2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999,
5 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
7 @setfilename ../info/variables
8 @node Variables, Functions, Control Structures, Top
12 A @dfn{variable} is a name used in a program to stand for a value.
13 Nearly all programming languages have variables of some sort. In the
14 text of a Lisp program, variables are written using the syntax for
17 In Lisp, unlike most programming languages, programs are represented
18 primarily as Lisp objects and only secondarily as text. The Lisp
19 objects used for variables are symbols: the symbol name is the variable
20 name, and the variable's value is stored in the value cell of the
21 symbol. The use of a symbol as a variable is independent of its use as
22 a function name. @xref{Symbol Components}.
24 The Lisp objects that constitute a Lisp program determine the textual
25 form of the program---it is simply the read syntax for those Lisp
26 objects. This is why, for example, a variable in a textual Lisp program
27 is written using the read syntax for the symbol that represents the
31 * Global Variables:: Variable values that exist permanently, everywhere.
32 * Constant Variables:: Certain "variables" have values that never change.
33 * Local Variables:: Variable values that exist only temporarily.
34 * Void Variables:: Symbols that lack values.
35 * Defining Variables:: A definition says a symbol is used as a variable.
36 * Tips for Defining:: Things you should think about when you
38 * Accessing Variables:: Examining values of variables whose names
39 are known only at run time.
40 * Setting Variables:: Storing new values in variables.
41 * Variable Scoping:: How Lisp chooses among local and global values.
42 * Buffer-Local Variables:: Variable values in effect only in one buffer.
43 * Frame-Local Variables:: Variable values in effect only in one frame.
44 * Future Local Variables:: New kinds of local values we might add some day.
45 * Variable Aliases:: Variables that are aliases for other variables.
46 * File Local Variables:: Handling local variable lists in files.
47 * Variables with Restricted Values:: Non-constant variables whose value can
48 @emph{not} be an arbitrary Lisp object.
51 @node Global Variables
52 @section Global Variables
53 @cindex global variable
55 The simplest way to use a variable is @dfn{globally}. This means that
56 the variable has just one value at a time, and this value is in effect
57 (at least for the moment) throughout the Lisp system. The value remains
58 in effect until you specify a new one. When a new value replaces the
59 old one, no trace of the old value remains in the variable.
61 You specify a value for a symbol with @code{setq}. For example,
68 gives the variable @code{x} the value @code{(a b)}. Note that
69 @code{setq} does not evaluate its first argument, the name of the
70 variable, but it does evaluate the second argument, the new value.
72 Once the variable has a value, you can refer to it by using the symbol
73 by itself as an expression. Thus,
82 assuming the @code{setq} form shown above has already been executed.
84 If you do set the same variable again, the new value replaces the old
102 @node Constant Variables
103 @section Variables that Never Change
106 @kindex setting-constant
107 @cindex keyword symbol
109 In Emacs Lisp, certain symbols normally evaluate to themselves. These
110 include @code{nil} and @code{t}, as well as any symbol whose name starts
111 with @samp{:} (these are called @dfn{keywords}). These symbols cannot
112 be rebound, nor can their values be changed. Any attempt to set or bind
113 @code{nil} or @code{t} signals a @code{setting-constant} error. The
114 same is true for a keyword (a symbol whose name starts with @samp{:}),
115 if it is interned in the standard obarray, except that setting such a
116 symbol to itself is not an error.
125 @error{} Attempt to set constant symbol: nil
129 @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 @node Local Variables
137 @section Local Variables
138 @cindex binding local variables
139 @cindex local variables
140 @cindex local binding
141 @cindex global binding
143 Global variables have values that last until explicitly superseded
144 with new values. Sometimes it is useful to create variable values that
145 exist temporarily---only until a certain part of the program finishes.
146 These values are called @dfn{local}, and the variables so used are
147 called @dfn{local variables}.
149 For example, when a function is called, its argument variables receive
150 new local values that last until the function exits. The @code{let}
151 special form explicitly establishes new local values for specified
152 variables; these last until exit from the @code{let} form.
154 @cindex shadowing of variables
155 Establishing a local value saves away the previous value (or lack of
156 one) of the variable. When the life span of the local value is over,
157 the previous value is restored. In the mean time, we say that the
158 previous value is @dfn{shadowed} and @dfn{not visible}. Both global and
159 local values may be shadowed (@pxref{Scope}).
161 If you set a variable (such as with @code{setq}) while it is local,
162 this replaces the local value; it does not alter the global value, or
163 previous local values, that are shadowed. To model this behavior, we
164 speak of a @dfn{local binding} of the variable as well as a local value.
166 The local binding is a conceptual place that holds a local value.
167 Entry to a function, or a special form such as @code{let}, creates the
168 local binding; exit from the function or from the @code{let} removes the
169 local binding. As long as the local binding lasts, the variable's value
170 is stored within it. Use of @code{setq} or @code{set} while there is a
171 local binding stores a different value into the local binding; it does
172 not create a new binding.
174 We also speak of the @dfn{global binding}, which is where
175 (conceptually) the global value is kept.
177 @cindex current binding
178 A variable can have more than one local binding at a time (for
179 example, if there are nested @code{let} forms that bind it). In such a
180 case, the most recently created local binding that still exists is the
181 @dfn{current binding} of the variable. (This rule is called
182 @dfn{dynamic scoping}; see @ref{Variable Scoping}.) If there are no
183 local bindings, the variable's global binding is its current binding.
184 We sometimes call the current binding the @dfn{most-local existing
185 binding}, for emphasis. Ordinary evaluation of a symbol always returns
186 the value of its current binding.
188 The special forms @code{let} and @code{let*} exist to create
191 @defspec let (bindings@dots{}) forms@dots{}
192 This special form binds variables according to @var{bindings} and then
193 evaluates all of the @var{forms} in textual order. The @code{let}-form
194 returns the value of the last form in @var{forms}.
196 Each of the @var{bindings} is either @w{(i) a} symbol, in which case
197 that symbol is bound to @code{nil}; or @w{(ii) a} list of the form
198 @code{(@var{symbol} @var{value-form})}, in which case @var{symbol} is
199 bound to the result of evaluating @var{value-form}. If @var{value-form}
200 is omitted, @code{nil} is used.
202 All of the @var{value-form}s in @var{bindings} are evaluated in the
203 order they appear and @emph{before} binding any of the symbols to them.
204 Here is an example of this: @code{z} is bound to the old value of
205 @code{y}, which is 2, not the new value of @code{y}, which is 1.
221 @defspec let* (bindings@dots{}) forms@dots{}
222 This special form is like @code{let}, but it binds each variable right
223 after computing its local value, before computing the local value for
224 the next variable. Therefore, an expression in @var{bindings} can
225 reasonably refer to the preceding symbols bound in this @code{let*}
226 form. Compare the following example with the example above for
236 (z y)) ; @r{Use the just-established value of @code{y}.}
243 Here is a complete list of the other facilities that create local
248 Function calls (@pxref{Functions}).
251 Macro calls (@pxref{Macros}).
254 @code{condition-case} (@pxref{Errors}).
257 Variables can also have buffer-local bindings (@pxref{Buffer-Local
258 Variables}) and frame-local bindings (@pxref{Frame-Local Variables}); a
259 few variables have terminal-local bindings (@pxref{Multiple Displays}).
260 These kinds of bindings work somewhat like ordinary local bindings, but
261 they are localized depending on ``where'' you are in Emacs, rather than
264 @defvar max-specpdl-size
265 @anchor{Definition of max-specpdl-size}
266 @cindex variable limit error
267 @cindex evaluation error
268 @cindex infinite recursion
269 This variable defines the limit on the total number of local variable
270 bindings and @code{unwind-protect} cleanups (@pxref{Cleanups,,
271 Cleaning Up from Nonlocal Exits}) that are allowed before signaling an
272 error (with data @code{"Variable binding depth exceeds
275 This limit, with the associated error when it is exceeded, is one way
276 that Lisp avoids infinite recursion on an ill-defined function.
277 @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} provides another limit on depth of nesting.
278 @xref{Definition of max-lisp-eval-depth,, Eval}.
280 The default value is 600. Entry to the Lisp debugger increases the
281 value, if there is little room left, to make sure the debugger itself
286 @section When a Variable is ``Void''
287 @kindex void-variable
288 @cindex void variable
290 If you have never given a symbol any value as a global variable, we
291 say that that symbol's global value is @dfn{void}. In other words, the
292 symbol's value cell does not have any Lisp object in it. If you try to
293 evaluate the symbol, you get a @code{void-variable} error rather than
296 Note that a value of @code{nil} is not the same as void. The symbol
297 @code{nil} is a Lisp object and can be the value of a variable just as any
298 other object can be; but it is @emph{a value}. A void variable does not
301 After you have given a variable a value, you can make it void once more
302 using @code{makunbound}.
304 @defun makunbound symbol
305 This function makes the current variable binding of @var{symbol} void.
306 Subsequent attempts to use this symbol's value as a variable will signal
307 the error @code{void-variable}, unless and until you set it again.
309 @code{makunbound} returns @var{symbol}.
313 (makunbound 'x) ; @r{Make the global value of @code{x} void.}
318 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x
322 If @var{symbol} is locally bound, @code{makunbound} affects the most
323 local existing binding. This is the only way a symbol can have a void
324 local binding, since all the constructs that create local bindings
325 create them with values. In this case, the voidness lasts at most as
326 long as the binding does; when the binding is removed due to exit from
327 the construct that made it, the previous local or global binding is
328 reexposed as usual, and the variable is no longer void unless the newly
329 reexposed binding was void all along.
333 (setq x 1) ; @r{Put a value in the global binding.}
335 (let ((x 2)) ; @r{Locally bind it.}
336 (makunbound 'x) ; @r{Void the local binding.}
338 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x
341 x ; @r{The global binding is unchanged.}
344 (let ((x 2)) ; @r{Locally bind it.}
345 (let ((x 3)) ; @r{And again.}
346 (makunbound 'x) ; @r{Void the innermost-local binding.}
347 x)) ; @r{And refer: it's void.}
348 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: x
354 (makunbound 'x)) ; @r{Void inner binding, then remove it.}
355 x) ; @r{Now outer @code{let} binding is visible.}
361 A variable that has been made void with @code{makunbound} is
362 indistinguishable from one that has never received a value and has
365 You can use the function @code{boundp} to test whether a variable is
368 @defun boundp variable
369 @code{boundp} returns @code{t} if @var{variable} (a symbol) is not void;
370 more precisely, if its current binding is not void. It returns
371 @code{nil} otherwise.
375 (boundp 'abracadabra) ; @r{Starts out void.}
379 (let ((abracadabra 5)) ; @r{Locally bind it.}
380 (boundp 'abracadabra))
384 (boundp 'abracadabra) ; @r{Still globally void.}
388 (setq abracadabra 5) ; @r{Make it globally nonvoid.}
392 (boundp 'abracadabra)
398 @node Defining Variables
399 @section Defining Global Variables
400 @cindex variable definition
402 You may announce your intention to use a symbol as a global variable
403 with a @dfn{variable definition}: a special form, either @code{defconst}
406 In Emacs Lisp, definitions serve three purposes. First, they inform
407 people who read the code that certain symbols are @emph{intended} to be
408 used a certain way (as variables). Second, they inform the Lisp system
409 of these things, supplying a value and documentation. Third, they
410 provide information to utilities such as @code{etags} and
411 @code{make-docfile}, which create data bases of the functions and
412 variables in a program.
414 The difference between @code{defconst} and @code{defvar} is primarily
415 a matter of intent, serving to inform human readers of whether the value
416 should ever change. Emacs Lisp does not restrict the ways in which a
417 variable can be used based on @code{defconst} or @code{defvar}
418 declarations. However, it does make a difference for initialization:
419 @code{defconst} unconditionally initializes the variable, while
420 @code{defvar} initializes it only if it is void.
423 One would expect user option variables to be defined with
424 @code{defconst}, since programs do not change them. Unfortunately, this
425 has bad results if the definition is in a library that is not preloaded:
426 @code{defconst} would override any prior value when the library is
427 loaded. Users would like to be able to set user options in their init
428 files, and override the default values given in the definitions. For
429 this reason, user options must be defined with @code{defvar}.
432 @defspec defvar symbol [value [doc-string]]
433 This special form defines @var{symbol} as a variable and can also
434 initialize and document it. The definition informs a person reading
435 your code that @var{symbol} is used as a variable that might be set or
436 changed. Note that @var{symbol} is not evaluated; the symbol to be
437 defined must appear explicitly in the @code{defvar}.
439 If @var{symbol} is void and @var{value} is specified, @code{defvar}
440 evaluates it and sets @var{symbol} to the result. But if @var{symbol}
441 already has a value (i.e., it is not void), @var{value} is not even
442 evaluated, and @var{symbol}'s value remains unchanged. If @var{value}
443 is omitted, the value of @var{symbol} is not changed in any case.
445 If @var{symbol} has a buffer-local binding in the current buffer,
446 @code{defvar} operates on the default value, which is buffer-independent,
447 not the current (buffer-local) binding. It sets the default value if
448 the default value is void. @xref{Buffer-Local Variables}.
450 When you evaluate a top-level @code{defvar} form with @kbd{C-M-x} in
451 Emacs Lisp mode (@code{eval-defun}), a special feature of
452 @code{eval-defun} arranges to set the variable unconditionally, without
453 testing whether its value is void.
455 If the @var{doc-string} argument appears, it specifies the documentation
456 for the variable. (This opportunity to specify documentation is one of
457 the main benefits of defining the variable.) The documentation is
458 stored in the symbol's @code{variable-documentation} property. The
459 Emacs help functions (@pxref{Documentation}) look for this property.
461 If the variable is a user option that users would want to set
462 interactively, you should use @samp{*} as the first character of
463 @var{doc-string}. This lets users set the variable conveniently using
464 the @code{set-variable} command. Note that you should nearly always
465 use @code{defcustom} instead of @code{defvar} to define these
466 variables, so that users can use @kbd{M-x customize} and related
467 commands to set them. @xref{Customization}.
469 Here are some examples. This form defines @code{foo} but does not
479 This example initializes the value of @code{bar} to @code{23}, and gives
480 it a documentation string:
485 "The normal weight of a bar.")
490 The following form changes the documentation string for @code{bar},
491 making it a user option, but does not change the value, since @code{bar}
492 already has a value. (The addition @code{(1+ nil)} would get an error
493 if it were evaluated, but since it is not evaluated, there is no error.)
498 "*The normal weight of a bar.")
507 Here is an equivalent expression for the @code{defvar} special form:
511 (defvar @var{symbol} @var{value} @var{doc-string})
514 (if (not (boundp '@var{symbol}))
515 (setq @var{symbol} @var{value}))
516 (if '@var{doc-string}
517 (put '@var{symbol} 'variable-documentation '@var{doc-string}))
522 The @code{defvar} form returns @var{symbol}, but it is normally used
523 at top level in a file where its value does not matter.
526 @defspec defconst symbol value [doc-string]
527 This special form defines @var{symbol} as a value and initializes it.
528 It informs a person reading your code that @var{symbol} has a standard
529 global value, established here, that should not be changed by the user
530 or by other programs. Note that @var{symbol} is not evaluated; the
531 symbol to be defined must appear explicitly in the @code{defconst}.
533 @code{defconst} always evaluates @var{value}, and sets the value of
534 @var{symbol} to the result. If @var{symbol} does have a buffer-local
535 binding in the current buffer, @code{defconst} sets the default value,
536 not the buffer-local value. (But you should not be making
537 buffer-local bindings for a symbol that is defined with
540 Here, @code{pi} is a constant that presumably ought not to be changed
541 by anyone (attempts by the Indiana State Legislature notwithstanding).
542 As the second form illustrates, however, this is only advisory.
546 (defconst pi 3.1415 "Pi to five places.")
560 @defun user-variable-p variable
562 This function returns @code{t} if @var{variable} is a user option---a
563 variable intended to be set by the user for customization---and
564 @code{nil} otherwise. (Variables other than user options exist for the
565 internal purposes of Lisp programs, and users need not know about them.)
567 User option variables are distinguished from other variables either
568 though being declared using @code{defcustom}@footnote{They may also be
569 declared equivalently in @file{cus-start.el}.} or by the first character
570 of their @code{variable-documentation} property. If the property exists
571 and is a string, and its first character is @samp{*}, then the variable
575 @kindex variable-interactive
576 If a user option variable has a @code{variable-interactive} property,
577 the @code{set-variable} command uses that value to control reading the
578 new value for the variable. The property's value is used as if it were
579 specified in @code{interactive} (@pxref{Using Interactive}). However,
580 this feature is largely obsoleted by @code{defcustom}
581 (@pxref{Customization}).
583 @strong{Warning:} If the @code{defconst} and @code{defvar} special
584 forms are used while the variable has a local binding (made with
585 @code{let}, or a function argument), they set the local-binding's
586 value; the top-level binding is not changed. This is not what you
587 usually want. To prevent it, use these special forms at top level in
588 a file, where normally no local binding is in effect, and make sure to
589 load the file before making a local binding for the variable.
591 @node Tips for Defining
592 @section Tips for Defining Variables Robustly
594 When you define a variable whose value is a function, or a list of
595 functions, use a name that ends in @samp{-function} or
596 @samp{-functions}, respectively.
598 There are several other variable name conventions;
599 here is a complete list:
603 The variable is a normal hook (@pxref{Hooks}).
605 @item @dots{}-function
606 The value is a function.
608 @item @dots{}-functions
609 The value is a list of functions.
612 The value is a form (an expression).
615 The value is a list of forms (expressions).
617 @item @dots{}-predicate
618 The value is a predicate---a function of one argument that returns
619 non-@code{nil} for ``good'' arguments and @code{nil} for ``bad''
623 The value is significant only as to whether it is @code{nil} or not.
625 @item @dots{}-program
626 The value is a program name.
628 @item @dots{}-command
629 The value is a whole shell command.
631 @item @samp{}-switches
632 The value specifies options for a command.
635 When you define a variable, always consider whether you should mark
636 it as ``risky''; see @ref{File Local Variables}.
638 When defining and initializing a variable that holds a complicated
639 value (such as a keymap with bindings in it), it's best to put the
640 entire computation of the value into the @code{defvar}, like this:
644 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
645 (define-key map "\C-c\C-a" 'my-command)
652 This method has several benefits. First, if the user quits while
653 loading the file, the variable is either still uninitialized or
654 initialized properly, never in-between. If it is still uninitialized,
655 reloading the file will initialize it properly. Second, reloading the
656 file once the variable is initialized will not alter it; that is
657 important if the user has run hooks to alter part of the contents (such
658 as, to rebind keys). Third, evaluating the @code{defvar} form with
659 @kbd{C-M-x} @emph{will} reinitialize the map completely.
661 Putting so much code in the @code{defvar} form has one disadvantage:
662 it puts the documentation string far away from the line which names the
663 variable. Here's a safe way to avoid that:
666 (defvar my-mode-map nil
669 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
670 (define-key map "\C-c\C-a" 'my-command)
672 (setq my-mode-map map)))
676 This has all the same advantages as putting the initialization inside
677 the @code{defvar}, except that you must type @kbd{C-M-x} twice, once on
678 each form, if you do want to reinitialize the variable.
680 But be careful not to write the code like this:
683 (defvar my-mode-map nil
686 (setq my-mode-map (make-sparse-keymap))
687 (define-key my-mode-map "\C-c\C-a" 'my-command)
692 This code sets the variable, then alters it, but it does so in more than
693 one step. If the user quits just after the @code{setq}, that leaves the
694 variable neither correctly initialized nor void nor @code{nil}. Once
695 that happens, reloading the file will not initialize the variable; it
696 will remain incomplete.
698 @node Accessing Variables
699 @section Accessing Variable Values
701 The usual way to reference a variable is to write the symbol which
702 names it (@pxref{Symbol Forms}). This requires you to specify the
703 variable name when you write the program. Usually that is exactly what
704 you want to do. Occasionally you need to choose at run time which
705 variable to reference; then you can use @code{symbol-value}.
707 @defun symbol-value symbol
708 This function returns the value of @var{symbol}. This is the value in
709 the innermost local binding of the symbol, or its global value if it
710 has no local bindings.
723 ;; @r{Here the symbol @code{abracadabra}}
724 ;; @r{is the symbol whose value is examined.}
725 (let ((abracadabra 'foo))
726 (symbol-value 'abracadabra))
731 ;; @r{Here the value of @code{abracadabra},}
732 ;; @r{which is @code{foo},}
733 ;; @r{is the symbol whose value is examined.}
734 (let ((abracadabra 'foo))
735 (symbol-value abracadabra))
740 (symbol-value 'abracadabra)
745 A @code{void-variable} error is signaled if the current binding of
746 @var{symbol} is void.
749 @node Setting Variables
750 @section How to Alter a Variable Value
752 The usual way to change the value of a variable is with the special
753 form @code{setq}. When you need to compute the choice of variable at
754 run time, use the function @code{set}.
756 @defspec setq [symbol form]@dots{}
757 This special form is the most common method of changing a variable's
758 value. Each @var{symbol} is given a new value, which is the result of
759 evaluating the corresponding @var{form}. The most-local existing
760 binding of the symbol is changed.
762 @code{setq} does not evaluate @var{symbol}; it sets the symbol that you
763 write. We say that this argument is @dfn{automatically quoted}. The
764 @samp{q} in @code{setq} stands for ``quoted.''
766 The value of the @code{setq} form is the value of the last @var{form}.
773 x ; @r{@code{x} now has a global value.}
777 (setq x 6) ; @r{The local binding of @code{x} is set.}
781 x ; @r{The global value is unchanged.}
785 Note that the first @var{form} is evaluated, then the first
786 @var{symbol} is set, then the second @var{form} is evaluated, then the
787 second @var{symbol} is set, and so on:
791 (setq x 10 ; @r{Notice that @code{x} is set before}
792 y (1+ x)) ; @r{the value of @code{y} is computed.}
798 @defun set symbol value
799 This function sets @var{symbol}'s value to @var{value}, then returns
800 @var{value}. Since @code{set} is a function, the expression written for
801 @var{symbol} is evaluated to obtain the symbol to set.
803 The most-local existing binding of the variable is the binding that is
804 set; shadowed bindings are not affected.
809 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: one
820 (set two 2) ; @r{@code{two} evaluates to symbol @code{one}.}
824 one ; @r{So it is @code{one} that was set.}
826 (let ((one 1)) ; @r{This binding of @code{one} is set,}
827 (set 'one 3) ; @r{not the global value.}
837 If @var{symbol} is not actually a symbol, a @code{wrong-type-argument}
842 @error{} Wrong type argument: symbolp, (x y)
845 Logically speaking, @code{set} is a more fundamental primitive than
846 @code{setq}. Any use of @code{setq} can be trivially rewritten to use
847 @code{set}; @code{setq} could even be defined as a macro, given the
848 availability of @code{set}. However, @code{set} itself is rarely used;
849 beginners hardly need to know about it. It is useful only for choosing
850 at run time which variable to set. For example, the command
851 @code{set-variable}, which reads a variable name from the user and then
852 sets the variable, needs to use @code{set}.
854 @cindex CL note---@code{set} local
856 @b{Common Lisp note:} In Common Lisp, @code{set} always changes the
857 symbol's ``special'' or dynamic value, ignoring any lexical bindings.
858 In Emacs Lisp, all variables and all bindings are dynamic, so @code{set}
859 always affects the most local existing binding.
863 One other function for setting a variable is designed to add
864 an element to a list if it is not already present in the list.
866 @defun add-to-list symbol element &optional append
867 This function sets the variable @var{symbol} by consing @var{element}
868 onto the old value, if @var{element} is not already a member of that
869 value. It returns the resulting list, whether updated or not. The
870 value of @var{symbol} had better be a list already before the call.
871 Membership is tested using @code{equal}.
873 Normally, if @var{element} is added, it is added to the front of
874 @var{symbol}, but if the optional argument @var{append} is
875 non-@code{nil}, it is added at the end.
877 The argument @var{symbol} is not implicitly quoted; @code{add-to-list}
878 is an ordinary function, like @code{set} and unlike @code{setq}. Quote
879 the argument yourself if that is what you want.
882 Here's a scenario showing how to use @code{add-to-list}:
888 (add-to-list 'foo 'c) ;; @r{Add @code{c}.}
891 (add-to-list 'foo 'b) ;; @r{No effect.}
894 foo ;; @r{@code{foo} was changed.}
898 An equivalent expression for @code{(add-to-list '@var{var}
899 @var{value})} is this:
902 (or (member @var{value} @var{var})
903 (setq @var{var} (cons @var{value} @var{var})))
906 @node Variable Scoping
907 @section Scoping Rules for Variable Bindings
909 A given symbol @code{foo} can have several local variable bindings,
910 established at different places in the Lisp program, as well as a global
911 binding. The most recently established binding takes precedence over
916 @cindex dynamic scoping
917 @cindex lexical scoping
918 Local bindings in Emacs Lisp have @dfn{indefinite scope} and
919 @dfn{dynamic extent}. @dfn{Scope} refers to @emph{where} textually in
920 the source code the binding can be accessed. ``Indefinite scope'' means
921 that any part of the program can potentially access the variable
922 binding. @dfn{Extent} refers to @emph{when}, as the program is
923 executing, the binding exists. ``Dynamic extent'' means that the binding
924 lasts as long as the activation of the construct that established it.
926 The combination of dynamic extent and indefinite scope is called
927 @dfn{dynamic scoping}. By contrast, most programming languages use
928 @dfn{lexical scoping}, in which references to a local variable must be
929 located textually within the function or block that binds the variable.
931 @cindex CL note---special variables
933 @b{Common Lisp note:} Variables declared ``special'' in Common Lisp are
934 dynamically scoped, like all variables in Emacs Lisp.
938 * Scope:: Scope means where in the program a value is visible.
939 Comparison with other languages.
940 * Extent:: Extent means how long in time a value exists.
941 * Impl of Scope:: Two ways to implement dynamic scoping.
942 * Using Scoping:: How to use dynamic scoping carefully and avoid problems.
948 Emacs Lisp uses @dfn{indefinite scope} for local variable bindings.
949 This means that any function anywhere in the program text might access a
950 given binding of a variable. Consider the following function
955 (defun binder (x) ; @r{@code{x} is bound in @code{binder}.}
956 (foo 5)) ; @r{@code{foo} is some other function.}
960 (defun user () ; @r{@code{x} is used ``free'' in @code{user}.}
965 In a lexically scoped language, the binding of @code{x} in
966 @code{binder} would never be accessible in @code{user}, because
967 @code{user} is not textually contained within the function
968 @code{binder}. However, in dynamically-scoped Emacs Lisp, @code{user}
969 may or may not refer to the binding of @code{x} established in
970 @code{binder}, depending on the circumstances:
974 If we call @code{user} directly without calling @code{binder} at all,
975 then whatever binding of @code{x} is found, it cannot come from
979 If we define @code{foo} as follows and then call @code{binder}, then the
980 binding made in @code{binder} will be seen in @code{user}:
990 However, if we define @code{foo} as follows and then call @code{binder},
991 then the binding made in @code{binder} @emph{will not} be seen in
1000 Here, when @code{foo} is called by @code{binder}, it binds @code{x}.
1001 (The binding in @code{foo} is said to @dfn{shadow} the one made in
1002 @code{binder}.) Therefore, @code{user} will access the @code{x} bound
1003 by @code{foo} instead of the one bound by @code{binder}.
1006 Emacs Lisp uses dynamic scoping because simple implementations of
1007 lexical scoping are slow. In addition, every Lisp system needs to offer
1008 dynamic scoping at least as an option; if lexical scoping is the norm,
1009 there must be a way to specify dynamic scoping instead for a particular
1010 variable. It might not be a bad thing for Emacs to offer both, but
1011 implementing it with dynamic scoping only was much easier.
1016 @dfn{Extent} refers to the time during program execution that a
1017 variable name is valid. In Emacs Lisp, a variable is valid only while
1018 the form that bound it is executing. This is called @dfn{dynamic
1019 extent}. ``Local'' or ``automatic'' variables in most languages,
1020 including C and Pascal, have dynamic extent.
1022 One alternative to dynamic extent is @dfn{indefinite extent}. This
1023 means that a variable binding can live on past the exit from the form
1024 that made the binding. Common Lisp and Scheme, for example, support
1025 this, but Emacs Lisp does not.
1027 To illustrate this, the function below, @code{make-add}, returns a
1028 function that purports to add @var{n} to its own argument @var{m}. This
1029 would work in Common Lisp, but it does not do the job in Emacs Lisp,
1030 because after the call to @code{make-add} exits, the variable @code{n}
1031 is no longer bound to the actual argument 2.
1035 (function (lambda (m) (+ n m)))) ; @r{Return a function.}
1037 (fset 'add2 (make-add 2)) ; @r{Define function @code{add2}}
1038 ; @r{with @code{(make-add 2)}.}
1039 @result{} (lambda (m) (+ n m))
1040 (add2 4) ; @r{Try to add 2 to 4.}
1041 @error{} Symbol's value as variable is void: n
1044 @cindex closures not available
1045 Some Lisp dialects have ``closures'', objects that are like functions
1046 but record additional variable bindings. Emacs Lisp does not have
1050 @subsection Implementation of Dynamic Scoping
1051 @cindex deep binding
1053 A simple sample implementation (which is not how Emacs Lisp actually
1054 works) may help you understand dynamic binding. This technique is
1055 called @dfn{deep binding} and was used in early Lisp systems.
1057 Suppose there is a stack of bindings, which are variable-value pairs.
1058 At entry to a function or to a @code{let} form, we can push bindings
1059 onto the stack for the arguments or local variables created there. We
1060 can pop those bindings from the stack at exit from the binding
1063 We can find the value of a variable by searching the stack from top to
1064 bottom for a binding for that variable; the value from that binding is
1065 the value of the variable. To set the variable, we search for the
1066 current binding, then store the new value into that binding.
1068 As you can see, a function's bindings remain in effect as long as it
1069 continues execution, even during its calls to other functions. That is
1070 why we say the extent of the binding is dynamic. And any other function
1071 can refer to the bindings, if it uses the same variables while the
1072 bindings are in effect. That is why we say the scope is indefinite.
1074 @cindex shallow binding
1075 The actual implementation of variable scoping in GNU Emacs Lisp uses a
1076 technique called @dfn{shallow binding}. Each variable has a standard
1077 place in which its current value is always found---the value cell of the
1080 In shallow binding, setting the variable works by storing a value in
1081 the value cell. Creating a new binding works by pushing the old value
1082 (belonging to a previous binding) onto a stack, and storing the new
1083 local value in the value cell. Eliminating a binding works by popping
1084 the old value off the stack, into the value cell.
1086 We use shallow binding because it has the same results as deep
1087 binding, but runs faster, since there is never a need to search for a
1091 @subsection Proper Use of Dynamic Scoping
1093 Binding a variable in one function and using it in another is a
1094 powerful technique, but if used without restraint, it can make programs
1095 hard to understand. There are two clean ways to use this technique:
1099 Use or bind the variable only in a few related functions, written close
1100 together in one file. Such a variable is used for communication within
1103 You should write comments to inform other programmers that they can see
1104 all uses of the variable before them, and to advise them not to add uses
1108 Give the variable a well-defined, documented meaning, and make all
1109 appropriate functions refer to it (but not bind it or set it) wherever
1110 that meaning is relevant. For example, the variable
1111 @code{case-fold-search} is defined as ``non-@code{nil} means ignore case
1112 when searching''; various search and replace functions refer to it
1113 directly or through their subroutines, but do not bind or set it.
1115 Then you can bind the variable in other programs, knowing reliably what
1119 In either case, you should define the variable with @code{defvar}.
1120 This helps other people understand your program by telling them to look
1121 for inter-function usage. It also avoids a warning from the byte
1122 compiler. Choose the variable's name to avoid name conflicts---don't
1123 use short names like @code{x}.
1125 @node Buffer-Local Variables
1126 @section Buffer-Local Variables
1127 @cindex variables, buffer-local
1128 @cindex buffer-local variables
1130 Global and local variable bindings are found in most programming
1131 languages in one form or another. Emacs, however, also supports additional,
1132 unusual kinds of variable binding: @dfn{buffer-local} bindings, which
1133 apply only in one buffer, and @dfn{frame-local} bindings, which apply only in
1134 one frame. Having different values for a variable in different buffers
1135 and/or frames is an important customization method.
1137 This section describes buffer-local bindings; for frame-local
1138 bindings, see the following section, @ref{Frame-Local Variables}. (A few
1139 variables have bindings that are local to each terminal; see
1140 @ref{Multiple Displays}.)
1143 * Intro to Buffer-Local:: Introduction and concepts.
1144 * Creating Buffer-Local:: Creating and destroying buffer-local bindings.
1145 * Default Value:: The default value is seen in buffers
1146 that don't have their own buffer-local values.
1149 @node Intro to Buffer-Local
1150 @subsection Introduction to Buffer-Local Variables
1152 A buffer-local variable has a buffer-local binding associated with a
1153 particular buffer. The binding is in effect when that buffer is
1154 current; otherwise, it is not in effect. If you set the variable while
1155 a buffer-local binding is in effect, the new value goes in that binding,
1156 so its other bindings are unchanged. This means that the change is
1157 visible only in the buffer where you made it.
1159 The variable's ordinary binding, which is not associated with any
1160 specific buffer, is called the @dfn{default binding}. In most cases,
1161 this is the global binding.
1163 A variable can have buffer-local bindings in some buffers but not in
1164 other buffers. The default binding is shared by all the buffers that
1165 don't have their own bindings for the variable. (This includes all
1166 newly-created buffers.) If you set the variable in a buffer that does
1167 not have a buffer-local binding for it, this sets the default binding
1168 (assuming there are no frame-local bindings to complicate the matter),
1169 so the new value is visible in all the buffers that see the default
1172 The most common use of buffer-local bindings is for major modes to change
1173 variables that control the behavior of commands. For example, C mode and
1174 Lisp mode both set the variable @code{paragraph-start} to specify that only
1175 blank lines separate paragraphs. They do this by making the variable
1176 buffer-local in the buffer that is being put into C mode or Lisp mode, and
1177 then setting it to the new value for that mode. @xref{Major Modes}.
1179 The usual way to make a buffer-local binding is with
1180 @code{make-local-variable}, which is what major mode commands typically
1181 use. This affects just the current buffer; all other buffers (including
1182 those yet to be created) will continue to share the default value unless
1183 they are explicitly given their own buffer-local bindings.
1185 @cindex automatically buffer-local
1186 A more powerful operation is to mark the variable as
1187 @dfn{automatically buffer-local} by calling
1188 @code{make-variable-buffer-local}. You can think of this as making the
1189 variable local in all buffers, even those yet to be created. More
1190 precisely, the effect is that setting the variable automatically makes
1191 the variable local to the current buffer if it is not already so. All
1192 buffers start out by sharing the default value of the variable as usual,
1193 but setting the variable creates a buffer-local binding for the current
1194 buffer. The new value is stored in the buffer-local binding, leaving
1195 the default binding untouched. This means that the default value cannot
1196 be changed with @code{setq} in any buffer; the only way to change it is
1197 with @code{setq-default}.
1199 @strong{Warning:} When a variable has buffer-local or frame-local
1200 bindings in one or more buffers, @code{let} rebinds the binding that's
1201 currently in effect. For instance, if the current buffer has a
1202 buffer-local value, @code{let} temporarily rebinds that. If no
1203 buffer-local or frame-local bindings are in effect, @code{let} rebinds
1204 the default value. If inside the @code{let} you then change to a
1205 different current buffer in which a different binding is in effect,
1206 you won't see the @code{let} binding any more. And if you exit the
1207 @code{let} while still in the other buffer, you won't see the
1208 unbinding occur (though it will occur properly). Here is an example
1215 (make-local-variable 'foo)
1219 ;; foo @result{} 'temp ; @r{let binding in buffer @samp{a}}
1221 ;; foo @result{} 'g ; @r{the global value since foo is not local in @samp{b}}
1224 foo @result{} 'g ; @r{exiting restored the local value in buffer @samp{a},}
1225 ; @r{but we don't see that in buffer @samp{b}}
1228 (set-buffer "a") ; @r{verify the local value was restored}
1233 Note that references to @code{foo} in @var{body} access the
1234 buffer-local binding of buffer @samp{b}.
1236 When a file specifies local variable values, these become buffer-local
1237 values when you visit the file. @xref{File Variables,,, emacs, The
1240 @node Creating Buffer-Local
1241 @subsection Creating and Deleting Buffer-Local Bindings
1243 @deffn Command make-local-variable variable
1244 This function creates a buffer-local binding in the current buffer for
1245 @var{variable} (a symbol). Other buffers are not affected. The value
1246 returned is @var{variable}.
1249 The buffer-local value of @var{variable} starts out as the same value
1250 @var{variable} previously had. If @var{variable} was void, it remains
1255 ;; @r{In buffer @samp{b1}:}
1256 (setq foo 5) ; @r{Affects all buffers.}
1260 (make-local-variable 'foo) ; @r{Now it is local in @samp{b1}.}
1264 foo ; @r{That did not change}
1265 @result{} 5 ; @r{the value.}
1268 (setq foo 6) ; @r{Change the value}
1269 @result{} 6 ; @r{in @samp{b1}.}
1277 ;; @r{In buffer @samp{b2}, the value hasn't changed.}
1285 Making a variable buffer-local within a @code{let}-binding for that
1286 variable does not work reliably, unless the buffer in which you do this
1287 is not current either on entry to or exit from the @code{let}. This is
1288 because @code{let} does not distinguish between different kinds of
1289 bindings; it knows only which variable the binding was made for.
1291 If the variable is terminal-local, this function signals an error. Such
1292 variables cannot have buffer-local bindings as well. @xref{Multiple
1295 @strong{Warning:} do not use @code{make-local-variable} for a hook
1296 variable. The hook variables are automatically made buffer-local as
1297 needed if you use the @var{local} argument to @code{add-hook} or
1301 @deffn Command make-variable-buffer-local variable
1302 This function marks @var{variable} (a symbol) automatically
1303 buffer-local, so that any subsequent attempt to set it will make it
1304 local to the current buffer at the time.
1306 A peculiar wrinkle of this feature is that binding the variable (with
1307 @code{let} or other binding constructs) does not create a buffer-local
1308 binding for it. Only setting the variable (with @code{set} or
1309 @code{setq}), while the variable does not have a @code{let}-style
1310 binding that was made in the current buffer, does so.
1312 If @var{variable} does not have a default value, then calling this
1313 command will give it a default value of @code{nil}. If @var{variable}
1314 already has a default value, that value remains unchanged.
1315 Subsequently calling @code{makunbound} on @var{variable} will result
1316 in a void buffer-local value and leave the default value unaffected.
1318 The value returned is @var{variable}.
1320 @strong{Warning:} Don't assume that you should use
1321 @code{make-variable-buffer-local} for user-option variables, simply
1322 because users @emph{might} want to customize them differently in
1323 different buffers. Users can make any variable local, when they wish
1324 to. It is better to leave the choice to them.
1326 The time to use @code{make-variable-buffer-local} is when it is crucial
1327 that no two buffers ever share the same binding. For example, when a
1328 variable is used for internal purposes in a Lisp program which depends
1329 on having separate values in separate buffers, then using
1330 @code{make-variable-buffer-local} can be the best solution.
1333 @defun local-variable-p variable &optional buffer
1334 This returns @code{t} if @var{variable} is buffer-local in buffer
1335 @var{buffer} (which defaults to the current buffer); otherwise,
1339 @defun local-variable-if-set-p variable &optional buffer
1340 This returns @code{t} if @var{variable} will become buffer-local in
1341 buffer @var{buffer} (which defaults to the current buffer) if it is
1345 @defun buffer-local-value variable buffer
1346 This function returns the buffer-local binding of @var{variable} (a
1347 symbol) in buffer @var{buffer}. If @var{variable} does not have a
1348 buffer-local binding in buffer @var{buffer}, it returns the default
1349 value (@pxref{Default Value}) of @var{variable} instead.
1352 @defun buffer-local-variables &optional buffer
1353 This function returns a list describing the buffer-local variables in
1354 buffer @var{buffer}. (If @var{buffer} is omitted, the current buffer is
1355 used.) It returns an association list (@pxref{Association Lists}) in
1356 which each element contains one buffer-local variable and its value.
1357 However, when a variable's buffer-local binding in @var{buffer} is void,
1358 then the variable appears directly in the resulting list.
1362 (make-local-variable 'foobar)
1363 (makunbound 'foobar)
1364 (make-local-variable 'bind-me)
1367 (setq lcl (buffer-local-variables))
1368 ;; @r{First, built-in variables local in all buffers:}
1369 @result{} ((mark-active . nil)
1370 (buffer-undo-list . nil)
1371 (mode-name . "Fundamental")
1374 ;; @r{Next, non-built-in buffer-local variables.}
1375 ;; @r{This one is buffer-local and void:}
1377 ;; @r{This one is buffer-local and nonvoid:}
1382 Note that storing new values into the @sc{cdr}s of cons cells in this
1383 list does @emph{not} change the buffer-local values of the variables.
1386 @deffn Command kill-local-variable variable
1387 This function deletes the buffer-local binding (if any) for
1388 @var{variable} (a symbol) in the current buffer. As a result, the
1389 default binding of @var{variable} becomes visible in this buffer. This
1390 typically results in a change in the value of @var{variable}, since the
1391 default value is usually different from the buffer-local value just
1394 If you kill the buffer-local binding of a variable that automatically
1395 becomes buffer-local when set, this makes the default value visible in
1396 the current buffer. However, if you set the variable again, that will
1397 once again create a buffer-local binding for it.
1399 @code{kill-local-variable} returns @var{variable}.
1401 This function is a command because it is sometimes useful to kill one
1402 buffer-local variable interactively, just as it is useful to create
1403 buffer-local variables interactively.
1406 @defun kill-all-local-variables
1407 This function eliminates all the buffer-local variable bindings of the
1408 current buffer except for variables marked as ``permanent''. As a
1409 result, the buffer will see the default values of most variables.
1411 This function also resets certain other information pertaining to the
1412 buffer: it sets the local keymap to @code{nil}, the syntax table to the
1413 value of @code{(standard-syntax-table)}, the case table to
1414 @code{(standard-case-table)}, and the abbrev table to the value of
1415 @code{fundamental-mode-abbrev-table}.
1417 The very first thing this function does is run the normal hook
1418 @code{change-major-mode-hook} (see below).
1420 Every major mode command begins by calling this function, which has the
1421 effect of switching to Fundamental mode and erasing most of the effects
1422 of the previous major mode. To ensure that this does its job, the
1423 variables that major modes set should not be marked permanent.
1425 @code{kill-all-local-variables} returns @code{nil}.
1428 @defvar change-major-mode-hook
1429 The function @code{kill-all-local-variables} runs this normal hook
1430 before it does anything else. This gives major modes a way to arrange
1431 for something special to be done if the user switches to a different
1432 major mode. For best results, make this variable buffer-local, so that
1433 it will disappear after doing its job and will not interfere with the
1434 subsequent major mode. @xref{Hooks}.
1438 @cindex permanent local variable
1439 A buffer-local variable is @dfn{permanent} if the variable name (a
1440 symbol) has a @code{permanent-local} property that is non-@code{nil}.
1441 Permanent locals are appropriate for data pertaining to where the file
1442 came from or how to save it, rather than with how to edit the contents.
1445 @subsection The Default Value of a Buffer-Local Variable
1446 @cindex default value
1448 The global value of a variable with buffer-local bindings is also
1449 called the @dfn{default} value, because it is the value that is in
1450 effect whenever neither the current buffer nor the selected frame has
1451 its own binding for the variable.
1453 The functions @code{default-value} and @code{setq-default} access and
1454 change a variable's default value regardless of whether the current
1455 buffer has a buffer-local binding. For example, you could use
1456 @code{setq-default} to change the default setting of
1457 @code{paragraph-start} for most buffers; and this would work even when
1458 you are in a C or Lisp mode buffer that has a buffer-local value for
1462 The special forms @code{defvar} and @code{defconst} also set the
1463 default value (if they set the variable at all), rather than any
1464 buffer-local or frame-local value.
1466 @defun default-value symbol
1467 This function returns @var{symbol}'s default value. This is the value
1468 that is seen in buffers and frames that do not have their own values for
1469 this variable. If @var{symbol} is not buffer-local, this is equivalent
1470 to @code{symbol-value} (@pxref{Accessing Variables}).
1474 @defun default-boundp symbol
1475 The function @code{default-boundp} tells you whether @var{symbol}'s
1476 default value is nonvoid. If @code{(default-boundp 'foo)} returns
1477 @code{nil}, then @code{(default-value 'foo)} would get an error.
1479 @code{default-boundp} is to @code{default-value} as @code{boundp} is to
1480 @code{symbol-value}.
1483 @defspec setq-default [symbol form]@dots{}
1484 This special form gives each @var{symbol} a new default value, which is
1485 the result of evaluating the corresponding @var{form}. It does not
1486 evaluate @var{symbol}, but does evaluate @var{form}. The value of the
1487 @code{setq-default} form is the value of the last @var{form}.
1489 If a @var{symbol} is not buffer-local for the current buffer, and is not
1490 marked automatically buffer-local, @code{setq-default} has the same
1491 effect as @code{setq}. If @var{symbol} is buffer-local for the current
1492 buffer, then this changes the value that other buffers will see (as long
1493 as they don't have a buffer-local value), but not the value that the
1494 current buffer sees.
1498 ;; @r{In buffer @samp{foo}:}
1499 (make-local-variable 'buffer-local)
1500 @result{} buffer-local
1503 (setq buffer-local 'value-in-foo)
1504 @result{} value-in-foo
1507 (setq-default buffer-local 'new-default)
1508 @result{} new-default
1512 @result{} value-in-foo
1515 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1516 @result{} new-default
1520 ;; @r{In (the new) buffer @samp{bar}:}
1522 @result{} new-default
1525 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1526 @result{} new-default
1529 (setq buffer-local 'another-default)
1530 @result{} another-default
1533 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1534 @result{} another-default
1538 ;; @r{Back in buffer @samp{foo}:}
1540 @result{} value-in-foo
1541 (default-value 'buffer-local)
1542 @result{} another-default
1547 @defun set-default symbol value
1548 This function is like @code{setq-default}, except that @var{symbol} is
1549 an ordinary evaluated argument.
1553 (set-default (car '(a b c)) 23)
1563 @node Frame-Local Variables
1564 @section Frame-Local Variables
1566 Just as variables can have buffer-local bindings, they can also have
1567 frame-local bindings. These bindings belong to one frame, and are in
1568 effect when that frame is selected. Frame-local bindings are actually
1569 frame parameters: you create a frame-local binding in a specific frame
1570 by calling @code{modify-frame-parameters} and specifying the variable
1571 name as the parameter name.
1573 To enable frame-local bindings for a certain variable, call the function
1574 @code{make-variable-frame-local}.
1576 @deffn Command make-variable-frame-local variable
1577 Enable the use of frame-local bindings for @var{variable}. This does
1578 not in itself create any frame-local bindings for the variable; however,
1579 if some frame already has a value for @var{variable} as a frame
1580 parameter, that value automatically becomes a frame-local binding.
1582 If @var{variable} does not have a default value, then calling this
1583 command will give it a default value of @code{nil}. If @var{variable}
1584 already has a default value, that value remains unchanged.
1586 If the variable is terminal-local, this function signals an error,
1587 because such variables cannot have frame-local bindings as well.
1588 @xref{Multiple Displays}. A few variables that are implemented
1589 specially in Emacs can be (and usually are) buffer-local, but can never
1592 This command returns @var{variable}.
1595 Buffer-local bindings take precedence over frame-local bindings. Thus,
1596 consider a variable @code{foo}: if the current buffer has a buffer-local
1597 binding for @code{foo}, that binding is active; otherwise, if the
1598 selected frame has a frame-local binding for @code{foo}, that binding is
1599 active; otherwise, the default binding of @code{foo} is active.
1601 Here is an example. First we prepare a few bindings for @code{foo}:
1604 (setq f1 (selected-frame))
1605 (make-variable-frame-local 'foo)
1607 ;; @r{Make a buffer-local binding for @code{foo} in @samp{b1}.}
1608 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create "b1"))
1609 (make-local-variable 'foo)
1612 ;; @r{Make a frame-local binding for @code{foo} in a new frame.}
1613 ;; @r{Store that frame in @code{f2}.}
1614 (setq f2 (make-frame))
1615 (modify-frame-parameters f2 '((foo . (f 2))))
1618 Now we examine @code{foo} in various contexts. Whenever the
1619 buffer @samp{b1} is current, its buffer-local binding is in effect,
1620 regardless of the selected frame:
1624 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create "b1"))
1629 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create "b1"))
1635 Otherwise, the frame gets a chance to provide the binding; when frame
1636 @code{f2} is selected, its frame-local binding is in effect:
1640 (set-buffer (get-buffer "*scratch*"))
1646 When neither the current buffer nor the selected frame provides
1647 a binding, the default binding is used:
1651 (set-buffer (get-buffer "*scratch*"))
1657 When the active binding of a variable is a frame-local binding, setting
1658 the variable changes that binding. You can observe the result with
1659 @code{frame-parameters}:
1663 (set-buffer (get-buffer "*scratch*"))
1665 (assq 'foo (frame-parameters f2))
1666 @result{} (foo . nobody)
1669 @node Future Local Variables
1670 @section Possible Future Local Variables
1672 We have considered the idea of bindings that are local to a category
1673 of frames---for example, all color frames, or all frames with dark
1674 backgrounds. We have not implemented them because it is not clear that
1675 this feature is really useful. You can get more or less the same
1676 results by adding a function to @code{after-make-frame-functions}, set up to
1677 define a particular frame parameter according to the appropriate
1678 conditions for each frame.
1680 It would also be possible to implement window-local bindings. We
1681 don't know of many situations where they would be useful, and it seems
1682 that indirect buffers (@pxref{Indirect Buffers}) with buffer-local
1683 bindings offer a way to handle these situations more robustly.
1685 If sufficient application is found for either of these two kinds of
1686 local bindings, we will provide it in a subsequent Emacs version.
1688 @node Variable Aliases
1689 @section Variable Aliases
1691 It is sometimes useful to make two variables synonyms, so that both
1692 variables always have the same value, and changing either one also
1693 changes the other. Whenever you change the name of a
1694 variable---either because you realize its old name was not well
1695 chosen, or because its meaning has partly changed---it can be useful
1696 to keep the old name as an @emph{alias} of the new one for
1697 compatibility. You can do this with @code{defvaralias}.
1699 @defun defvaralias alias-var base-var &optional docstring
1700 This function defines the symbol @var{alias-var} as a variable alias
1701 for symbol @var{base-var}. This means that retrieving the value of
1702 @var{alias-var} returns the value of @var{base-var}, and changing the
1703 value of @var{alias-var} changes the value of @var{base-var}.
1705 If the @var{docstring} argument is non-@code{nil}, it specifies the
1706 documentation for @var{alias-var}; otherwise, the alias gets the same
1707 documentation as @var{base-var} has, if any, unless @var{base-var} is
1708 itself an alias, in which case @var{alias-var} gets the documentation
1709 of the variable at the end of the chain of aliases.
1711 This function returns @var{base-var}.
1714 @defun indirect-variable variable
1715 This function returns the variable at the end of the chain of aliases
1716 of @var{variable}. If @var{variable} is not a symbol, or if @var{variable} is
1717 not defined as an alias, the function returns @var{variable}.
1719 This function signals a @code{cyclic-variable-indirection} error if
1720 there is a loop in the chain of symbols.
1724 (defvaralias 'foo 'bar)
1725 (indirect-variable 'foo)
1727 (indirect-variable 'bar)
1743 @node File Local Variables
1744 @section File Local Variables
1746 This section describes the functions and variables that affect
1747 processing of local variables lists in files. @xref{File variables, ,
1748 Local Variables in Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for basic
1749 information about file local variables.
1751 @defopt enable-local-variables
1752 This variable controls whether to process file local variables lists. A
1753 value of @code{t} means process the local variables lists
1754 unconditionally; @code{nil} means ignore them; anything else means ask
1755 the user what to do for each file. The default value is @code{t}.
1758 @defun hack-local-variables &optional mode-only
1759 This function parses, and binds or evaluates as appropriate, any local
1760 variables specified by the contents of the current buffer. The variable
1761 @code{enable-local-variables} has its effect here. However, this
1762 function does not look for the @samp{mode:} local variable in the
1763 @w{@samp{-*-}} line. @code{set-auto-mode} does that, also taking
1764 @code{enable-local-variables} into account.
1766 If the optional argument @var{mode-only} is non-@code{nil}, then all
1767 this function does is return @code{t} if the @w{@samp{-*-}} line
1768 specifies a mode and @code{nil} otherwise. It does not set the mode
1769 nor any other file local variable. It does not check whether a mode
1770 is specified in the local variables list at the end of the file.
1773 If a file local variable list could specify a function that would
1774 be called later, or an expression that would be executed later, simply
1775 visiting a file could take over your Emacs. To prevent this, Emacs
1776 takes care not to allow local variable lists to set such variables.
1778 For one thing, any variable whose name ends in @samp{-command},
1779 @samp{-frame-alist}, @samp{-function}, @samp{-functions},
1780 @samp{-hook}, @samp{-hooks}, @samp{-form}, @samp{-forms}, @samp{-map},
1781 @samp{-map-alist}, @samp{-mode-alist}, @samp{-program}, or
1782 @samp{-predicate} cannot be set in a local variable list. In general,
1783 you should use such a name whenever it is appropriate for the
1784 variable's meaning. The variables @samp{font-lock-keywords},
1785 @samp{font-lock-keywords-[0-9]}, and
1786 @samp{font-lock-syntactic-keywords} cannot be set in a local variable
1787 list, either. These rules can be overridden by giving the variable's
1788 name a non-@code{nil} @code{safe-local-variable} property. If one
1789 gives it a @code{safe-local-variable} property of @code{t}, then one
1790 can give the variable any file local value. One can also give any
1791 symbol, including the above, a @code{safe-local-variable} property
1792 that is a function taking exactly one argument. In that case, giving
1793 a variable with that name a file local value is only allowed if the
1794 function returns non-@code{nil} when called with that value as
1797 In addition, any variable whose name has a non-@code{nil}
1798 @code{risky-local-variable} property is also ignored. So are all
1799 variables listed in @code{ignored-local-variables}:
1801 @defvar ignored-local-variables
1802 This variable holds a list of variables that should not be
1803 set by a file's local variables list. Any value specified
1804 for one of these variables is ignored.
1807 @defun risky-local-variable-p sym &optional val
1808 If @var{val} is non-@code{nil}, returns non-@code{nil} if giving
1809 @var{sym} a file local value of @var{val} would be risky, for any of
1810 the reasons stated above. If @var{val} is @code{nil} or omitted, only
1811 returns @code{nil} if @var{sym} can be safely assigned any file local
1815 The @samp{Eval:} ``variable'' is also a potential loophole, so Emacs
1816 normally asks for confirmation before handling it.
1818 @defopt enable-local-eval
1819 This variable controls processing of @samp{Eval:} in local variables
1820 lists in files being visited. A value of @code{t} means process them
1821 unconditionally; @code{nil} means ignore them; anything else means ask
1822 the user what to do for each file. The default value is @code{maybe}.
1825 Text properties are also potential loopholes, since their values
1826 could include functions to call. So Emacs discards all text
1827 properties from string values specified in a file's local variables
1830 @node Variables with Restricted Values
1831 @section Variables with Restricted Values
1833 Ordinary Lisp variables can be assigned any value that is a valid
1834 Lisp object. However, certain Lisp variables are not defined in Lisp,
1835 but in C. Most of these variables are defined in the C code using
1836 @code{DEFVAR_LISP}. Like variables defined in Lisp, these can take on
1837 any value. However, some variables are defined using
1838 @code{DEFVAR_INT} or @code{DEFVAR_BOOL}. @xref{Defining Lisp
1839 variables in C,, Writing Emacs Primitives}, in particular the
1840 description of functions of the type @code{syms_of_@var{filename}},
1841 for a brief discussion of the C implementation.
1843 Variables of type @code{DEFVAR_BOOL} can only take on the values
1844 @code{nil} or @code{t}. Attempting to assign them any other value
1845 will set them to @code{t}:
1848 (let ((display-hourglass 5))
1853 @defvar byte-boolean-vars
1854 This variable holds a list of all variables of type @code{DEFVAR_BOOL}.
1857 Variables of type @code{DEFVAR_INT} can only take on integer values.
1858 Attempting to assign them any other value will result in an error:
1861 (setq window-min-height 5.0)
1862 @error{} Wrong type argument: integerp, 5.0
1866 arch-tag: 5ff62c44-2b51-47bb-99d4-fea5aeec5d3e