.
845 @cindex dynamic binding
846 @cindex dynamic scope
847 @cindex dynamic extent
848 By default, the local bindings that Emacs creates are @dfn{dynamic
849 bindings}. Such a binding has @dfn{dynamic scope}, meaning that any
850 part of the program can potentially access the variable binding. It
851 also has @dfn{dynamic extent}, meaning that the binding lasts only
852 while the binding construct (such as the body of a @code{let} form) is
855 @cindex lexical binding
856 @cindex lexical scope
857 @cindex indefinite extent
858 Emacs can optionally create @dfn{lexical bindings}. A lexical
859 binding has @dfn{lexical scope}, meaning that any reference to the
860 variable must be located textually within the binding
861 construct@footnote{With some exceptions; for instance, a lexical
862 binding can also be accessed from the Lisp debugger.}. It also has
863 @dfn{indefinite extent}, meaning that under some circumstances the
864 binding can live on even after the binding construct has finished
865 executing, by means of special objects called @dfn{closures}.
867 The following subsections describe dynamic binding and lexical
868 binding in greater detail, and how to enable lexical binding in Emacs
872 * Dynamic Binding:: The default for binding local variables in Emacs.
873 * Dynamic Binding Tips:: Avoiding problems with dynamic binding.
874 * Lexical Binding:: A different type of local variable binding.
875 * Using Lexical Binding:: How to enable lexical binding.
878 @node Dynamic Binding
879 @subsection Dynamic Binding
881 By default, the local variable bindings made by Emacs are dynamic
882 bindings. When a variable is dynamically bound, its current binding
883 at any point in the execution of the Lisp program is simply the most
884 recently-created dynamic local binding for that symbol, or the global
885 binding if there is no such local binding.
887 Dynamic bindings have dynamic scope and extent, as shown by the
892 (defvar x -99) ; @r{@code{x} receives an initial value of @minus{}99.}
895 x) ; @r{@code{x} is used free in this function.}
897 (let ((x 1)) ; @r{@code{x} is dynamically bound.}
901 ;; @r{After the @code{let} form finishes, @code{x} reverts to its}
902 ;; @r{previous value, which is @minus{}99.}
910 The function @code{getx} refers to @code{x}. This is a @dfn{free}
911 reference, in the sense that there is no binding for @code{x} within
912 that @code{defun} construct itself. When we call @code{getx} from
913 within a @code{let} form in which @code{x} is (dynamically) bound, it
914 retrieves the local value (i.e., 1). But when we call @code{getx}
915 outside the @code{let} form, it retrieves the global value (i.e.,
918 Here is another example, which illustrates setting a dynamically
919 bound variable using @code{setq}:
923 (defvar x -99) ; @r{@code{x} receives an initial value of @minus{}99.}
926 (setq x (1+ x))) ; @r{Add 1 to @code{x} and return its new value.}
931 @result{} 3 ; @r{The two @code{addx} calls add to @code{x} twice.}
933 ;; @r{After the @code{let} form finishes, @code{x} reverts to its}
934 ;; @r{previous value, which is @minus{}99.}
941 Dynamic binding is implemented in Emacs Lisp in a simple way. Each
942 symbol has a value cell, which specifies its current dynamic value (or
943 absence of value). @xref{Symbol Components}. When a symbol is given
944 a dynamic local binding, Emacs records the contents of the value cell
945 (or absence thereof) in a stack, and stores the new local value in the
946 value cell. When the binding construct finishes executing, Emacs pops
947 the old value off the stack, and puts it in the value cell.
949 @node Dynamic Binding Tips
950 @subsection Proper Use of Dynamic Binding
952 Dynamic binding is a powerful feature, as it allows programs to
953 refer to variables that are not defined within their local textual
954 scope. However, if used without restraint, this can also make
955 programs hard to understand. There are two clean ways to use this
960 If a variable has no global definition, use it as a local variable
961 only within a binding construct, such as the body of the @code{let}
962 form where the variable was bound. If this convention is followed
963 consistently throughout a program, the value of the variable will not
964 affect, nor be affected by, any uses of the same variable symbol
965 elsewhere in the program.
968 Otherwise, define the variable with @code{defvar}, @code{defconst}, or
969 @code{defcustom}. @xref{Defining Variables}. Usually, the definition
970 should be at top-level in an Emacs Lisp file. As far as possible, it
971 should include a documentation string which explains the meaning and
972 purpose of the variable. You should also choose the variable's name
973 to avoid name conflicts (@pxref{Coding Conventions}).
975 Then you can bind the variable anywhere in a program, knowing reliably
976 what the effect will be. Wherever you encounter the variable, it will
977 be easy to refer back to the definition, e.g., via the @kbd{C-h v}
978 command (provided the variable definition has been loaded into Emacs).
979 @xref{Name Help,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
981 For example, it is common to use local bindings for customizable
982 variables like @code{case-fold-search}:
986 (defun search-for-abc ()
987 "Search for the string \"abc\", ignoring case differences."
988 (let ((case-fold-search nil))
989 (re-search-forward "abc")))
994 @node Lexical Binding
995 @subsection Lexical Binding
997 Lexical binding was introduced to Emacs, as an optional feature, in
998 version 24.1. We expect its importance to increase in the future.
999 Lexical binding opens up many more opportunities for optimization, so
1000 programs using it are likely to run faster in future Emacs versions.
1001 Lexical binding is also more compatible with concurrency, which we
1002 want to add to Emacs in the future.
1004 A lexically-bound variable has @dfn{lexical scope}, meaning that any
1005 reference to the variable must be located textually within the binding
1006 construct. Here is an example
1008 (see the next subsection, for how to actually enable lexical binding):
1011 (@pxref{Using Lexical Binding}, for how to actually enable lexical binding):
1016 (let ((x 1)) ; @r{@code{x} is lexically bound.}
1021 x) ; @r{@code{x} is used free in this function.}
1023 (let ((x 1)) ; @r{@code{x} is lexically bound.}
1025 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x
1030 Here, the variable @code{x} has no global value. When it is lexically
1031 bound within a @code{let} form, it can be used in the textual confines
1032 of that @code{let} form. But it can @emph{not} be used from within a
1033 @code{getx} function called from the @code{let} form, since the
1034 function definition of @code{getx} occurs outside the @code{let} form
1037 @cindex lexical environment
1038 Here is how lexical binding works. Each binding construct defines a
1039 @dfn{lexical environment}, specifying the variables that are bound
1040 within the construct and their local values. When the Lisp evaluator
1041 wants the current value of a variable, it looks first in the lexical
1042 environment; if the variable is not specified in there, it looks in
1043 the symbol's value cell, where the dynamic value is stored.
1045 (Internally, the lexical environment is an alist of symbol-value
1046 pairs, with the final element in the alist being the symbol @code{t}
1047 rather than a cons cell. Such an alist can be passed as the second
1048 argument to the @code{eval} function, in order to specify a lexical
1049 environment in which to evaluate a form. @xref{Eval}. Most Emacs
1050 Lisp programs, however, should not interact directly with lexical
1051 environments in this way; only specialized programs like debuggers.)
1053 @cindex closures, example of using
1054 Lexical bindings have indefinite extent. Even after a binding
1055 construct has finished executing, its lexical environment can be
1056 ``kept around'' in Lisp objects called @dfn{closures}. A closure is
1057 created when you define a named or anonymous function with lexical
1058 binding enabled. @xref{Closures}, for details.
1060 When a closure is called as a function, any lexical variable
1061 references within its definition use the retained lexical environment.
1065 (defvar my-ticker nil) ; @r{We will use this dynamically bound}
1066 ; @r{variable to store a closure.}
1068 (let ((x 0)) ; @r{@code{x} is lexically bound.}
1069 (setq my-ticker (lambda ()
1071 @result{} (closure ((x . 0) t) ()
1083 x ; @r{Note that @code{x} has no global value.}
1084 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x
1088 The @code{let} binding defines a lexical environment in which the
1089 variable @code{x} is locally bound to 0. Within this binding
1090 construct, we define a lambda expression which increments @code{x} by
1091 one and returns the incremented value. This lambda expression is
1092 automatically turned into a closure, in which the lexical environment
1093 lives on even after the @code{let} binding construct has exited. Each
1094 time we evaluate the closure, it increments @code{x}, using the
1095 binding of @code{x} in that lexical environment.
1097 Note that unlike dynamic variables which are tied to the symbol
1098 object itself, the relationship between lexical variables and symbols
1099 is only present in the interpreter (or compiler). Therefore,
1100 functions which take a symbol argument (like @code{symbol-value},
1101 @code{boundp}, and @code{set}) can only retrieve or modify a
1102 variable's dynamic binding (i.e., the contents of its symbol's value
1105 @node Using Lexical Binding
1106 @subsection Using Lexical Binding
1108 When loading an Emacs Lisp file or evaluating a Lisp buffer, lexical
1109 binding is enabled if the buffer-local variable @code{lexical-binding}
1112 @defvar lexical-binding
1113 If this buffer-local variable is non-@code{nil}, Emacs Lisp files and
1114 buffers are evaluated using lexical binding instead of dynamic
1115 binding. (However, special variables are still dynamically bound; see
1116 below.) If @code{nil}, dynamic binding is used for all local
1117 variables. This variable is typically set for a whole Emacs Lisp
1118 file, as a file local variable (@pxref{File Local Variables}).
1119 Note that unlike other such variables, this one must be set in the
1120 first line of a file.
1124 When evaluating Emacs Lisp code directly using an @code{eval} call,
1125 lexical binding is enabled if the @var{lexical} argument to
1126 @code{eval} is non-@code{nil}. @xref{Eval}.
1128 @cindex special variables
1129 Even when lexical binding is enabled, certain variables will
1130 continue to be dynamically bound. These are called @dfn{special
1131 variables}. Every variable that has been defined with @code{defvar},
1132 @code{defcustom} or @code{defconst} is a special variable
1133 (@pxref{Defining Variables}). All other variables are subject to
1136 @defun special-variable-p symbol
1137 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{symbol} is a special
1138 variable (i.e., it has a @code{defvar}, @code{defcustom}, or
1139 @code{defconst} variable definition). Otherwise, the return value is
1143 The use of a special variable as a formal argument in a function is
1144 discouraged. Doing so gives rise to unspecified behavior when lexical
1145 binding mode is enabled (it may use lexical binding sometimes, and
1146 dynamic binding other times).
1148 Converting an Emacs Lisp program to lexical binding is easy. First,
1149 add a file-local variable setting of @code{lexical-binding} to
1150 @code{t} in the header line of the Emacs Lisp source file (@pxref{File
1151 Local Variables}). Second, check that every variable in the program
1152 which needs to be dynamically bound has a variable definition, so that
1153 it is not inadvertently bound lexically.
1155 @cindex free variable
1156 @cindex unused lexical variable
1157 A simple way to find out which variables need a variable definition
1158 is to byte-compile the source file. @xref{Byte Compilation}. If a
1159 non-special variable is used outside of a @code{let} form, the
1160 byte-compiler will warn about reference or assignment to a free
1161 variable. If a non-special variable is bound but not used within a
1162 @code{let} form, the byte-compiler will warn about an unused lexical
1163 variable. The byte-compiler will also issue a warning if you use a
1164 special variable as a function argument.
1166 (To silence byte-compiler warnings about unused variables, just use
1167 a variable name that start with an underscore. The byte-compiler
1168 interprets this as an indication that this is a variable known not to
1171 @node Buffer-Local Variables
1172 @section Buffer-Local Variables
1173 @cindex variable, buffer-local
1174 @cindex buffer-local variables
1176 Global and local variable bindings are found in most programming
1177 languages in one form or another. Emacs, however, also supports
1178 additional, unusual kinds of variable binding, such as
1179 @dfn{buffer-local} bindings, which apply only in one buffer. Having
1180 different values for a variable in different buffers is an important
1181 customization method. (Variables can also have bindings that are
1182 local to each terminal. @xref{Multiple Terminals}.)
1185 * Intro to Buffer-Local:: Introduction and concepts.
1186 * Creating Buffer-Local:: Creating and destroying buffer-local bindings.
1187 * Default Value:: The default value is seen in buffers
1188 that don't have their own buffer-local values.
1191 @node Intro to Buffer-Local
1192 @subsection Introduction to Buffer-Local Variables
1194 A buffer-local variable has a buffer-local binding associated with a
1195 particular buffer. The binding is in effect when that buffer is
1196 current; otherwise, it is not in effect. If you set the variable while
1197 a buffer-local binding is in effect, the new value goes in that binding,
1198 so its other bindings are unchanged. This means that the change is
1199 visible only in the buffer where you made it.
1201 The variable's ordinary binding, which is not associated with any
1202 specific buffer, is called the @dfn{default binding}. In most cases,
1203 this is the global binding.
1205 A variable can have buffer-local bindings in some buffers but not in
1206 other buffers. The default binding is shared by all the buffers that
1207 don't have their own bindings for the variable. (This includes all
1208 newly-created buffers.) If you set the variable in a buffer that does
1209 not have a buffer-local binding for it, this sets the default binding,
1210 so the new value is visible in all the buffers that see the default
1213 The most common use of buffer-local bindings is for major modes to change
1214 variables that control the behavior of commands. For example, C mode and
1215 Lisp mode both set the variable @code{paragraph-start} to specify that only
1216 blank lines separate paragraphs. They do this by making the variable
1217 buffer-local in the buffer that is being put into C mode or Lisp mode, and
1218 then setting it to the new value for that mode. @xref{Major Modes}.
1220 The usual way to make a buffer-local binding is with
1221 @code{make-local-variable}, which is what major mode commands typically
1222 use. This affects just the current buffer; all other buffers (including
1223 those yet to be created) will continue to share the default value unless
1224 they are explicitly given their own buffer-local bindings.
1226 @cindex automatically buffer-local
1227 A more powerful operation is to mark the variable as
1228 @dfn{automatically buffer-local} by calling
1229 @code{make-variable-buffer-local}. You can think of this as making the
1230 variable local in all buffers, even those yet to be created. More
1231 precisely, the effect is that setting the variable automatically makes
1232 the variable local to the current buffer if it is not already so. All
1233 buffers start out by sharing the default value of the variable as usual,
1234 but setting the variable creates a buffer-local binding for the current
1235 buffer. The new value is stored in the buffer-local binding, leaving
1236 the default binding untouched. This means that the default value cannot
1237 be changed with @code{setq} in any buffer; the only way to change it is
1238 with @code{setq-default}.
1240 @strong{Warning:} When a variable has buffer-local
1241 bindings in one or more buffers, @code{let} rebinds the binding that's
1242 currently in effect. For instance, if the current buffer has a
1243 buffer-local value, @code{let} temporarily rebinds that. If no
1244 buffer-local bindings are in effect, @code{let} rebinds
1245 the default value. If inside the @code{let} you then change to a
1246 different current buffer in which a different binding is in effect,
1247 you won't see the @code{let} binding any more. And if you exit the
1248 @code{let} while still in the other buffer, you won't see the
1249 unbinding occur (though it will occur properly). Here is an example
1256 (make-local-variable 'foo)
1260 ;; foo @result{} 'temp ; @r{let binding in buffer @samp{a}}
1262 ;; foo @result{} 'g ; @r{the global value since foo is not local in @samp{b}}
1265 foo @result{} 'g ; @r{exiting restored the local value in buffer @samp{a},}
1266 ; @r{but we don't see that in buffer @samp{b}}
1269 (set-buffer "a") ; @r{verify the local value was restored}
1275 Note that references to @code{foo} in @var{body} access the
1276 buffer-local binding of buffer @samp{b}.
1278 When a file specifies local variable values, these become buffer-local
1279 values when you visit the file. @xref{File Variables,,, emacs, The
1282 A buffer-local variable cannot be made terminal-local
1283 (@pxref{Multiple Terminals}).
1285 @node Creating Buffer-Local
1286 @subsection Creating and Deleting Buffer-Local Bindings
1288 @deffn Command make-local-variable variable
1289 This function creates a buffer-local binding in the current buffer for
1290 @var{variable} (a symbol). Other buffers are not affected. The value
1291 returned is @var{variable}.
1293 The buffer-local value of @var{variable} starts out as the same value
1294 @var{variable} previously had. If @var{variable} was void, it remains
1299 ;; @r{In buffer @samp{b1}:}
1300 (setq foo 5) ; @r{Affects all buffers.}
1304 (make-local-variable 'foo) ; @r{Now it is local in @samp{b1}.}
1308 foo ; @r{That did not change}
1309 @result{} 5 ; @r{the value.}
1312 (setq foo 6) ; @r{Change the value}
1313 @result{} 6 ; @r{in @samp{b1}.}
1321 ;; @r{In buffer @samp{b2}, the value hasn't changed.}
1322 (with-current-buffer "b2"
1328 Making a variable buffer-local within a @code{let}-binding for that
1329 variable does not work reliably, unless the buffer in which you do this
1330 is not current either on entry to or exit from the @code{let}. This is
1331 because @code{let} does not distinguish between different kinds of
1332 bindings; it knows only which variable the binding was made for.
1334 If the variable is terminal-local (@pxref{Multiple Terminals}), this
1335 function signals an error. Such variables cannot have buffer-local
1338 @strong{Warning:} do not use @code{make-local-variable} for a hook
1339 variable. The hook variables are automatically made buffer-local as
1340 needed if you use the @var{local} argument to @code{add-hook} or
1344 @defmac setq-local variable value
1345 This macro creates a buffer-local binding in the current buffer for
1346 @var{variable}, and gives it the buffer-local value @var{value}. It
1347 is equivalent to calling @code{make-local-variable} followed by
1348 @code{setq}. @var{variable} should be an unquoted symbol.
1351 @deffn Command make-variable-buffer-local variable
1352 This function marks @var{variable} (a symbol) automatically
1353 buffer-local, so that any subsequent attempt to set it will make it
1354 local to the current buffer at the time. Unlike
1355 @code{make-local-variable}, with which it is often confused, this
1356 cannot be undone, and affects the behavior of the variable in all
1359 A peculiar wrinkle of this feature is that binding the variable (with
1360 @code{let} or other binding constructs) does not create a buffer-local
1361 binding for it. Only setting the variable (with @code{set} or
1362 @code{setq}), while the variable does not have a @code{let}-style
1363 binding that was made in the current buffer, does so.
1365 If @var{variable} does not have a default value, then calling this
1366 command will give it a default value of @code{nil}. If @var{variable}
1367 already has a default value, that value remains unchanged.
1368 Subsequently calling @code{makunbound} on @var{variable} will result
1369 in a void buffer-local value and leave the default value unaffected.
1371 The value returned is @var{variable}.
1373 @strong{Warning:} Don't assume that you should use
1374 @code{make-variable-buffer-local} for user-option variables, simply
1375 because users @emph{might} want to customize them differently in
1376 different buffers. Users can make any variable local, when they wish
1377 to. It is better to leave the choice to them.
1379 The time to use @code{make-variable-buffer-local} is when it is crucial
1380 that no two buffers ever share the same binding. For example, when a
1381 variable is used for internal purposes in a Lisp program which depends
1382 on having separate values in separate buffers, then using
1383 @code{make-variable-buffer-local} can be the best solution.
1386 @defmac defvar-local variable value &optional docstring
1387 This macro defines @var{variable} as a variable with initial value
1388 @var{value} and @var{docstring}, and marks it as automatically
1389 buffer-local. It is equivalent to calling @code{defvar} followed by
1390 @code{make-variable-buffer-local}. @var{variable} should be an
1394 @defun local-variable-p variable &optional buffer
1395 This returns @code{t} if @var{variable} is buffer-local in buffer
1396 @var{buffer} (which defaults to the current buffer); otherwise,
1400 @defun local-variable-if-set-p variable &optional buffer
1401 This returns @code{t} if @var{variable} either has a buffer-local
1402 value in buffer @var{buffer}, or is automatically buffer-local.
1403 Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}. If omitted or @code{nil},
1404 @var{buffer} defaults to the current buffer.
1407 @defun buffer-local-value variable buffer
1408 This function returns the buffer-local binding of @var{variable} (a
1409 symbol) in buffer @var{buffer}. If @var{variable} does not have a
1410 buffer-local binding in buffer @var{buffer}, it returns the default
1411 value (@pxref{Default Value}) of @var{variable} instead.
1414 @defun buffer-local-variables &optional buffer
1415 This function returns a list describing the buffer-local variables in
1416 buffer @var{buffer}. (If @var{buffer} is omitted, the current buffer
1417 is used.) Normally, each list element has the form
1418 @w{@code{(@var{sym} . @var{val})}}, where @var{sym} is a buffer-local
1419 variable (a symbol) and @var{val} is its buffer-local value. But when
1420 a variable's buffer-local binding in @var{buffer} is void, its list
1421 element is just @var{sym}.
1425 (make-local-variable 'foobar)
1426 (makunbound 'foobar)
1427 (make-local-variable 'bind-me)
1430 (setq lcl (buffer-local-variables))
1431 ;; @r{First, built-in variables local in all buffers:}
1432 @result{} ((mark-active . nil)
1433 (buffer-undo-list . nil)
1434 (mode-name . "Fundamental")
1437 ;; @r{Next, non-built-in buffer-local variables.}
1438 ;; @r{This one is buffer-local and void:}
1440 ;; @r{This one is buffer-local and nonvoid:}
1445 Note that storing new values into the @sc{cdr}s of cons cells in this
1446 list does @emph{not} change the buffer-local values of the variables.
1449 @deffn Command kill-local-variable variable
1450 This function deletes the buffer-local binding (if any) for
1451 @var{variable} (a symbol) in the current buffer. As a result, the
1452 default binding of @var{variable} becomes visible in this buffer. This
1453 typically results in a change in the value of @var{variable}, since the
1454 default value is usually different from the buffer-local value just
1457 If you kill the buffer-local binding of a variable that automatically
1458 becomes buffer-local when set, this makes the default value visible in
1459 the current buffer. However, if you set the variable again, that will
1460 once again create a buffer-local binding for it.
1462 @code{kill-local-variable} returns @var{variable}.
1464 This function is a command because it is sometimes useful to kill one
1465 buffer-local variable interactively, just as it is useful to create
1466 buffer-local variables interactively.
1469 @cindex local variables, killed by major mode
1470 @defun kill-all-local-variables
1471 This function eliminates all the buffer-local variable bindings of the
1472 current buffer except for variables marked as permanent and local
1473 hook functions that have a non-@code{nil} @code{permanent-local-hook}
1474 property (@pxref{Setting Hooks}). As a result, the buffer will see
1475 the default values of most variables.
1477 This function also resets certain other information pertaining to the
1478 buffer: it sets the local keymap to @code{nil}, the syntax table to the
1479 value of @code{(standard-syntax-table)}, the case table to
1480 @code{(standard-case-table)}, and the abbrev table to the value of
1481 @code{fundamental-mode-abbrev-table}.
1483 The very first thing this function does is run the normal hook
1484 @code{change-major-mode-hook} (see below).
1486 Every major mode command begins by calling this function, which has the
1487 effect of switching to Fundamental mode and erasing most of the effects
1488 of the previous major mode. To ensure that this does its job, the
1489 variables that major modes set should not be marked permanent.
1491 @code{kill-all-local-variables} returns @code{nil}.
1494 @defvar change-major-mode-hook
1495 The function @code{kill-all-local-variables} runs this normal hook
1496 before it does anything else. This gives major modes a way to arrange
1497 for something special to be done if the user switches to a different
1498 major mode. It is also useful for buffer-specific minor modes
1499 that should be forgotten if the user changes the major mode.
1501 For best results, make this variable buffer-local, so that it will
1502 disappear after doing its job and will not interfere with the
1503 subsequent major mode. @xref{Hooks}.
1506 @cindex permanent local variable
1507 A buffer-local variable is @dfn{permanent} if the variable name (a
1508 symbol) has a @code{permanent-local} property that is non-@code{nil}.
1509 Such variables are unaffected by @code{kill-all-local-variables}, and
1510 their local bindings are therefore not cleared by changing major modes.
1511 Permanent locals are appropriate for data pertaining to where the file
1512 came from or how to save it, rather than with how to edit the contents.
1515 @subsection The Default Value of a Buffer-Local Variable
1516 @cindex default value
1518 The global value of a variable with buffer-local bindings is also
1519 called the @dfn{default} value, because it is the value that is in
1520 effect whenever neither the current buffer nor the selected frame has
1521 its own binding for the variable.
1523 The functions @code{default-value} and @code{setq-default} access and
1524 change a variable's default value regardless of whether the current
1525 buffer has a buffer-local binding. For example, you could use
1526 @code{setq-default} to change the default setting of
1527 @code{paragraph-start} for most buffers; and this would work even when
1528 you are in a C or Lisp mode buffer that has a buffer-local value for
1532 The special forms @code{defvar} and @code{defconst} also set the
1533 default value (if they set the variable at all), rather than any
1536 @defun default-value symbol
1537 This function returns @var{symbol}'s default value. This is the value
1538 that is seen in buffers and frames that do not have their own values for
1539 this variable. If @var{symbol} is not buffer-local, this is equivalent
1540 to @code{symbol-value} (@pxref{Accessing Variables}).
1544 @defun default-boundp symbol
1545 The function @code{default-boundp} tells you whether @var{symbol}'s
1546 default value is nonvoid. If @code{(default-boundp 'foo)} returns
1547 @code{nil}, then @code{(default-value 'foo)} would get an error.
1549 @code{default-boundp} is to @code{default-value} as @code{boundp} is to
1550 @code{symbol-value}.
1553 @defspec setq-default [symbol form]@dots{}
1554 This special form gives each @var{symbol} a new default value, which is
1555 the result of evaluating the corresponding @var{form}. It does not
1556 evaluate @var{symbol}, but does evaluate @var{form}. The value of the
1557 @code{setq-default} form is the value of the last @var{form}.
1559 If a @var{symbol} is not buffer-local for the current buffer, and is not
1560 marked automatically buffer-local, @code{setq-default} has the same
1561 effect as @code{setq}. If @var{symbol} is buffer-local for the current
1562 buffer, then this changes the value that other buffers will see (as long
1563 as they don't have a buffer-local value), but not the value that the
1564 current buffer sees.
1568 ;; @r{In buffer @samp{foo}:}
1569 (make-local-variable 'buffer-local)
1570 @result{} buffer-local
1573 (setq buffer-local 'value-in-foo)
1574 @result{} value-in-foo
1577 (setq-default buffer-local 'new-default)
1578 @result{} new-default
1582 @result{} value-in-foo
1585 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1586 @result{} new-default
1590 ;; @r{In (the new) buffer @samp{bar}:}
1592 @result{} new-default
1595 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1596 @result{} new-default
1599 (setq buffer-local 'another-default)
1600 @result{} another-default
1603 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1604 @result{} another-default
1608 ;; @r{Back in buffer @samp{foo}:}
1610 @result{} value-in-foo
1611 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1612 @result{} another-default
1617 @defun set-default symbol value
1618 This function is like @code{setq-default}, except that @var{symbol} is
1619 an ordinary evaluated argument.
1623 (set-default (car '(a b c)) 23)
1633 @node File Local Variables
1634 @section File Local Variables
1635 @cindex file local variables
1637 A file can specify local variable values; Emacs uses these to create
1638 buffer-local bindings for those variables in the buffer visiting that
1639 file. @xref{File Variables, , Local Variables in Files, emacs, The
1640 GNU Emacs Manual}, for basic information about file-local variables.
1641 This section describes the functions and variables that affect how
1642 file-local variables are processed.
1644 If a file-local variable could specify an arbitrary function or Lisp
1645 expression that would be called later, visiting a file could take over
1646 your Emacs. Emacs protects against this by automatically setting only
1647 those file-local variables whose specified values are known to be
1648 safe. Other file-local variables are set only if the user agrees.
1650 For additional safety, @code{read-circle} is temporarily bound to
1651 @code{nil} when Emacs reads file-local variables (@pxref{Input
1652 Functions}). This prevents the Lisp reader from recognizing circular
1653 and shared Lisp structures (@pxref{Circular Objects}).
1655 @defopt enable-local-variables
1656 This variable controls whether to process file-local variables.
1657 The possible values are:
1660 @item @code{t} (the default)
1661 Set the safe variables, and query (once) about any unsafe variables.
1663 Set only the safe variables and do not query.
1665 Set all the variables and do not query.
1667 Don't set any variables.
1669 Query (once) about all the variables.
1673 @defvar inhibit-local-variables-regexps
1674 This is a list of regular expressions. If a file has a name
1675 matching an element of this list, then it is not scanned for
1676 any form of file-local variable. For examples of why you might want
1677 to use this, @pxref{Auto Major Mode}.
1680 @defun hack-local-variables &optional handle-mode
1681 This function parses, and binds or evaluates as appropriate, any local
1682 variables specified by the contents of the current buffer. The variable
1683 @code{enable-local-variables} has its effect here. However, this
1684 function does not look for the @samp{mode:} local variable in the
1685 @w{@samp{-*-}} line. @code{set-auto-mode} does that, also taking
1686 @code{enable-local-variables} into account (@pxref{Auto Major Mode}).
1688 This function works by walking the alist stored in
1689 @code{file-local-variables-alist} and applying each local variable in
1690 turn. It calls @code{before-hack-local-variables-hook} and
1691 @code{hack-local-variables-hook} before and after applying the
1692 variables, respectively. It only calls the before-hook if the alist
1693 is non-@code{nil}; it always calls the other hook. This
1694 function ignores a @samp{mode} element if it specifies the same major
1695 mode as the buffer already has.
1697 If the optional argument @var{handle-mode} is @code{t}, then all this
1698 function does is return a symbol specifying the major mode, if the
1699 @w{@samp{-*-}} line or the local variables list specifies one, and
1700 @code{nil} otherwise. It does not set the mode or any other
1701 file-local variable. If @var{handle-mode} has any value other than
1702 @code{nil} or @code{t}, any settings of @samp{mode} in the
1703 @w{@samp{-*-}} line or the local variables list are ignored, and the
1704 other settings are applied. If @var{handle-mode} is @code{nil}, all
1705 the file local variables are set.
1708 @defvar file-local-variables-alist
1709 This buffer-local variable holds the alist of file-local variable
1710 settings. Each element of the alist is of the form
1711 @w{@code{(@var{var} . @var{value})}}, where @var{var} is a symbol of
1712 the local variable and @var{value} is its value. When Emacs visits a
1713 file, it first collects all the file-local variables into this alist,
1714 and then the @code{hack-local-variables} function applies them one by
1718 @defvar before-hack-local-variables-hook
1719 Emacs calls this hook immediately before applying file-local variables
1720 stored in @code{file-local-variables-alist}.
1723 @defvar hack-local-variables-hook
1724 Emacs calls this hook immediately after it finishes applying
1725 file-local variables stored in @code{file-local-variables-alist}.
1728 @cindex safe local variable
1729 You can specify safe values for a variable with a
1730 @code{safe-local-variable} property. The property has to be a
1731 function of one argument; any value is safe if the function returns
1732 non-@code{nil} given that value. Many commonly-encountered file
1733 variables have @code{safe-local-variable} properties; these include
1734 @code{fill-column}, @code{fill-prefix}, and @code{indent-tabs-mode}.
1735 For boolean-valued variables that are safe, use @code{booleanp} as the
1738 When defining a user option using @code{defcustom}, you can set its
1739 @code{safe-local-variable} property by adding the arguments
1740 @code{:safe @var{function}} to @code{defcustom} (@pxref{Variable
1743 @defopt safe-local-variable-values
1744 This variable provides another way to mark some variable values as
1745 safe. It is a list of cons cells @code{(@var{var} . @var{val})},
1746 where @var{var} is a variable name and @var{val} is a value which is
1747 safe for that variable.
1749 When Emacs asks the user whether or not to obey a set of file-local
1750 variable specifications, the user can choose to mark them as safe.
1751 Doing so adds those variable/value pairs to
1752 @code{safe-local-variable-values}, and saves it to the user's custom
1756 @defun safe-local-variable-p sym val
1757 This function returns non-@code{nil} if it is safe to give @var{sym}
1758 the value @var{val}, based on the above criteria.
1761 @c @cindex risky local variable Duplicates risky-local-variable
1762 Some variables are considered @dfn{risky}. If a variable is risky,
1763 it is never entered automatically into
1764 @code{safe-local-variable-values}; Emacs always queries before setting
1765 a risky variable, unless the user explicitly allows a value by
1766 customizing @code{safe-local-variable-values} directly.
1768 Any variable whose name has a non-@code{nil}
1769 @code{risky-local-variable} property is considered risky. When you
1770 define a user option using @code{defcustom}, you can set its
1771 @code{risky-local-variable} property by adding the arguments
1772 @code{:risky @var{value}} to @code{defcustom} (@pxref{Variable
1773 Definitions}). In addition, any variable whose name ends in any of
1774 @samp{-command}, @samp{-frame-alist}, @samp{-function},
1775 @samp{-functions}, @samp{-hook}, @samp{-hooks}, @samp{-form},
1776 @samp{-forms}, @samp{-map}, @samp{-map-alist}, @samp{-mode-alist},
1777 @samp{-program}, or @samp{-predicate} is automatically considered
1778 risky. The variables @samp{font-lock-keywords},
1779 @samp{font-lock-keywords} followed by a digit, and
1780 @samp{font-lock-syntactic-keywords} are also considered risky.
1782 @defun risky-local-variable-p sym
1783 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{sym} is a risky variable,
1784 based on the above criteria.
1787 @defvar ignored-local-variables
1788 This variable holds a list of variables that should not be given local
1789 values by files. Any value specified for one of these variables is
1793 The @samp{Eval:} ``variable'' is also a potential loophole, so Emacs
1794 normally asks for confirmation before handling it.
1796 @defopt enable-local-eval
1797 This variable controls processing of @samp{Eval:} in @samp{-*-} lines
1799 lists in files being visited. A value of @code{t} means process them
1800 unconditionally; @code{nil} means ignore them; anything else means ask
1801 the user what to do for each file. The default value is @code{maybe}.
1804 @defopt safe-local-eval-forms
1805 This variable holds a list of expressions that are safe to
1806 evaluate when found in the @samp{Eval:} ``variable'' in a file
1807 local variables list.
1810 If the expression is a function call and the function has a
1811 @code{safe-local-eval-function} property, the property value
1812 determines whether the expression is safe to evaluate. The property
1813 value can be a predicate to call to test the expression, a list of
1814 such predicates (it's safe if any predicate succeeds), or @code{t}
1815 (always safe provided the arguments are constant).
1817 Text properties are also potential loopholes, since their values
1818 could include functions to call. So Emacs discards all text
1819 properties from string values specified for file-local variables.
1821 @node Directory Local Variables
1822 @section Directory Local Variables
1823 @cindex directory local variables
1825 A directory can specify local variable values common to all files in
1826 that directory; Emacs uses these to create buffer-local bindings for
1827 those variables in buffers visiting any file in that directory. This
1828 is useful when the files in the directory belong to some @dfn{project}
1829 and therefore share the same local variables.
1831 There are two different methods for specifying directory local
1832 variables: by putting them in a special file, or by defining a
1833 @dfn{project class} for that directory.
1835 @defvr Constant dir-locals-file
1836 This constant is the name of the file where Emacs expects to find the
1837 directory-local variables. The name of the file is
1838 @file{.dir-locals.el}@footnote{
1839 The MS-DOS version of Emacs uses @file{_dir-locals.el} instead, due to
1840 limitations of the DOS filesystems.
1841 }. A file by that name in a directory causes Emacs to apply its
1842 settings to any file in that directory or any of its subdirectories
1843 (optionally, you can exclude subdirectories; see below).
1844 If some of the subdirectories have their own @file{.dir-locals.el}
1845 files, Emacs uses the settings from the deepest file it finds starting
1846 from the file's directory and moving up the directory tree. The file
1847 specifies local variables as a specially formatted list; see
1848 @ref{Directory Variables, , Per-directory Local Variables, emacs, The
1849 GNU Emacs Manual}, for more details.
1852 @defun hack-dir-local-variables
1853 This function reads the @code{.dir-locals.el} file and stores the
1854 directory-local variables in @code{file-local-variables-alist} that is
1855 local to the buffer visiting any file in the directory, without
1856 applying them. It also stores the directory-local settings in
1857 @code{dir-locals-class-alist}, where it defines a special class for
1858 the directory in which @file{.dir-locals.el} file was found. This
1859 function works by calling @code{dir-locals-set-class-variables} and
1860 @code{dir-locals-set-directory-class}, described below.
1863 @defun hack-dir-local-variables-non-file-buffer
1864 This function looks for directory-local variables, and immediately
1865 applies them in the current buffer. It is intended to be called in
1866 the mode commands for non-file buffers, such as Dired buffers, to let
1867 them obey directory-local variable settings. For non-file buffers,
1868 Emacs looks for directory-local variables in @code{default-directory}
1869 and its parent directories.
1872 @defun dir-locals-set-class-variables class variables
1873 This function defines a set of variable settings for the named
1874 @var{class}, which is a symbol. You can later assign the class to one
1875 or more directories, and Emacs will apply those variable settings to
1876 all files in those directories. The list in @var{variables} can be of
1877 one of the two forms: @code{(@var{major-mode} . @var{alist})} or
1878 @code{(@var{directory} . @var{list})}. With the first form, if the
1879 file's buffer turns on a mode that is derived from @var{major-mode},
1880 then the all the variables in the associated @var{alist} are applied;
1881 @var{alist} should be of the form @code{(@var{name} . @var{value})}.
1882 A special value @code{nil} for @var{major-mode} means the settings are
1883 applicable to any mode. In @var{alist}, you can use a special
1884 @var{name}: @code{subdirs}. If the associated value is
1885 @code{nil}, the alist is only applied to files in the relevant
1886 directory, not to those in any subdirectories.
1888 With the second form of @var{variables}, if @var{directory} is the
1889 initial substring of the file's directory, then @var{list} is applied
1890 recursively by following the above rules; @var{list} should be of one
1891 of the two forms accepted by this function in @var{variables}.
1894 @defun dir-locals-set-directory-class directory class &optional mtime
1895 This function assigns @var{class} to all the files in @code{directory}
1896 and its subdirectories. Thereafter, all the variable settings
1897 specified for @var{class} will be applied to any visited file in
1898 @var{directory} and its children. @var{class} must have been already
1899 defined by @code{dir-locals-set-class-variables}.
1901 Emacs uses this function internally when it loads directory variables
1902 from a @code{.dir-locals.el} file. In that case, the optional
1903 argument @var{mtime} holds the file modification time (as returned by
1904 @code{file-attributes}). Emacs uses this time to check stored
1905 local variables are still valid. If you are assigning a class
1906 directly, not via a file, this argument should be @code{nil}.
1909 @defvar dir-locals-class-alist
1910 This alist holds the class symbols and the associated variable
1911 settings. It is updated by @code{dir-locals-set-class-variables}.
1914 @defvar dir-locals-directory-cache
1915 This alist holds directory names, their assigned class names, and
1916 modification times of the associated directory local variables file
1917 (if there is one). The function @code{dir-locals-set-directory-class}
1921 @defvar enable-dir-local-variables
1922 If @code{nil}, directory-local variables are ignored. This variable
1923 may be useful for modes that want to ignore directory-locals while
1924 still respecting file-local variables (@pxref{File Local Variables}).
1927 @node Connection Local Variables
1928 @section Connection Local Variables
1929 @cindex connection local variables
1931 Connection-local variables provide a general mechanism for
1932 different variable settings in buffers with a remote default
1933 directory. They are bound and set depending on the remote connection
1934 a buffer is dedicated to. Per default, they are set in all process
1935 buffers for a remote connection, but they could be applied also in
1936 other buffers with a remote directory.
1938 @defun connection-local-set-class-variables class variables
1939 This function defines a set of variable settings for the named
1940 @var{class}, which is a symbol. You can later assign the class to one
1941 or more remote connections, and Emacs will apply those variable
1942 settings to all process buffers for those connections. The list in
1943 @var{variables} is an alist of the form @code{(@var{name}
1944 . @var{value})}. Example:
1948 (connection-local-set-class-variables
1950 '((shell-file-name . "/bin/bash")
1951 (shell-command-switch . "-c")
1952 (shell-interactive-switch . "-i")
1953 (shell-login-switch . "-l")))
1957 (connection-local-set-class-variables
1959 '((shell-file-name . "/bin/ksh")
1960 (shell-command-switch . "-c")
1961 (shell-interactive-switch . "-i")
1962 (shell-login-switch . "-l")))
1966 (connection-local-set-class-variables
1968 '((null-device . "/dev/null")))
1973 @defvar connection-local-class-alist
1974 This alist holds the class symbols and the associated variable
1975 settings. It is updated by @code{connection-local-set-class-variables}.
1978 @defun connection-local-set-classes criteria &rest classes
1979 This function assigns @var{classes}, which are symbols, to all remote
1980 connections identified by @var{criteria}. @var{criteria} is either a
1981 regular expression identifying a remote server, or a function with one
1982 argument @var{identification}, which must return non-nil when a remote
1983 server shall apply @var{classes} variables, or @code{nil}.
1985 If @var{criteria} is a regexp, is must match the result of
1986 @code{(file-remote-p default-directory)} of a buffer in order to apply
1987 the variables setting. Example:
1991 (connection-local-set-classes
1992 "^/ssh:" 'remote-bash 'remote-null-device)
1996 (connection-local-set-classes
1997 "^/sudo:" 'remote-ksh 'remote-null-device)
2001 If @var{criteria} is nil, it applies for all remote connections.
2002 Therefore, the example above would be equivalent to
2005 (connection-local-set-classes "^/ssh:" 'remote-bash)
2006 (connection-local-set-classes "^/sudo:" 'remote-ksh)
2007 (connection-local-set-classes nil 'remote-null-device)
2010 If @var{criteria} is a lambda function it must accept one parameter,
2011 the identification. The example above could be rewritten as
2015 (connection-local-set-classes
2016 (lambda (identification)
2017 (string-equal (file-remote-p identification 'method) "ssh"))
2022 (connection-local-set-classes
2023 (lambda (identification)
2024 (string-equal (file-remote-p identification 'method) "sudo"))
2029 (connection-local-set-classes
2030 (lambda (identification) t)
2031 'remote-null-device)
2035 Thereafter, all the variable settings specified for @var{classes}
2036 will be applied to any buffer with a matching remote directory, when
2037 activated by @code{hack-connection-local-variables-apply}. Any class
2038 of @var{classes} must have been already defined by
2039 @code{connection-local-set-class-variables}.
2042 @defvar connection-local-criteria-alist
2043 This alist contains remote server identifications and their assigned
2044 class names. The function @code{connection-local-set-classes} updates
2048 @defun hack-connection-local-variables
2049 This function collects applicable connection-local variables in
2050 @code{connection-local-variables-alist} that is local to the buffer,
2051 without applying them. Whether a connection-local variable is
2052 applicable is specified by the remote identifier of a buffer,
2053 evaluated by @code{(file-remote-p default-directory)}.
2056 @defun hack-connection-local-variables-apply
2057 This function looks for connection-local variables, and immediately
2058 applies them in the current buffer. It is called per default for
2059 every process-buffer related to a remote connection. For other remote
2060 buffers, it could be called by any mode.
2063 @defmac with-connection-local-classes classes &rest body
2064 All connection-local variables, which are specified by a class in
2065 @var{classes}, are applied. An implicit binding of the classes to the
2066 remote connection is enabled.
2068 After that, @var{body} is executed, and the connection-local variables
2069 are unwound. Example:
2073 (connection-local-set-class-variables
2075 '((perl-command-name . "/usr/local/bin/perl")
2076 (perl-command-switch . "-e %s")))
2080 (with-connection-local-classes '(remote-perl)
2081 do something useful)
2086 @defvar enable-connection-local-variables
2087 If @code{nil}, connection-local variables are ignored. This variable
2088 shall be changed temporarily only in special modes.
2091 @node Variable Aliases
2092 @section Variable Aliases
2093 @cindex variable aliases
2094 @cindex alias, for variables
2096 It is sometimes useful to make two variables synonyms, so that both
2097 variables always have the same value, and changing either one also
2098 changes the other. Whenever you change the name of a
2099 variable---either because you realize its old name was not well
2100 chosen, or because its meaning has partly changed---it can be useful
2101 to keep the old name as an @emph{alias} of the new one for
2102 compatibility. You can do this with @code{defvaralias}.
2104 @defun defvaralias new-alias base-variable &optional docstring
2105 This function defines the symbol @var{new-alias} as a variable alias
2106 for symbol @var{base-variable}. This means that retrieving the value
2107 of @var{new-alias} returns the value of @var{base-variable}, and
2108 changing the value of @var{new-alias} changes the value of
2109 @var{base-variable}. The two aliased variable names always share the
2110 same value and the same bindings.
2112 If the @var{docstring} argument is non-@code{nil}, it specifies the
2113 documentation for @var{new-alias}; otherwise, the alias gets the same
2114 documentation as @var{base-variable} has, if any, unless
2115 @var{base-variable} is itself an alias, in which case @var{new-alias} gets
2116 the documentation of the variable at the end of the chain of aliases.
2118 This function returns @var{base-variable}.
2121 Variable aliases are convenient for replacing an old name for a
2122 variable with a new name. @code{make-obsolete-variable} declares that
2123 the old name is obsolete and therefore that it may be removed at some
2124 stage in the future.
2126 @defun make-obsolete-variable obsolete-name current-name when &optional access-type
2127 This function makes the byte compiler warn that the variable
2128 @var{obsolete-name} is obsolete. If @var{current-name} is a symbol,
2129 it is the variable's new name; then the warning message says to use
2130 @var{current-name} instead of @var{obsolete-name}. If
2131 @var{current-name} is a string, this is the message and there is no
2132 replacement variable. @var{when} should be a string indicating when
2133 the variable was first made obsolete (usually a version number
2136 The optional argument @var{access-type}, if non-@code{nil}, should
2137 specify the kind of access that will trigger obsolescence warnings; it
2138 can be either @code{get} or @code{set}.
2141 You can make two variables synonyms and declare one obsolete at the
2142 same time using the macro @code{define-obsolete-variable-alias}.
2144 @defmac define-obsolete-variable-alias obsolete-name current-name &optional when docstring
2145 This macro marks the variable @var{obsolete-name} as obsolete and also
2146 makes it an alias for the variable @var{current-name}. It is
2147 equivalent to the following:
2150 (defvaralias @var{obsolete-name} @var{current-name} @var{docstring})
2151 (make-obsolete-variable @var{obsolete-name} @var{current-name} @var{when})
2155 @defun indirect-variable variable
2156 This function returns the variable at the end of the chain of aliases
2157 of @var{variable}. If @var{variable} is not a symbol, or if @var{variable} is
2158 not defined as an alias, the function returns @var{variable}.
2160 This function signals a @code{cyclic-variable-indirection} error if
2161 there is a loop in the chain of symbols.
2165 (defvaralias 'foo 'bar)
2166 (indirect-variable 'foo)
2168 (indirect-variable 'bar)
2184 @node Variables with Restricted Values
2185 @section Variables with Restricted Values
2186 @cindex lisp variables defined in C, restrictions
2188 Ordinary Lisp variables can be assigned any value that is a valid
2189 Lisp object. However, certain Lisp variables are not defined in Lisp,
2190 but in C@. Most of these variables are defined in the C code using
2191 @code{DEFVAR_LISP}. Like variables defined in Lisp, these can take on
2192 any value. However, some variables are defined using
2193 @code{DEFVAR_INT} or @code{DEFVAR_BOOL}. @xref{Defining Lisp
2194 variables in C,, Writing Emacs Primitives}, in particular the
2195 description of functions of the type @code{syms_of_@var{filename}},
2196 for a brief discussion of the C implementation.
2198 Variables of type @code{DEFVAR_BOOL} can only take on the values
2199 @code{nil} or @code{t}. Attempting to assign them any other value
2200 will set them to @code{t}:
2203 (let ((display-hourglass 5))
2208 @defvar byte-boolean-vars
2209 This variable holds a list of all variables of type @code{DEFVAR_BOOL}.
2212 Variables of type @code{DEFVAR_INT} can take on only integer values.
2213 Attempting to assign them any other value will result in an error:
2216 (setq undo-limit 1000.0)
2217 @error{} Wrong type argument: integerp, 1000.0
2220 @node Generalized Variables
2221 @section Generalized Variables
2223 @cindex generalized variable
2225 A @dfn{generalized variable} or @dfn{place form} is one of the many places
2226 in Lisp memory where values can be stored. The simplest place form is
2227 a regular Lisp variable. But the @sc{car}s and @sc{cdr}s of lists, elements
2228 of arrays, properties of symbols, and many other locations are also
2229 places where Lisp values are stored.
2231 Generalized variables are analogous to lvalues in the C
2232 language, where @samp{x = a[i]} gets an element from an array
2233 and @samp{a[i] = x} stores an element using the same notation.
2234 Just as certain forms like @code{a[i]} can be lvalues in C, there
2235 is a set of forms that can be generalized variables in Lisp.
2238 * Setting Generalized Variables:: The @code{setf} macro.
2239 * Adding Generalized Variables:: Defining new @code{setf} forms.
2242 @node Setting Generalized Variables
2243 @subsection The @code{setf} Macro
2245 The @code{setf} macro is the most basic way to operate on generalized
2246 variables. The @code{setf} form is like @code{setq}, except that it
2247 accepts arbitrary place forms on the left side rather than just
2248 symbols. For example, @code{(setf (car a) b)} sets the car of
2249 @code{a} to @code{b}, doing the same operation as @code{(setcar a b)},
2250 but without having to remember two separate functions for setting and
2251 accessing every type of place.
2253 @defmac setf [place form]@dots{}
2254 This macro evaluates @var{form} and stores it in @var{place}, which
2255 must be a valid generalized variable form. If there are several
2256 @var{place} and @var{form} pairs, the assignments are done sequentially
2257 just as with @code{setq}. @code{setf} returns the value of the last
2261 The following Lisp forms will work as generalized variables, and
2262 so may appear in the @var{place} argument of @code{setf}:
2266 A symbol naming a variable. In other words, @code{(setf x y)} is
2267 exactly equivalent to @code{(setq x y)}, and @code{setq} itself is
2268 strictly speaking redundant given that @code{setf} exists. Many
2269 programmers continue to prefer @code{setq} for setting simple
2270 variables, though, purely for stylistic or historical reasons.
2271 The macro @code{(setf x y)} actually expands to @code{(setq x y)},
2272 so there is no performance penalty for using it in compiled code.
2275 A call to any of the following standard Lisp functions:
2278 aref cddr symbol-function
2279 car elt symbol-plist
2280 caar get symbol-value
2287 A call to any of the following Emacs-specific functions:
2290 alist-get process-get
2291 frame-parameter process-sentinel
2292 terminal-parameter window-buffer
2293 keymap-parent window-display-table
2294 match-data window-dedicated-p
2295 overlay-get window-hscroll
2296 overlay-start window-parameter
2297 overlay-end window-point
2298 process-buffer window-start
2299 process-filter default-value
2304 @code{setf} signals an error if you pass a @var{place} form that it
2305 does not know how to handle.
2307 @c And for cl-lib's cl-getf.
2308 Note that for @code{nthcdr}, the list argument of the function must
2309 itself be a valid @var{place} form. For example, @code{(setf (nthcdr
2310 0 foo) 7)} will set @code{foo} itself to 7.
2311 @c The use of @code{nthcdr} as a @var{place} form is an extension
2312 @c to standard Common Lisp.
2314 @c FIXME I don't think is a particularly good way to do it,
2315 @c but these macros are introduced before generalized variables are.
2316 The macros @code{push} (@pxref{List Variables}) and @code{pop}
2317 (@pxref{List Elements}) can manipulate generalized variables,
2318 not just lists. @code{(pop @var{place})} removes and returns the first
2319 element of the list stored in @var{place}. It is analogous to
2320 @code{(prog1 (car @var{place}) (setf @var{place} (cdr @var{place})))},
2321 except that it takes care to evaluate all subforms only once.
2322 @code{(push @var{x} @var{place})} inserts @var{x} at the front of
2323 the list stored in @var{place}. It is analogous to @code{(setf
2324 @var{place} (cons @var{x} @var{place}))}, except for evaluation of the
2325 subforms. Note that @code{push} and @code{pop} on an @code{nthcdr}
2326 place can be used to insert or delete at any position in a list.
2328 The @file{cl-lib} library defines various extensions for generalized
2329 variables, including additional @code{setf} places.
2330 @xref{Generalized Variables,,, cl, Common Lisp Extensions}.
2333 @node Adding Generalized Variables
2334 @subsection Defining new @code{setf} forms
2336 This section describes how to define new forms that @code{setf} can
2339 @defmac gv-define-simple-setter name setter &optional fix-return
2340 This macro enables you to easily define @code{setf} methods for simple
2341 cases. @var{name} is the name of a function, macro, or special form.
2342 You can use this macro whenever @var{name} has a directly
2343 corresponding @var{setter} function that updates it, e.g.,
2344 @code{(gv-define-simple-setter car setcar)}.
2346 This macro translates a call of the form
2349 (setf (@var{name} @var{args}@dots{}) @var{value})
2354 (@var{setter} @var{args}@dots{} @var{value})
2358 Such a @code{setf} call is documented to return @var{value}. This is
2359 no problem with, e.g., @code{car} and @code{setcar}, because
2360 @code{setcar} returns the value that it set. If your @var{setter}
2361 function does not return @var{value}, use a non-@code{nil} value for
2362 the @var{fix-return} argument of @code{gv-define-simple-setter}. This
2363 expands into something equivalent to
2365 (let ((temp @var{value}))
2366 (@var{setter} @var{args}@dots{} temp)
2369 so ensuring that it returns the correct result.
2373 @defmac gv-define-setter name arglist &rest body
2374 This macro allows for more complex @code{setf} expansions than the
2375 previous form. You may need to use this form, for example, if there
2376 is no simple setter function to call, or if there is one but it
2377 requires different arguments to the place form.
2379 This macro expands the form
2380 @code{(setf (@var{name} @var{args}@dots{}) @var{value})} by
2381 first binding the @code{setf} argument forms
2382 @code{(@var{value} @var{args}@dots{})} according to @var{arglist},
2383 and then executing @var{body}. @var{body} should return a Lisp
2384 form that does the assignment, and finally returns the value that was
2385 set. An example of using this macro is:
2388 (gv-define-setter caar (val x) `(setcar (car ,x) ,val))
2392 @findex gv-define-expander
2394 @c FIXME? Not sure what or how much to say about these.
2395 @c See cl.texi for an example of using gv-letplace.
2396 For more control over the expansion, see the macro @code{gv-define-expander}.
2397 The macro @code{gv-letplace} can be useful in defining macros that
2398 perform similarly to @code{setf}; for example, the @code{incf} macro
2399 of Common Lisp. Consult the source file @file{gv.el} for more details.
2401 @cindex CL note---no @code{setf} functions
2403 @b{Common Lisp note:} Common Lisp defines another way to specify the
2404 @code{setf} behavior of a function, namely @code{setf} functions,
2405 whose names are lists @code{(setf @var{name})} rather than symbols.
2406 For example, @code{(defun (setf foo) @dots{})} defines the function
2407 that is used when @code{setf} is applied to @code{foo}. Emacs does
2408 not support this. It is a compile-time error to use @code{setf} on a
2409 form that has not already had an appropriate expansion defined. In
2410 Common Lisp, this is not an error since the function @code{(setf
2411 @var{func})} might be defined later.