Merge from emacs-24; up to 2012-12-06T01:39:03Z!monnier@iro.umontreal.ca
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispref / objects.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
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3@c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2013 Free Software
4@c Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
ecc6530d 6@node Lisp Data Types
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7@chapter Lisp Data Types
8@cindex object
9@cindex Lisp object
10@cindex type
11@cindex data type
12
13 A Lisp @dfn{object} is a piece of data used and manipulated by Lisp
14programs. For our purposes, a @dfn{type} or @dfn{data type} is a set of
15possible objects.
16
17 Every object belongs to at least one type. Objects of the same type
18have similar structures and may usually be used in the same contexts.
19Types can overlap, and objects can belong to two or more types.
20Consequently, we can ask whether an object belongs to a particular type,
21but not for ``the'' type of an object.
22
23@cindex primitive type
24 A few fundamental object types are built into Emacs. These, from
25which all other types are constructed, are called @dfn{primitive types}.
26Each object belongs to one and only one primitive type. These types
27include @dfn{integer}, @dfn{float}, @dfn{cons}, @dfn{symbol},
28@dfn{string}, @dfn{vector}, @dfn{hash-table}, @dfn{subr}, and
29@dfn{byte-code function}, plus several special types, such as
30@dfn{buffer}, that are related to editing. (@xref{Editing Types}.)
31
32 Each primitive type has a corresponding Lisp function that checks
33whether an object is a member of that type.
34
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35 Lisp is unlike many other languages in that its objects are
36@dfn{self-typing}: the primitive type of each object is implicit in
37the object itself. For example, if an object is a vector, nothing can
38treat it as a number; Lisp knows it is a vector, not a number.
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39
40 In most languages, the programmer must declare the data type of each
41variable, and the type is known by the compiler but not represented in
42the data. Such type declarations do not exist in Emacs Lisp. A Lisp
43variable can have any type of value, and it remembers whatever value
44you store in it, type and all. (Actually, a small number of Emacs
45Lisp variables can only take on values of a certain type.
46@xref{Variables with Restricted Values}.)
47
48 This chapter describes the purpose, printed representation, and read
49syntax of each of the standard types in GNU Emacs Lisp. Details on how
50to use these types can be found in later chapters.
51
52@menu
53* Printed Representation:: How Lisp objects are represented as text.
54* Comments:: Comments and their formatting conventions.
55* Programming Types:: Types found in all Lisp systems.
56* Editing Types:: Types specific to Emacs.
57* Circular Objects:: Read syntax for circular structure.
58* Type Predicates:: Tests related to types.
59* Equality Predicates:: Tests of equality between any two objects.
60@end menu
61
62@node Printed Representation
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63@section Printed Representation and Read Syntax
64@cindex printed representation
65@cindex read syntax
66
67 The @dfn{printed representation} of an object is the format of the
68output generated by the Lisp printer (the function @code{prin1}) for
69that object. Every data type has a unique printed representation.
70The @dfn{read syntax} of an object is the format of the input accepted
71by the Lisp reader (the function @code{read}) for that object. This
72is not necessarily unique; many kinds of object have more than one
73syntax. @xref{Read and Print}.
74
75@cindex hash notation
76 In most cases, an object's printed representation is also a read
77syntax for the object. However, some types have no read syntax, since
78it does not make sense to enter objects of these types as constants in
79a Lisp program. These objects are printed in @dfn{hash notation},
80which consists of the characters @samp{#<}, a descriptive string
81(typically the type name followed by the name of the object), and a
82closing @samp{>}. For example:
83
84@example
85(current-buffer)
86 @result{} #<buffer objects.texi>
87@end example
88
89@noindent
90Hash notation cannot be read at all, so the Lisp reader signals the
91error @code{invalid-read-syntax} whenever it encounters @samp{#<}.
92@kindex invalid-read-syntax
93
94 In other languages, an expression is text; it has no other form. In
95Lisp, an expression is primarily a Lisp object and only secondarily the
96text that is the object's read syntax. Often there is no need to
97emphasize this distinction, but you must keep it in the back of your
98mind, or you will occasionally be very confused.
99
100 When you evaluate an expression interactively, the Lisp interpreter
101first reads the textual representation of it, producing a Lisp object,
102and then evaluates that object (@pxref{Evaluation}). However,
103evaluation and reading are separate activities. Reading returns the
104Lisp object represented by the text that is read; the object may or may
105not be evaluated later. @xref{Input Functions}, for a description of
106@code{read}, the basic function for reading objects.
107
108@node Comments
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109@section Comments
110@cindex comments
111@cindex @samp{;} in comment
112
113 A @dfn{comment} is text that is written in a program only for the sake
114of humans that read the program, and that has no effect on the meaning
115of the program. In Lisp, a semicolon (@samp{;}) starts a comment if it
116is not within a string or character constant. The comment continues to
117the end of line. The Lisp reader discards comments; they do not become
118part of the Lisp objects which represent the program within the Lisp
119system.
120
121 The @samp{#@@@var{count}} construct, which skips the next @var{count}
122characters, is useful for program-generated comments containing binary
123data. The Emacs Lisp byte compiler uses this in its output files
124(@pxref{Byte Compilation}). It isn't meant for source files, however.
125
126 @xref{Comment Tips}, for conventions for formatting comments.
127
128@node Programming Types
129@section Programming Types
130@cindex programming types
131
132 There are two general categories of types in Emacs Lisp: those having
133to do with Lisp programming, and those having to do with editing. The
134former exist in many Lisp implementations, in one form or another. The
135latter are unique to Emacs Lisp.
136
137@menu
138* Integer Type:: Numbers without fractional parts.
139* Floating Point Type:: Numbers with fractional parts and with a large range.
140* Character Type:: The representation of letters, numbers and
141 control characters.
142* Symbol Type:: A multi-use object that refers to a function,
143 variable, or property list, and has a unique identity.
144* Sequence Type:: Both lists and arrays are classified as sequences.
145* Cons Cell Type:: Cons cells, and lists (which are made from cons cells).
146* Array Type:: Arrays include strings and vectors.
147* String Type:: An (efficient) array of characters.
148* Vector Type:: One-dimensional arrays.
149* Char-Table Type:: One-dimensional sparse arrays indexed by characters.
150* Bool-Vector Type:: One-dimensional arrays of @code{t} or @code{nil}.
151* Hash Table Type:: Super-fast lookup tables.
152* Function Type:: A piece of executable code you can call from elsewhere.
153* Macro Type:: A method of expanding an expression into another
154 expression, more fundamental but less pretty.
155* Primitive Function Type:: A function written in C, callable from Lisp.
156* Byte-Code Type:: A function written in Lisp, then compiled.
157* Autoload Type:: A type used for automatically loading seldom-used
158 functions.
159@end menu
160
161@node Integer Type
162@subsection Integer Type
163
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164 The range of values for integers in Emacs Lisp is @minus{}536870912 to
165536870911 (30 bits; i.e.,
b8d4c8d0 166@ifnottex
1ddd6622 167-2**29
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168@end ifnottex
169@tex
1ddd6622 170@math{-2^{29}}
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171@end tex
172to
173@ifnottex
f99f1641 1742**29 @minus{} 1)
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175@end ifnottex
176@tex
1ddd6622 177@math{2^{29}-1})
b8d4c8d0 178@end tex
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179on typical 32-bit machines. (Some machines provide a wider range.)
180Emacs Lisp arithmetic functions do not check for overflow. Thus
181@code{(1+ 536870911)} is @minus{}536870912 if Emacs integers are 30 bits.
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182
183 The read syntax for integers is a sequence of (base ten) digits with an
184optional sign at the beginning and an optional period at the end. The
185printed representation produced by the Lisp interpreter never has a
186leading @samp{+} or a final @samp{.}.
187
188@example
189@group
190-1 ; @r{The integer -1.}
1911 ; @r{The integer 1.}
1921. ; @r{Also the integer 1.}
193+1 ; @r{Also the integer 1.}
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194@end group
195@end example
196
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197@noindent
198As a special exception, if a sequence of digits specifies an integer
199too large or too small to be a valid integer object, the Lisp reader
200reads it as a floating-point number (@pxref{Floating Point Type}).
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201For instance, if Emacs integers are 30 bits, @code{536870912} is read
202as the floating-point number @code{536870912.0}.
eed5c93a 203
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204 @xref{Numbers}, for more information.
205
206@node Floating Point Type
207@subsection Floating Point Type
208
209 Floating point numbers are the computer equivalent of scientific
210notation; you can think of a floating point number as a fraction
211together with a power of ten. The precise number of significant
212figures and the range of possible exponents is machine-specific; Emacs
213uses the C data type @code{double} to store the value, and internally
214this records a power of 2 rather than a power of 10.
215
216 The printed representation for floating point numbers requires either
217a decimal point (with at least one digit following), an exponent, or
218both. For example, @samp{1500.0}, @samp{15e2}, @samp{15.0e2},
219@samp{1.5e3}, and @samp{.15e4} are five ways of writing a floating point
220number whose value is 1500. They are all equivalent.
221
222 @xref{Numbers}, for more information.
223
224@node Character Type
225@subsection Character Type
226@cindex @acronym{ASCII} character codes
227
228 A @dfn{character} in Emacs Lisp is nothing more than an integer. In
229other words, characters are represented by their character codes. For
230example, the character @kbd{A} is represented as the @w{integer 65}.
231
232 Individual characters are used occasionally in programs, but it is
233more common to work with @emph{strings}, which are sequences composed
234of characters. @xref{String Type}.
235
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236 Characters in strings and buffers are currently limited to the range
237of 0 to 4194303---twenty two bits (@pxref{Character Codes}). Codes 0
238through 127 are @acronym{ASCII} codes; the rest are
239non-@acronym{ASCII} (@pxref{Non-ASCII Characters}). Characters that
240represent keyboard input have a much wider range, to encode modifier
241keys such as Control, Meta and Shift.
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242
243 There are special functions for producing a human-readable textual
244description of a character for the sake of messages. @xref{Describing
245Characters}.
246
247@menu
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248* Basic Char Syntax:: Syntax for regular characters.
249* General Escape Syntax:: How to specify characters by their codes.
250* Ctl-Char Syntax:: Syntax for control characters.
251* Meta-Char Syntax:: Syntax for meta-characters.
252* Other Char Bits:: Syntax for hyper-, super-, and alt-characters.
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253@end menu
254
255@node Basic Char Syntax
256@subsubsection Basic Char Syntax
257@cindex read syntax for characters
258@cindex printed representation for characters
259@cindex syntax for characters
260@cindex @samp{?} in character constant
261@cindex question mark in character constant
262
263 Since characters are really integers, the printed representation of
264a character is a decimal number. This is also a possible read syntax
265for a character, but writing characters that way in Lisp programs is
266not clear programming. You should @emph{always} use the special read
267syntax formats that Emacs Lisp provides for characters. These syntax
268formats start with a question mark.
269
270 The usual read syntax for alphanumeric characters is a question mark
271followed by the character; thus, @samp{?A} for the character
272@kbd{A}, @samp{?B} for the character @kbd{B}, and @samp{?a} for the
273character @kbd{a}.
274
275 For example:
276
277@example
278?Q @result{} 81 ?q @result{} 113
279@end example
280
281 You can use the same syntax for punctuation characters, but it is
282often a good idea to add a @samp{\} so that the Emacs commands for
283editing Lisp code don't get confused. For example, @samp{?\(} is the
284way to write the open-paren character. If the character is @samp{\},
285you @emph{must} use a second @samp{\} to quote it: @samp{?\\}.
286
287@cindex whitespace
288@cindex bell character
289@cindex @samp{\a}
290@cindex backspace
291@cindex @samp{\b}
292@cindex tab (ASCII character)
293@cindex @samp{\t}
294@cindex vertical tab
295@cindex @samp{\v}
296@cindex formfeed
297@cindex @samp{\f}
298@cindex newline
299@cindex @samp{\n}
300@cindex return (ASCII character)
301@cindex @samp{\r}
302@cindex escape (ASCII character)
303@cindex @samp{\e}
304@cindex space (ASCII character)
305@cindex @samp{\s}
306 You can express the characters control-g, backspace, tab, newline,
307vertical tab, formfeed, space, return, del, and escape as @samp{?\a},
308@samp{?\b}, @samp{?\t}, @samp{?\n}, @samp{?\v}, @samp{?\f},
309@samp{?\s}, @samp{?\r}, @samp{?\d}, and @samp{?\e}, respectively.
310(@samp{?\s} followed by a dash has a different meaning---it applies
311the ``super'' modifier to the following character.) Thus,
312
313@example
314?\a @result{} 7 ; @r{control-g, @kbd{C-g}}
315?\b @result{} 8 ; @r{backspace, @key{BS}, @kbd{C-h}}
316?\t @result{} 9 ; @r{tab, @key{TAB}, @kbd{C-i}}
317?\n @result{} 10 ; @r{newline, @kbd{C-j}}
318?\v @result{} 11 ; @r{vertical tab, @kbd{C-k}}
319?\f @result{} 12 ; @r{formfeed character, @kbd{C-l}}
320?\r @result{} 13 ; @r{carriage return, @key{RET}, @kbd{C-m}}
321?\e @result{} 27 ; @r{escape character, @key{ESC}, @kbd{C-[}}
322?\s @result{} 32 ; @r{space character, @key{SPC}}
323?\\ @result{} 92 ; @r{backslash character, @kbd{\}}
324?\d @result{} 127 ; @r{delete character, @key{DEL}}
325@end example
326
327@cindex escape sequence
328 These sequences which start with backslash are also known as
329@dfn{escape sequences}, because backslash plays the role of an
330``escape character''; this terminology has nothing to do with the
331character @key{ESC}. @samp{\s} is meant for use in character
332constants; in string constants, just write the space.
333
334 A backslash is allowed, and harmless, preceding any character without
335a special escape meaning; thus, @samp{?\+} is equivalent to @samp{?+}.
336There is no reason to add a backslash before most characters. However,
337you should add a backslash before any of the characters
338@samp{()\|;'`"#.,} to avoid confusing the Emacs commands for editing
339Lisp code. You can also add a backslash before whitespace characters such as
340space, tab, newline and formfeed. However, it is cleaner to use one of
341the easily readable escape sequences, such as @samp{\t} or @samp{\s},
342instead of an actual whitespace character such as a tab or a space.
343(If you do write backslash followed by a space, you should write
344an extra space after the character constant to separate it from the
345following text.)
346
347@node General Escape Syntax
348@subsubsection General Escape Syntax
349
49ea0074 350 In addition to the specific escape sequences for special important
fb080b28 351control characters, Emacs provides several types of escape syntax that
9fce7eda 352you can use to specify non-@acronym{ASCII} text characters.
b8d4c8d0 353
b8d4c8d0 354@cindex @samp{\} in character constant
4963495d 355@cindex backslash in character constants
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356@cindex unicode character escape
357 Firstly, you can specify characters by their Unicode values.
358@code{?\u@var{nnnn}} represents a character with Unicode code point
359@samp{U+@var{nnnn}}, where @var{nnnn} is (by convention) a hexadecimal
360number with exactly four digits. The backslash indicates that the
361subsequent characters form an escape sequence, and the @samp{u}
362specifies a Unicode escape sequence.
363
364 There is a slightly different syntax for specifying Unicode
365characters with code points higher than @code{U+@var{ffff}}:
366@code{?\U00@var{nnnnnn}} represents the character with code point
367@samp{U+@var{nnnnnn}}, where @var{nnnnnn} is a six-digit hexadecimal
368number. The Unicode Standard only defines code points up to
369@samp{U+@var{10ffff}}, so if you specify a code point higher than
370that, Emacs signals an error.
371
372 Secondly, you can specify characters by their hexadecimal character
373codes. A hexadecimal escape sequence consists of a backslash,
374@samp{x}, and the hexadecimal character code. Thus, @samp{?\x41} is
375the character @kbd{A}, @samp{?\x1} is the character @kbd{C-a}, and
376@code{?\xe0} is the character
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377@iftex
378@samp{@`a}.
379@end iftex
380@ifnottex
381@samp{a} with grave accent.
382@end ifnottex
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383You can use any number of hex digits, so you can represent any
384character code in this way.
385
386@cindex octal character code
387 Thirdly, you can specify characters by their character code in
388octal. An octal escape sequence consists of a backslash followed by
389up to three octal digits; thus, @samp{?\101} for the character
390@kbd{A}, @samp{?\001} for the character @kbd{C-a}, and @code{?\002}
391for the character @kbd{C-b}. Only characters up to octal code 777 can
392be specified this way.
393
394 These escape sequences may also be used in strings. @xref{Non-ASCII
395in Strings}.
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396
397@node Ctl-Char Syntax
398@subsubsection Control-Character Syntax
399
400@cindex control characters
401 Control characters can be represented using yet another read syntax.
402This consists of a question mark followed by a backslash, caret, and the
403corresponding non-control character, in either upper or lower case. For
404example, both @samp{?\^I} and @samp{?\^i} are valid read syntax for the
405character @kbd{C-i}, the character whose value is 9.
406
407 Instead of the @samp{^}, you can use @samp{C-}; thus, @samp{?\C-i} is
408equivalent to @samp{?\^I} and to @samp{?\^i}:
409
410@example
411?\^I @result{} 9 ?\C-I @result{} 9
412@end example
413
414 In strings and buffers, the only control characters allowed are those
415that exist in @acronym{ASCII}; but for keyboard input purposes, you can turn
416any character into a control character with @samp{C-}. The character
417codes for these non-@acronym{ASCII} control characters include the
418@tex
419@math{2^{26}}
420@end tex
421@ifnottex
4222**26
423@end ifnottex
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424bit as well as the code for the corresponding non-control character.
425Ordinary text terminals have no way of generating non-@acronym{ASCII}
426control characters, but you can generate them straightforwardly using
427X and other window systems.
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428
429 For historical reasons, Emacs treats the @key{DEL} character as
430the control equivalent of @kbd{?}:
431
432@example
433?\^? @result{} 127 ?\C-? @result{} 127
434@end example
435
436@noindent
437As a result, it is currently not possible to represent the character
438@kbd{Control-?}, which is a meaningful input character under X, using
439@samp{\C-}. It is not easy to change this, as various Lisp files refer
440to @key{DEL} in this way.
441
442 For representing control characters to be found in files or strings,
443we recommend the @samp{^} syntax; for control characters in keyboard
444input, we prefer the @samp{C-} syntax. Which one you use does not
445affect the meaning of the program, but may guide the understanding of
446people who read it.
447
448@node Meta-Char Syntax
449@subsubsection Meta-Character Syntax
450
451@cindex meta characters
452 A @dfn{meta character} is a character typed with the @key{META}
453modifier key. The integer that represents such a character has the
454@tex
455@math{2^{27}}
456@end tex
457@ifnottex
4582**27
459@end ifnottex
460bit set. We use high bits for this and other modifiers to make
461possible a wide range of basic character codes.
462
463 In a string, the
464@tex
465@math{2^{7}}
466@end tex
467@ifnottex
4682**7
469@end ifnottex
470bit attached to an @acronym{ASCII} character indicates a meta
471character; thus, the meta characters that can fit in a string have
472codes in the range from 128 to 255, and are the meta versions of the
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473ordinary @acronym{ASCII} characters. @xref{Strings of Events}, for
474details about @key{META}-handling in strings.
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475
476 The read syntax for meta characters uses @samp{\M-}. For example,
477@samp{?\M-A} stands for @kbd{M-A}. You can use @samp{\M-} together with
478octal character codes (see below), with @samp{\C-}, or with any other
479syntax for a character. Thus, you can write @kbd{M-A} as @samp{?\M-A},
480or as @samp{?\M-\101}. Likewise, you can write @kbd{C-M-b} as
481@samp{?\M-\C-b}, @samp{?\C-\M-b}, or @samp{?\M-\002}.
482
483@node Other Char Bits
484@subsubsection Other Character Modifier Bits
485
486 The case of a graphic character is indicated by its character code;
487for example, @acronym{ASCII} distinguishes between the characters @samp{a}
488and @samp{A}. But @acronym{ASCII} has no way to represent whether a control
489character is upper case or lower case. Emacs uses the
490@tex
491@math{2^{25}}
492@end tex
493@ifnottex
4942**25
495@end ifnottex
496bit to indicate that the shift key was used in typing a control
497character. This distinction is possible only when you use X terminals
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498or other special terminals; ordinary text terminals do not report the
499distinction. The Lisp syntax for the shift bit is @samp{\S-}; thus,
500@samp{?\C-\S-o} or @samp{?\C-\S-O} represents the shifted-control-o
501character.
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502
503@cindex hyper characters
504@cindex super characters
505@cindex alt characters
506 The X Window System defines three other
507@anchor{modifier bits}modifier bits that can be set
508in a character: @dfn{hyper}, @dfn{super} and @dfn{alt}. The syntaxes
509for these bits are @samp{\H-}, @samp{\s-} and @samp{\A-}. (Case is
510significant in these prefixes.) Thus, @samp{?\H-\M-\A-x} represents
511@kbd{Alt-Hyper-Meta-x}. (Note that @samp{\s} with no following @samp{-}
512represents the space character.)
513@tex
514Numerically, the bit values are @math{2^{22}} for alt, @math{2^{23}}
515for super and @math{2^{24}} for hyper.
516@end tex
517@ifnottex
518Numerically, the
519bit values are 2**22 for alt, 2**23 for super and 2**24 for hyper.
520@end ifnottex
521
522@node Symbol Type
523@subsection Symbol Type
524
525 A @dfn{symbol} in GNU Emacs Lisp is an object with a name. The
526symbol name serves as the printed representation of the symbol. In
a2afc99d 527ordinary Lisp use, with one single obarray (@pxref{Creating Symbols}),
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528a symbol's name is unique---no two symbols have the same name.
529
530 A symbol can serve as a variable, as a function name, or to hold a
531property list. Or it may serve only to be distinct from all other Lisp
532objects, so that its presence in a data structure may be recognized
533reliably. In a given context, usually only one of these uses is
534intended. But you can use one symbol in all of these ways,
535independently.
536
537 A symbol whose name starts with a colon (@samp{:}) is called a
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538@dfn{keyword symbol}. These symbols automatically act as constants,
539and are normally used only by comparing an unknown symbol with a few
540specific alternatives. @xref{Constant Variables}.
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541
542@cindex @samp{\} in symbols
543@cindex backslash in symbols
544 A symbol name can contain any characters whatever. Most symbol names
545are written with letters, digits, and the punctuation characters
546@samp{-+=*/}. Such names require no special punctuation; the characters
547of the name suffice as long as the name does not look like a number.
548(If it does, write a @samp{\} at the beginning of the name to force
549interpretation as a symbol.) The characters @samp{_~!@@$%^&:<>@{@}?} are
550less often used but also require no special punctuation. Any other
551characters may be included in a symbol's name by escaping them with a
552backslash. In contrast to its use in strings, however, a backslash in
553the name of a symbol simply quotes the single character that follows the
554backslash. For example, in a string, @samp{\t} represents a tab
555character; in the name of a symbol, however, @samp{\t} merely quotes the
556letter @samp{t}. To have a symbol with a tab character in its name, you
557must actually use a tab (preceded with a backslash). But it's rare to
558do such a thing.
559
560@cindex CL note---case of letters
561@quotation
562@b{Common Lisp note:} In Common Lisp, lower case letters are always
563``folded'' to upper case, unless they are explicitly escaped. In Emacs
564Lisp, upper case and lower case letters are distinct.
565@end quotation
566
567 Here are several examples of symbol names. Note that the @samp{+} in
568the fifth example is escaped to prevent it from being read as a number.
569This is not necessary in the fourth example because the rest of the name
570makes it invalid as a number.
571
572@example
573@group
574foo ; @r{A symbol named @samp{foo}.}
575FOO ; @r{A symbol named @samp{FOO}, different from @samp{foo}.}
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576@end group
577@group
5781+ ; @r{A symbol named @samp{1+}}
579 ; @r{(not @samp{+1}, which is an integer).}
580@end group
581@group
582\+1 ; @r{A symbol named @samp{+1}}
583 ; @r{(not a very readable name).}
584@end group
585@group
586\(*\ 1\ 2\) ; @r{A symbol named @samp{(* 1 2)} (a worse name).}
587@c the @'s in this next line use up three characters, hence the
588@c apparent misalignment of the comment.
589+-*/_~!@@$%^&=:<>@{@} ; @r{A symbol named @samp{+-*/_~!@@$%^&=:<>@{@}}.}
590 ; @r{These characters need not be escaped.}
591@end group
592@end example
593
ddb54206 594@cindex @samp{##} read syntax
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595@ifinfo
596@c This uses ``colon'' instead of a literal `:' because Info cannot
597@c cope with a `:' in a menu
598@cindex @samp{#@var{colon}} read syntax
599@end ifinfo
600@ifnotinfo
601@cindex @samp{#:} read syntax
602@end ifnotinfo
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603 As an exception to the rule that a symbol's name serves as its
604printed representation, @samp{##} is the printed representation for an
605interned symbol whose name is an empty string. Furthermore,
606@samp{#:@var{foo}} is the printed representation for an uninterned
607symbol whose name is @var{foo}. (Normally, the Lisp reader interns
608all symbols; @pxref{Creating Symbols}.)
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609
610@node Sequence Type
611@subsection Sequence Types
612
613 A @dfn{sequence} is a Lisp object that represents an ordered set of
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614elements. There are two kinds of sequence in Emacs Lisp: @dfn{lists}
615and @dfn{arrays}.
616
617 Lists are the most commonly-used sequences. A list can hold
618elements of any type, and its length can be easily changed by adding
619or removing elements. See the next subsection for more about lists.
620
621 Arrays are fixed-length sequences. They are further subdivided into
622strings, vectors, char-tables and bool-vectors. Vectors can hold
623elements of any type, whereas string elements must be characters, and
624bool-vector elements must be @code{t} or @code{nil}. Char-tables are
625like vectors except that they are indexed by any valid character code.
626The characters in a string can have text properties like characters in
627a buffer (@pxref{Text Properties}), but vectors do not support text
628properties, even when their elements happen to be characters.
629
630 Lists, strings and the other array types also share important
631similarities. For example, all have a length @var{l}, and all have
632elements which can be indexed from zero to @var{l} minus one. Several
633functions, called sequence functions, accept any kind of sequence.
634For example, the function @code{length} reports the length of any kind
635of sequence. @xref{Sequences Arrays Vectors}.
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636
637 It is generally impossible to read the same sequence twice, since
638sequences are always created anew upon reading. If you read the read
639syntax for a sequence twice, you get two sequences with equal contents.
640There is one exception: the empty list @code{()} always stands for the
641same object, @code{nil}.
642
643@node Cons Cell Type
644@subsection Cons Cell and List Types
645@cindex address field of register
646@cindex decrement field of register
647@cindex pointers
648
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649 A @dfn{cons cell} is an object that consists of two slots, called
650the @sc{car} slot and the @sc{cdr} slot. Each slot can @dfn{hold} any
651Lisp object. We also say that ``the @sc{car} of this cons cell is''
652whatever object its @sc{car} slot currently holds, and likewise for
653the @sc{cdr}.
b8d4c8d0 654
fead402d 655@cindex list structure
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656 A @dfn{list} is a series of cons cells, linked together so that the
657@sc{cdr} slot of each cons cell holds either the next cons cell or the
658empty list. The empty list is actually the symbol @code{nil}.
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659@xref{Lists}, for details. Because most cons cells are used as part
660of lists, we refer to any structure made out of cons cells as a
661@dfn{list structure}.
662
663@cindex linked list
664@quotation
665A note to C programmers: a Lisp list thus works as a @dfn{linked list}
666built up of cons cells. Because pointers in Lisp are implicit, we do
667not distinguish between a cons cell slot ``holding'' a value versus
668``pointing to'' the value.
669@end quotation
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670
671@cindex atoms
672 Because cons cells are so central to Lisp, we also have a word for
16152b76 673``an object which is not a cons cell''. These objects are called
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674@dfn{atoms}.
675
676@cindex parenthesis
677@cindex @samp{(@dots{})} in lists
678 The read syntax and printed representation for lists are identical, and
679consist of a left parenthesis, an arbitrary number of elements, and a
680right parenthesis. Here are examples of lists:
681
682@example
683(A 2 "A") ; @r{A list of three elements.}
684() ; @r{A list of no elements (the empty list).}
685nil ; @r{A list of no elements (the empty list).}
686("A ()") ; @r{A list of one element: the string @code{"A ()"}.}
687(A ()) ; @r{A list of two elements: @code{A} and the empty list.}
688(A nil) ; @r{Equivalent to the previous.}
689((A B C)) ; @r{A list of one element}
690 ; @r{(which is a list of three elements).}
691@end example
692
693 Upon reading, each object inside the parentheses becomes an element
694of the list. That is, a cons cell is made for each element. The
695@sc{car} slot of the cons cell holds the element, and its @sc{cdr}
696slot refers to the next cons cell of the list, which holds the next
697element in the list. The @sc{cdr} slot of the last cons cell is set to
698hold @code{nil}.
699
700 The names @sc{car} and @sc{cdr} derive from the history of Lisp. The
701original Lisp implementation ran on an @w{IBM 704} computer which
702divided words into two parts, called the ``address'' part and the
703``decrement''; @sc{car} was an instruction to extract the contents of
704the address part of a register, and @sc{cdr} an instruction to extract
705the contents of the decrement. By contrast, ``cons cells'' are named
706for the function @code{cons} that creates them, which in turn was named
707for its purpose, the construction of cells.
708
709@menu
710* Box Diagrams:: Drawing pictures of lists.
711* Dotted Pair Notation:: A general syntax for cons cells.
712* Association List Type:: A specially constructed list.
713@end menu
714
715@node Box Diagrams
716@subsubsection Drawing Lists as Box Diagrams
717@cindex box diagrams, for lists
718@cindex diagrams, boxed, for lists
719
720 A list can be illustrated by a diagram in which the cons cells are
721shown as pairs of boxes, like dominoes. (The Lisp reader cannot read
722such an illustration; unlike the textual notation, which can be
723understood by both humans and computers, the box illustrations can be
724understood only by humans.) This picture represents the three-element
725list @code{(rose violet buttercup)}:
726
727@example
728@group
729 --- --- --- --- --- ---
730 | | |--> | | |--> | | |--> nil
731 --- --- --- --- --- ---
732 | | |
733 | | |
734 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
735@end group
736@end example
737
738 In this diagram, each box represents a slot that can hold or refer to
739any Lisp object. Each pair of boxes represents a cons cell. Each arrow
740represents a reference to a Lisp object, either an atom or another cons
741cell.
742
743 In this example, the first box, which holds the @sc{car} of the first
744cons cell, refers to or ``holds'' @code{rose} (a symbol). The second
745box, holding the @sc{cdr} of the first cons cell, refers to the next
746pair of boxes, the second cons cell. The @sc{car} of the second cons
747cell is @code{violet}, and its @sc{cdr} is the third cons cell. The
748@sc{cdr} of the third (and last) cons cell is @code{nil}.
749
750 Here is another diagram of the same list, @code{(rose violet
751buttercup)}, sketched in a different manner:
752
753@smallexample
754@group
755 --------------- ---------------- -------------------
756| car | cdr | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
757| rose | o-------->| violet | o-------->| buttercup | nil |
758| | | | | | | | |
759 --------------- ---------------- -------------------
760@end group
761@end smallexample
762
763@cindex @code{nil} as a list
764@cindex empty list
765 A list with no elements in it is the @dfn{empty list}; it is identical
766to the symbol @code{nil}. In other words, @code{nil} is both a symbol
767and a list.
768
769 Here is the list @code{(A ())}, or equivalently @code{(A nil)},
770depicted with boxes and arrows:
771
772@example
773@group
774 --- --- --- ---
775 | | |--> | | |--> nil
776 --- --- --- ---
777 | |
778 | |
779 --> A --> nil
780@end group
781@end example
782
783 Here is a more complex illustration, showing the three-element list,
784@code{((pine needles) oak maple)}, the first element of which is a
785two-element list:
786
787@example
788@group
789 --- --- --- --- --- ---
790 | | |--> | | |--> | | |--> nil
791 --- --- --- --- --- ---
792 | | |
793 | | |
794 | --> oak --> maple
795 |
796 | --- --- --- ---
797 --> | | |--> | | |--> nil
798 --- --- --- ---
799 | |
800 | |
801 --> pine --> needles
802@end group
803@end example
804
805 The same list represented in the second box notation looks like this:
806
807@example
808@group
809 -------------- -------------- --------------
810| car | cdr | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
811| o | o------->| oak | o------->| maple | nil |
812| | | | | | | | | |
813 -- | --------- -------------- --------------
814 |
815 |
816 | -------------- ----------------
817 | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
818 ------>| pine | o------->| needles | nil |
819 | | | | | |
820 -------------- ----------------
821@end group
822@end example
823
824@node Dotted Pair Notation
825@subsubsection Dotted Pair Notation
826@cindex dotted pair notation
827@cindex @samp{.} in lists
828
829 @dfn{Dotted pair notation} is a general syntax for cons cells that
830represents the @sc{car} and @sc{cdr} explicitly. In this syntax,
831@code{(@var{a} .@: @var{b})} stands for a cons cell whose @sc{car} is
832the object @var{a} and whose @sc{cdr} is the object @var{b}. Dotted
833pair notation is more general than list syntax because the @sc{cdr}
834does not have to be a list. However, it is more cumbersome in cases
835where list syntax would work. In dotted pair notation, the list
836@samp{(1 2 3)} is written as @samp{(1 . (2 . (3 . nil)))}. For
837@code{nil}-terminated lists, you can use either notation, but list
838notation is usually clearer and more convenient. When printing a
839list, the dotted pair notation is only used if the @sc{cdr} of a cons
840cell is not a list.
841
842 Here's an example using boxes to illustrate dotted pair notation.
843This example shows the pair @code{(rose . violet)}:
844
845@example
846@group
847 --- ---
848 | | |--> violet
849 --- ---
850 |
851 |
852 --> rose
853@end group
854@end example
855
856 You can combine dotted pair notation with list notation to represent
857conveniently a chain of cons cells with a non-@code{nil} final @sc{cdr}.
858You write a dot after the last element of the list, followed by the
859@sc{cdr} of the final cons cell. For example, @code{(rose violet
860. buttercup)} is equivalent to @code{(rose . (violet . buttercup))}.
861The object looks like this:
862
863@example
864@group
865 --- --- --- ---
866 | | |--> | | |--> buttercup
867 --- --- --- ---
868 | |
869 | |
870 --> rose --> violet
871@end group
872@end example
873
874 The syntax @code{(rose .@: violet .@: buttercup)} is invalid because
875there is nothing that it could mean. If anything, it would say to put
876@code{buttercup} in the @sc{cdr} of a cons cell whose @sc{cdr} is already
877used for @code{violet}.
878
879 The list @code{(rose violet)} is equivalent to @code{(rose . (violet))},
880and looks like this:
881
882@example
883@group
884 --- --- --- ---
885 | | |--> | | |--> nil
886 --- --- --- ---
887 | |
888 | |
889 --> rose --> violet
890@end group
891@end example
892
893 Similarly, the three-element list @code{(rose violet buttercup)}
894is equivalent to @code{(rose . (violet . (buttercup)))}.
895@ifnottex
896It looks like this:
897
898@example
899@group
900 --- --- --- --- --- ---
901 | | |--> | | |--> | | |--> nil
902 --- --- --- --- --- ---
903 | | |
904 | | |
905 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
906@end group
907@end example
908@end ifnottex
909
910@node Association List Type
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911@subsubsection Association List Type
912
913 An @dfn{association list} or @dfn{alist} is a specially-constructed
914list whose elements are cons cells. In each element, the @sc{car} is
915considered a @dfn{key}, and the @sc{cdr} is considered an
916@dfn{associated value}. (In some cases, the associated value is stored
917in the @sc{car} of the @sc{cdr}.) Association lists are often used as
918stacks, since it is easy to add or remove associations at the front of
919the list.
920
921 For example,
922
923@example
924(setq alist-of-colors
925 '((rose . red) (lily . white) (buttercup . yellow)))
926@end example
927
928@noindent
929sets the variable @code{alist-of-colors} to an alist of three elements. In the
930first element, @code{rose} is the key and @code{red} is the value.
931
932 @xref{Association Lists}, for a further explanation of alists and for
933functions that work on alists. @xref{Hash Tables}, for another kind of
934lookup table, which is much faster for handling a large number of keys.
935
936@node Array Type
937@subsection Array Type
938
939 An @dfn{array} is composed of an arbitrary number of slots for
940holding or referring to other Lisp objects, arranged in a contiguous block of
941memory. Accessing any element of an array takes approximately the same
942amount of time. In contrast, accessing an element of a list requires
943time proportional to the position of the element in the list. (Elements
944at the end of a list take longer to access than elements at the
945beginning of a list.)
946
947 Emacs defines four types of array: strings, vectors, bool-vectors, and
948char-tables.
949
950 A string is an array of characters and a vector is an array of
951arbitrary objects. A bool-vector can hold only @code{t} or @code{nil}.
952These kinds of array may have any length up to the largest integer.
953Char-tables are sparse arrays indexed by any valid character code; they
954can hold arbitrary objects.
955
956 The first element of an array has index zero, the second element has
957index 1, and so on. This is called @dfn{zero-origin} indexing. For
958example, an array of four elements has indices 0, 1, 2, @w{and 3}. The
959largest possible index value is one less than the length of the array.
960Once an array is created, its length is fixed.
961
962 All Emacs Lisp arrays are one-dimensional. (Most other programming
963languages support multidimensional arrays, but they are not essential;
964you can get the same effect with nested one-dimensional arrays.) Each
965type of array has its own read syntax; see the following sections for
966details.
967
968 The array type is a subset of the sequence type, and contains the
969string type, the vector type, the bool-vector type, and the char-table
970type.
971
972@node String Type
973@subsection String Type
974
975 A @dfn{string} is an array of characters. Strings are used for many
976purposes in Emacs, as can be expected in a text editor; for example, as
977the names of Lisp symbols, as messages for the user, and to represent
978text extracted from buffers. Strings in Lisp are constants: evaluation
979of a string returns the same string.
980
981 @xref{Strings and Characters}, for functions that operate on strings.
982
983@menu
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984* Syntax for Strings:: How to specify Lisp strings.
985* Non-ASCII in Strings:: International characters in strings.
986* Nonprinting Characters:: Literal unprintable characters in strings.
987* Text Props and Strings:: Strings with text properties.
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988@end menu
989
990@node Syntax for Strings
991@subsubsection Syntax for Strings
992
993@cindex @samp{"} in strings
994@cindex double-quote in strings
995@cindex @samp{\} in strings
996@cindex backslash in strings
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997 The read syntax for a string is a double-quote, an arbitrary number
998of characters, and another double-quote, @code{"like this"}. To
999include a double-quote in a string, precede it with a backslash; thus,
1000@code{"\""} is a string containing just a single double-quote
1001character. Likewise, you can include a backslash by preceding it with
1002another backslash, like this: @code{"this \\ is a single embedded
1003backslash"}.
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1004
1005@cindex newline in strings
1006 The newline character is not special in the read syntax for strings;
1007if you write a new line between the double-quotes, it becomes a
1008character in the string. But an escaped newline---one that is preceded
1009by @samp{\}---does not become part of the string; i.e., the Lisp reader
1010ignores an escaped newline while reading a string. An escaped space
1011@w{@samp{\ }} is likewise ignored.
1012
1013@example
1014"It is useful to include newlines
1015in documentation strings,
1016but the newline is \
1017ignored if escaped."
1018 @result{} "It is useful to include newlines
1019in documentation strings,
1020but the newline is ignored if escaped."
1021@end example
1022
1023@node Non-ASCII in Strings
1024@subsubsection Non-@acronym{ASCII} Characters in Strings
1025
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1026 There are two text representations for non-@acronym{ASCII}
1027characters in Emacs strings: multibyte and unibyte (@pxref{Text
1028Representations}). Roughly speaking, unibyte strings store raw bytes,
1029while multibyte strings store human-readable text. Each character in
1df7defd 1030a unibyte string is a byte, i.e., its value is between 0 and 255. By
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1031contrast, each character in a multibyte string may have a value
1032between 0 to 4194303 (@pxref{Character Type}). In both cases,
1033characters above 127 are non-@acronym{ASCII}.
1034
1035 You can include a non-@acronym{ASCII} character in a string constant
1036by writing it literally. If the string constant is read from a
1037multibyte source, such as a multibyte buffer or string, or a file that
1038would be visited as multibyte, then Emacs reads each
1039non-@acronym{ASCII} character as a multibyte character and
1040automatically makes the string a multibyte string. If the string
1041constant is read from a unibyte source, then Emacs reads the
1042non-@acronym{ASCII} character as unibyte, and makes the string
1043unibyte.
1044
1045 Instead of writing a character literally into a multibyte string,
1046you can write it as its character code using an escape sequence.
1047@xref{General Escape Syntax}, for details about escape sequences.
1048
1049 If you use any Unicode-style escape sequence @samp{\uNNNN} or
1050@samp{\U00NNNNNN} in a string constant (even for an @acronym{ASCII}
1051character), Emacs automatically assumes that it is multibyte.
1052
1053 You can also use hexadecimal escape sequences (@samp{\x@var{n}}) and
1054octal escape sequences (@samp{\@var{n}}) in string constants.
1055@strong{But beware:} If a string constant contains hexadecimal or
1056octal escape sequences, and these escape sequences all specify unibyte
1df7defd 1057characters (i.e., less than 256), and there are no other literal
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1058non-@acronym{ASCII} characters or Unicode-style escape sequences in
1059the string, then Emacs automatically assumes that it is a unibyte
1060string. That is to say, it assumes that all non-@acronym{ASCII}
1061characters occurring in the string are 8-bit raw bytes.
1062
1063 In hexadecimal and octal escape sequences, the escaped character
77f6eafe 1064code may contain a variable number of digits, so the first subsequent
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1065character which is not a valid hexadecimal or octal digit terminates
1066the escape sequence. If the next character in a string could be
1067interpreted as a hexadecimal or octal digit, write @w{@samp{\ }}
1068(backslash and space) to terminate the escape sequence. For example,
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1069@w{@samp{\xe0\ }} represents one character, @samp{a} with grave
1070accent. @w{@samp{\ }} in a string constant is just like
1071backslash-newline; it does not contribute any character to the string,
2395ab64 1072but it does terminate any preceding hex escape.
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1073
1074@node Nonprinting Characters
1075@subsubsection Nonprinting Characters in Strings
1076
1077 You can use the same backslash escape-sequences in a string constant
1078as in character literals (but do not use the question mark that begins a
1079character constant). For example, you can write a string containing the
1080nonprinting characters tab and @kbd{C-a}, with commas and spaces between
1081them, like this: @code{"\t, \C-a"}. @xref{Character Type}, for a
1082description of the read syntax for characters.
1083
1084 However, not all of the characters you can write with backslash
1085escape-sequences are valid in strings. The only control characters that
1086a string can hold are the @acronym{ASCII} control characters. Strings do not
1087distinguish case in @acronym{ASCII} control characters.
1088
1089 Properly speaking, strings cannot hold meta characters; but when a
1090string is to be used as a key sequence, there is a special convention
1091that provides a way to represent meta versions of @acronym{ASCII}
1092characters in a string. If you use the @samp{\M-} syntax to indicate
1093a meta character in a string constant, this sets the
1094@tex
1095@math{2^{7}}
1096@end tex
1097@ifnottex
10982**7
1099@end ifnottex
1100bit of the character in the string. If the string is used in
1101@code{define-key} or @code{lookup-key}, this numeric code is translated
1102into the equivalent meta character. @xref{Character Type}.
1103
1104 Strings cannot hold characters that have the hyper, super, or alt
1105modifiers.
1106
1107@node Text Props and Strings
1108@subsubsection Text Properties in Strings
1109
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1110@cindex @samp{#(} read syntax
1111@cindex text properties, read syntax
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1112 A string can hold properties for the characters it contains, in
1113addition to the characters themselves. This enables programs that copy
1114text between strings and buffers to copy the text's properties with no
1115special effort. @xref{Text Properties}, for an explanation of what text
1116properties mean. Strings with text properties use a special read and
1117print syntax:
1118
1119@example
1120#("@var{characters}" @var{property-data}...)
1121@end example
1122
1123@noindent
1124where @var{property-data} consists of zero or more elements, in groups
1125of three as follows:
1126
1127@example
1128@var{beg} @var{end} @var{plist}
1129@end example
1130
1131@noindent
1132The elements @var{beg} and @var{end} are integers, and together specify
1133a range of indices in the string; @var{plist} is the property list for
1134that range. For example,
1135
1136@example
1137#("foo bar" 0 3 (face bold) 3 4 nil 4 7 (face italic))
1138@end example
1139
1140@noindent
1141represents a string whose textual contents are @samp{foo bar}, in which
1142the first three characters have a @code{face} property with value
1143@code{bold}, and the last three have a @code{face} property with value
1144@code{italic}. (The fourth character has no text properties, so its
1145property list is @code{nil}. It is not actually necessary to mention
1146ranges with @code{nil} as the property list, since any characters not
1147mentioned in any range will default to having no properties.)
1148
1149@node Vector Type
1150@subsection Vector Type
1151
1152 A @dfn{vector} is a one-dimensional array of elements of any type. It
1153takes a constant amount of time to access any element of a vector. (In
1154a list, the access time of an element is proportional to the distance of
1155the element from the beginning of the list.)
1156
1157 The printed representation of a vector consists of a left square
1158bracket, the elements, and a right square bracket. This is also the
1159read syntax. Like numbers and strings, vectors are considered constants
1160for evaluation.
1161
1162@example
1163[1 "two" (three)] ; @r{A vector of three elements.}
1164 @result{} [1 "two" (three)]
1165@end example
1166
1167 @xref{Vectors}, for functions that work with vectors.
1168
1169@node Char-Table Type
1170@subsection Char-Table Type
1171
1172 A @dfn{char-table} is a one-dimensional array of elements of any type,
1173indexed by character codes. Char-tables have certain extra features to
1174make them more useful for many jobs that involve assigning information
1175to character codes---for example, a char-table can have a parent to
1176inherit from, a default value, and a small number of extra slots to use for
1177special purposes. A char-table can also specify a single value for
1178a whole character set.
1179
1180 The printed representation of a char-table is like a vector
1181except that there is an extra @samp{#^} at the beginning.
1182
1183 @xref{Char-Tables}, for special functions to operate on char-tables.
1184Uses of char-tables include:
1185
1186@itemize @bullet
1187@item
1188Case tables (@pxref{Case Tables}).
1189
1190@item
1191Character category tables (@pxref{Categories}).
1192
1193@item
1194Display tables (@pxref{Display Tables}).
1195
1196@item
1197Syntax tables (@pxref{Syntax Tables}).
1198@end itemize
1199
1200@node Bool-Vector Type
1201@subsection Bool-Vector Type
1202
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1203 A @dfn{bool-vector} is a one-dimensional array whose elements must
1204be @code{t} or @code{nil}.
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1205
1206 The printed representation of a bool-vector is like a string, except
1207that it begins with @samp{#&} followed by the length. The string
1208constant that follows actually specifies the contents of the bool-vector
1209as a bitmap---each ``character'' in the string contains 8 bits, which
1210specify the next 8 elements of the bool-vector (1 stands for @code{t},
1211and 0 for @code{nil}). The least significant bits of the character
1212correspond to the lowest indices in the bool-vector.
1213
1214@example
1215(make-bool-vector 3 t)
1216 @result{} #&3"^G"
1217(make-bool-vector 3 nil)
1218 @result{} #&3"^@@"
1219@end example
1220
1221@noindent
1222These results make sense, because the binary code for @samp{C-g} is
1223111 and @samp{C-@@} is the character with code 0.
1224
1225 If the length is not a multiple of 8, the printed representation
1226shows extra elements, but these extras really make no difference. For
1227instance, in the next example, the two bool-vectors are equal, because
1228only the first 3 bits are used:
1229
1230@example
1231(equal #&3"\377" #&3"\007")
1232 @result{} t
1233@end example
1234
1235@node Hash Table Type
1236@subsection Hash Table Type
1237
1238 A hash table is a very fast kind of lookup table, somewhat like an
1239alist in that it maps keys to corresponding values, but much faster.
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1240The printed representation of a hash table specifies its properties
1241and contents, like this:
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1242
1243@example
1244(make-hash-table)
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1245 @result{} #s(hash-table size 65 test eql rehash-size 1.5
1246 rehash-threshold 0.8 data ())
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1247@end example
1248
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1249@noindent
1250@xref{Hash Tables}, for more information about hash tables.
1251
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1252@node Function Type
1253@subsection Function Type
1254
1255 Lisp functions are executable code, just like functions in other
1256programming languages. In Lisp, unlike most languages, functions are
1257also Lisp objects. A non-compiled function in Lisp is a lambda
1258expression: that is, a list whose first element is the symbol
1259@code{lambda} (@pxref{Lambda Expressions}).
1260
1261 In most programming languages, it is impossible to have a function
1262without a name. In Lisp, a function has no intrinsic name. A lambda
1263expression can be called as a function even though it has no name; to
1264emphasize this, we also call it an @dfn{anonymous function}
1265(@pxref{Anonymous Functions}). A named function in Lisp is just a
1266symbol with a valid function in its function cell (@pxref{Defining
1267Functions}).
1268
1269 Most of the time, functions are called when their names are written in
1270Lisp expressions in Lisp programs. However, you can construct or obtain
1271a function object at run time and then call it with the primitive
1272functions @code{funcall} and @code{apply}. @xref{Calling Functions}.
1273
1274@node Macro Type
1275@subsection Macro Type
1276
1277 A @dfn{Lisp macro} is a user-defined construct that extends the Lisp
1278language. It is represented as an object much like a function, but with
1279different argument-passing semantics. A Lisp macro has the form of a
1280list whose first element is the symbol @code{macro} and whose @sc{cdr}
1281is a Lisp function object, including the @code{lambda} symbol.
1282
1283 Lisp macro objects are usually defined with the built-in
1284@code{defmacro} function, but any list that begins with @code{macro} is
1285a macro as far as Emacs is concerned. @xref{Macros}, for an explanation
1286of how to write a macro.
1287
1288 @strong{Warning}: Lisp macros and keyboard macros (@pxref{Keyboard
1289Macros}) are entirely different things. When we use the word ``macro''
1290without qualification, we mean a Lisp macro, not a keyboard macro.
1291
1292@node Primitive Function Type
1293@subsection Primitive Function Type
45e46036 1294@cindex primitive function
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1295
1296 A @dfn{primitive function} is a function callable from Lisp but
1297written in the C programming language. Primitive functions are also
1298called @dfn{subrs} or @dfn{built-in functions}. (The word ``subr'' is
16152b76 1299derived from ``subroutine''.) Most primitive functions evaluate all
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1300their arguments when they are called. A primitive function that does
1301not evaluate all its arguments is called a @dfn{special form}
1302(@pxref{Special Forms}).@refill
1303
1304 It does not matter to the caller of a function whether the function is
1305primitive. However, this does matter if you try to redefine a primitive
1306with a function written in Lisp. The reason is that the primitive
1307function may be called directly from C code. Calls to the redefined
1308function from Lisp will use the new definition, but calls from C code
1309may still use the built-in definition. Therefore, @strong{we discourage
1310redefinition of primitive functions}.
1311
1312 The term @dfn{function} refers to all Emacs functions, whether written
1df7defd 1313in Lisp or C@. @xref{Function Type}, for information about the
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1314functions written in Lisp.
1315
1316 Primitive functions have no read syntax and print in hash notation
1317with the name of the subroutine.
1318
1319@example
1320@group
1321(symbol-function 'car) ; @r{Access the function cell}
1322 ; @r{of the symbol.}
1323 @result{} #<subr car>
1324(subrp (symbol-function 'car)) ; @r{Is this a primitive function?}
1325 @result{} t ; @r{Yes.}
1326@end group
1327@end example
1328
1329@node Byte-Code Type
1330@subsection Byte-Code Function Type
1331
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1332@dfn{Byte-code function objects} are produced by byte-compiling Lisp
1333code (@pxref{Byte Compilation}). Internally, a byte-code function
1334object is much like a vector; however, the evaluator handles this data
1335type specially when it appears in a function call. @xref{Byte-Code
1336Objects}.
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1337
1338The printed representation and read syntax for a byte-code function
1339object is like that for a vector, with an additional @samp{#} before the
1340opening @samp{[}.
1341
1342@node Autoload Type
1343@subsection Autoload Type
1344
1345 An @dfn{autoload object} is a list whose first element is the symbol
1346@code{autoload}. It is stored as the function definition of a symbol,
1347where it serves as a placeholder for the real definition. The autoload
1348object says that the real definition is found in a file of Lisp code
1349that should be loaded when necessary. It contains the name of the file,
1350plus some other information about the real definition.
1351
1352 After the file has been loaded, the symbol should have a new function
1353definition that is not an autoload object. The new definition is then
1354called as if it had been there to begin with. From the user's point of
1355view, the function call works as expected, using the function definition
1356in the loaded file.
1357
1358 An autoload object is usually created with the function
1359@code{autoload}, which stores the object in the function cell of a
1360symbol. @xref{Autoload}, for more details.
1361
1362@node Editing Types
1363@section Editing Types
1364@cindex editing types
1365
1366 The types in the previous section are used for general programming
1367purposes, and most of them are common to most Lisp dialects. Emacs Lisp
1368provides several additional data types for purposes connected with
1369editing.
1370
1371@menu
1372* Buffer Type:: The basic object of editing.
1373* Marker Type:: A position in a buffer.
1374* Window Type:: Buffers are displayed in windows.
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1375* Frame Type:: Windows subdivide frames.
1376* Terminal Type:: A terminal device displays frames.
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1377* Window Configuration Type:: Recording the way a frame is subdivided.
1378* Frame Configuration Type:: Recording the status of all frames.
6fdbd4c6 1379* Process Type:: A subprocess of Emacs running on the underlying OS.
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1380* Stream Type:: Receive or send characters.
1381* Keymap Type:: What function a keystroke invokes.
1382* Overlay Type:: How an overlay is represented.
2bd1f99a 1383* Font Type:: Fonts for displaying text.
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1384@end menu
1385
1386@node Buffer Type
1387@subsection Buffer Type
1388
1389 A @dfn{buffer} is an object that holds text that can be edited
1390(@pxref{Buffers}). Most buffers hold the contents of a disk file
1391(@pxref{Files}) so they can be edited, but some are used for other
1392purposes. Most buffers are also meant to be seen by the user, and
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1393therefore displayed, at some time, in a window (@pxref{Windows}). But
1394a buffer need not be displayed in any window. Each buffer has a
1395designated position called @dfn{point} (@pxref{Positions}); most
1396editing commands act on the contents of the current buffer in the
1397neighborhood of point. At any time, one buffer is the @dfn{current
1398buffer}.
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1399
1400 The contents of a buffer are much like a string, but buffers are not
1401used like strings in Emacs Lisp, and the available operations are
1402different. For example, you can insert text efficiently into an
1403existing buffer, altering the buffer's contents, whereas ``inserting''
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1404text into a string requires concatenating substrings, and the result
1405is an entirely new string object.
b8d4c8d0 1406
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1407 Many of the standard Emacs functions manipulate or test the
1408characters in the current buffer; a whole chapter in this manual is
1409devoted to describing these functions (@pxref{Text}).
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1410
1411 Several other data structures are associated with each buffer:
1412
1413@itemize @bullet
1414@item
1415a local syntax table (@pxref{Syntax Tables});
1416
1417@item
1418a local keymap (@pxref{Keymaps}); and,
1419
1420@item
1421a list of buffer-local variable bindings (@pxref{Buffer-Local Variables}).
1422
1423@item
1424overlays (@pxref{Overlays}).
1425
1426@item
1427text properties for the text in the buffer (@pxref{Text Properties}).
1428@end itemize
1429
1430@noindent
1431The local keymap and variable list contain entries that individually
1432override global bindings or values. These are used to customize the
1433behavior of programs in different buffers, without actually changing the
1434programs.
1435
1436 A buffer may be @dfn{indirect}, which means it shares the text
1437of another buffer, but presents it differently. @xref{Indirect Buffers}.
1438
1439 Buffers have no read syntax. They print in hash notation, showing the
1440buffer name.
1441
1442@example
1443@group
1444(current-buffer)
1445 @result{} #<buffer objects.texi>
1446@end group
1447@end example
1448
1449@node Marker Type
1450@subsection Marker Type
1451
1452 A @dfn{marker} denotes a position in a specific buffer. Markers
1453therefore have two components: one for the buffer, and one for the
1454position. Changes in the buffer's text automatically relocate the
1455position value as necessary to ensure that the marker always points
1456between the same two characters in the buffer.
1457
1458 Markers have no read syntax. They print in hash notation, giving the
1459current character position and the name of the buffer.
1460
1461@example
1462@group
1463(point-marker)
1464 @result{} #<marker at 10779 in objects.texi>
1465@end group
1466@end example
1467
1468@xref{Markers}, for information on how to test, create, copy, and move
1469markers.
1470
1471@node Window Type
1472@subsection Window Type
1473
1474 A @dfn{window} describes the portion of the terminal screen that Emacs
1475uses to display a buffer. Every window has one associated buffer, whose
1476contents appear in the window. By contrast, a given buffer may appear
1477in one window, no window, or several windows.
1478
1479 Though many windows may exist simultaneously, at any time one window
1480is designated the @dfn{selected window}. This is the window where the
1481cursor is (usually) displayed when Emacs is ready for a command. The
1482selected window usually displays the current buffer, but this is not
1483necessarily the case.
1484
1485 Windows are grouped on the screen into frames; each window belongs to
1486one and only one frame. @xref{Frame Type}.
1487
1488 Windows have no read syntax. They print in hash notation, giving the
1489window number and the name of the buffer being displayed. The window
1490numbers exist to identify windows uniquely, since the buffer displayed
1491in any given window can change frequently.
1492
1493@example
1494@group
1495(selected-window)
1496 @result{} #<window 1 on objects.texi>
1497@end group
1498@end example
1499
1500 @xref{Windows}, for a description of the functions that work on windows.
1501
1502@node Frame Type
1503@subsection Frame Type
1504
1505 A @dfn{frame} is a screen area that contains one or more Emacs
1506windows; we also use the term ``frame'' to refer to the Lisp object
1507that Emacs uses to refer to the screen area.
1508
1509 Frames have no read syntax. They print in hash notation, giving the
1510frame's title, plus its address in core (useful to identify the frame
1511uniquely).
1512
1513@example
1514@group
1515(selected-frame)
1516 @result{} #<frame emacs@@psilocin.gnu.org 0xdac80>
1517@end group
1518@end example
1519
1520 @xref{Frames}, for a description of the functions that work on frames.
1521
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1522@node Terminal Type
1523@subsection Terminal Type
1524@cindex terminal type
1525
1526 A @dfn{terminal} is a device capable of displaying one or more
1527Emacs frames (@pxref{Frame Type}).
1528
1529 Terminals have no read syntax. They print in hash notation giving
1530the terminal's ordinal number and its TTY device file name.
1531
1532@example
1533@group
1534(get-device-terminal nil)
1535 @result{} #<terminal 1 on /dev/tty>
1536@end group
1537@end example
1538
1539@c FIXME: add an xref to where terminal-related primitives are described.
1540
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1541@node Window Configuration Type
1542@subsection Window Configuration Type
1543@cindex window layout in a frame
1544
1545 A @dfn{window configuration} stores information about the positions,
1546sizes, and contents of the windows in a frame, so you can recreate the
1547same arrangement of windows later.
1548
1549 Window configurations do not have a read syntax; their print syntax
1550looks like @samp{#<window-configuration>}. @xref{Window
1551Configurations}, for a description of several functions related to
1552window configurations.
1553
1554@node Frame Configuration Type
1555@subsection Frame Configuration Type
1556@cindex screen layout
1557@cindex window layout, all frames
1558
1559 A @dfn{frame configuration} stores information about the positions,
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1560sizes, and contents of the windows in all frames. It is not a
1561primitive type---it is actually a list whose @sc{car} is
1562@code{frame-configuration} and whose @sc{cdr} is an alist. Each alist
1563element describes one frame, which appears as the @sc{car} of that
1564element.
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1565
1566 @xref{Frame Configurations}, for a description of several functions
1567related to frame configurations.
1568
1569@node Process Type
1570@subsection Process Type
1571
1572 The word @dfn{process} usually means a running program. Emacs itself
1573runs in a process of this sort. However, in Emacs Lisp, a process is a
1574Lisp object that designates a subprocess created by the Emacs process.
1575Programs such as shells, GDB, ftp, and compilers, running in
1576subprocesses of Emacs, extend the capabilities of Emacs.
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1577 An Emacs subprocess takes textual input from Emacs and returns textual
1578output to Emacs for further manipulation. Emacs can also send signals
1579to the subprocess.
1580
1581 Process objects have no read syntax. They print in hash notation,
1582giving the name of the process:
1583
1584@example
1585@group
1586(process-list)
1587 @result{} (#<process shell>)
1588@end group
1589@end example
1590
1591@xref{Processes}, for information about functions that create, delete,
1592return information about, send input or signals to, and receive output
1593from processes.
1594
1595@node Stream Type
1596@subsection Stream Type
1597
1598 A @dfn{stream} is an object that can be used as a source or sink for
1599characters---either to supply characters for input or to accept them as
1600output. Many different types can be used this way: markers, buffers,
1601strings, and functions. Most often, input streams (character sources)
1602obtain characters from the keyboard, a buffer, or a file, and output
1603streams (character sinks) send characters to a buffer, such as a
1604@file{*Help*} buffer, or to the echo area.
1605
1606 The object @code{nil}, in addition to its other meanings, may be used
1607as a stream. It stands for the value of the variable
1608@code{standard-input} or @code{standard-output}. Also, the object
1609@code{t} as a stream specifies input using the minibuffer
1610(@pxref{Minibuffers}) or output in the echo area (@pxref{The Echo
1611Area}).
1612
1613 Streams have no special printed representation or read syntax, and
1614print as whatever primitive type they are.
1615
1616 @xref{Read and Print}, for a description of functions
1617related to streams, including parsing and printing functions.
1618
1619@node Keymap Type
1620@subsection Keymap Type
1621
1622 A @dfn{keymap} maps keys typed by the user to commands. This mapping
1623controls how the user's command input is executed. A keymap is actually
1624a list whose @sc{car} is the symbol @code{keymap}.
1625
1626 @xref{Keymaps}, for information about creating keymaps, handling prefix
1627keys, local as well as global keymaps, and changing key bindings.
1628
1629@node Overlay Type
1630@subsection Overlay Type
1631
1632 An @dfn{overlay} specifies properties that apply to a part of a
1633buffer. Each overlay applies to a specified range of the buffer, and
1634contains a property list (a list whose elements are alternating property
1635names and values). Overlay properties are used to present parts of the
1636buffer temporarily in a different display style. Overlays have no read
1637syntax, and print in hash notation, giving the buffer name and range of
1638positions.
1639
eceeb5fc 1640 @xref{Overlays}, for information on how you can create and use overlays.
b8d4c8d0 1641
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1642@node Font Type
1643@subsection Font Type
1644
1645 A @dfn{font} specifies how to display text on a graphical terminal.
1646There are actually three separate font types---@dfn{font objects},
1647@dfn{font specs}, and @dfn{font entities}---each of which has slightly
1648different properties. None of them have a read syntax; their print
1649syntax looks like @samp{#<font-object>}, @samp{#<font-spec>}, and
1650@samp{#<font-entity>} respectively. @xref{Low-Level Font}, for a
1651description of these Lisp objects.
1652
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1653@node Circular Objects
1654@section Read Syntax for Circular Objects
1655@cindex circular structure, read syntax
1656@cindex shared structure, read syntax
1657@cindex @samp{#@var{n}=} read syntax
1658@cindex @samp{#@var{n}#} read syntax
1659
1660 To represent shared or circular structures within a complex of Lisp
1661objects, you can use the reader constructs @samp{#@var{n}=} and
1662@samp{#@var{n}#}.
1663
1664 Use @code{#@var{n}=} before an object to label it for later reference;
1665subsequently, you can use @code{#@var{n}#} to refer the same object in
1666another place. Here, @var{n} is some integer. For example, here is how
1667to make a list in which the first element recurs as the third element:
1668
1669@example
1670(#1=(a) b #1#)
1671@end example
1672
1673@noindent
1674This differs from ordinary syntax such as this
1675
1676@example
1677((a) b (a))
1678@end example
1679
1680@noindent
1681which would result in a list whose first and third elements
1682look alike but are not the same Lisp object. This shows the difference:
1683
1684@example
1685(prog1 nil
1686 (setq x '(#1=(a) b #1#)))
1687(eq (nth 0 x) (nth 2 x))
1688 @result{} t
1689(setq x '((a) b (a)))
1690(eq (nth 0 x) (nth 2 x))
1691 @result{} nil
1692@end example
1693
1694 You can also use the same syntax to make a circular structure, which
1695appears as an ``element'' within itself. Here is an example:
1696
1697@example
1698#1=(a #1#)
1699@end example
1700
1701@noindent
1702This makes a list whose second element is the list itself.
1703Here's how you can see that it really works:
1704
1705@example
1706(prog1 nil
1707 (setq x '#1=(a #1#)))
1708(eq x (cadr x))
1709 @result{} t
1710@end example
1711
1712 The Lisp printer can produce this syntax to record circular and shared
1713structure in a Lisp object, if you bind the variable @code{print-circle}
1714to a non-@code{nil} value. @xref{Output Variables}.
1715
1716@node Type Predicates
1717@section Type Predicates
1718@cindex type checking
1719@kindex wrong-type-argument
1720
1721 The Emacs Lisp interpreter itself does not perform type checking on
1722the actual arguments passed to functions when they are called. It could
1723not do so, since function arguments in Lisp do not have declared data
1724types, as they do in other programming languages. It is therefore up to
1725the individual function to test whether each actual argument belongs to
1726a type that the function can use.
1727
1728 All built-in functions do check the types of their actual arguments
1729when appropriate, and signal a @code{wrong-type-argument} error if an
1730argument is of the wrong type. For example, here is what happens if you
1731pass an argument to @code{+} that it cannot handle:
1732
1733@example
1734@group
1735(+ 2 'a)
1736 @error{} Wrong type argument: number-or-marker-p, a
1737@end group
1738@end example
1739
1740@cindex type predicates
1741@cindex testing types
1742 If you want your program to handle different types differently, you
1743must do explicit type checking. The most common way to check the type
1744of an object is to call a @dfn{type predicate} function. Emacs has a
1745type predicate for each type, as well as some predicates for
1746combinations of types.
1747
1748 A type predicate function takes one argument; it returns @code{t} if
1749the argument belongs to the appropriate type, and @code{nil} otherwise.
1750Following a general Lisp convention for predicate functions, most type
1751predicates' names end with @samp{p}.
1752
1753 Here is an example which uses the predicates @code{listp} to check for
1754a list and @code{symbolp} to check for a symbol.
1755
1756@example
1757(defun add-on (x)
1758 (cond ((symbolp x)
1759 ;; If X is a symbol, put it on LIST.
1760 (setq list (cons x list)))
1761 ((listp x)
1762 ;; If X is a list, add its elements to LIST.
1763 (setq list (append x list)))
1764 (t
1765 ;; We handle only symbols and lists.
1766 (error "Invalid argument %s in add-on" x))))
1767@end example
1768
1769 Here is a table of predefined type predicates, in alphabetical order,
1770with references to further information.
1771
1772@table @code
1773@item atom
1774@xref{List-related Predicates, atom}.
1775
1776@item arrayp
1777@xref{Array Functions, arrayp}.
1778
1779@item bool-vector-p
1780@xref{Bool-Vectors, bool-vector-p}.
1781
1782@item bufferp
1783@xref{Buffer Basics, bufferp}.
1784
1785@item byte-code-function-p
1786@xref{Byte-Code Type, byte-code-function-p}.
1787
1788@item case-table-p
1789@xref{Case Tables, case-table-p}.
1790
1791@item char-or-string-p
1792@xref{Predicates for Strings, char-or-string-p}.
1793
1794@item char-table-p
1795@xref{Char-Tables, char-table-p}.
1796
1797@item commandp
1798@xref{Interactive Call, commandp}.
1799
1800@item consp
1801@xref{List-related Predicates, consp}.
1802
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1803@item custom-variable-p
1804@xref{Variable Definitions, custom-variable-p}.
1805
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1806@item display-table-p
1807@xref{Display Tables, display-table-p}.
1808
1809@item floatp
1810@xref{Predicates on Numbers, floatp}.
1811
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1812@item fontp
1813@xref{Low-Level Font}.
1814
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1815@item frame-configuration-p
1816@xref{Frame Configurations, frame-configuration-p}.
1817
1818@item frame-live-p
1819@xref{Deleting Frames, frame-live-p}.
1820
1821@item framep
1822@xref{Frames, framep}.
1823
1824@item functionp
1825@xref{Functions, functionp}.
1826
1827@item hash-table-p
1828@xref{Other Hash, hash-table-p}.
1829
1830@item integer-or-marker-p
1831@xref{Predicates on Markers, integer-or-marker-p}.
1832
1833@item integerp
1834@xref{Predicates on Numbers, integerp}.
1835
1836@item keymapp
1837@xref{Creating Keymaps, keymapp}.
1838
1839@item keywordp
1840@xref{Constant Variables}.
1841
1842@item listp
1843@xref{List-related Predicates, listp}.
1844
1845@item markerp
1846@xref{Predicates on Markers, markerp}.
1847
1848@item wholenump
1849@xref{Predicates on Numbers, wholenump}.
1850
1851@item nlistp
1852@xref{List-related Predicates, nlistp}.
1853
1854@item numberp
1855@xref{Predicates on Numbers, numberp}.
1856
1857@item number-or-marker-p
1858@xref{Predicates on Markers, number-or-marker-p}.
1859
1860@item overlayp
1861@xref{Overlays, overlayp}.
1862
1863@item processp
1864@xref{Processes, processp}.
1865
1866@item sequencep
1867@xref{Sequence Functions, sequencep}.
1868
1869@item stringp
1870@xref{Predicates for Strings, stringp}.
1871
1872@item subrp
1873@xref{Function Cells, subrp}.
1874
1875@item symbolp
1876@xref{Symbols, symbolp}.
1877
1878@item syntax-table-p
1879@xref{Syntax Tables, syntax-table-p}.
1880
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1881@item vectorp
1882@xref{Vectors, vectorp}.
1883
1884@item window-configuration-p
1885@xref{Window Configurations, window-configuration-p}.
1886
1887@item window-live-p
1888@xref{Deleting Windows, window-live-p}.
1889
1890@item windowp
1891@xref{Basic Windows, windowp}.
1892
1893@item booleanp
1894@xref{nil and t, booleanp}.
1895
1896@item string-or-null-p
1897@xref{Predicates for Strings, string-or-null-p}.
1898@end table
1899
1900 The most general way to check the type of an object is to call the
1901function @code{type-of}. Recall that each object belongs to one and
1902only one primitive type; @code{type-of} tells you which one (@pxref{Lisp
1903Data Types}). But @code{type-of} knows nothing about non-primitive
1904types. In most cases, it is more convenient to use type predicates than
1905@code{type-of}.
1906
1907@defun type-of object
1908This function returns a symbol naming the primitive type of
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1909@var{object}. The value is one of the symbols @code{bool-vector},
1910@code{buffer}, @code{char-table}, @code{compiled-function},
1911@code{cons}, @code{float}, @code{font-entity}, @code{font-object},
1912@code{font-spec}, @code{frame}, @code{hash-table}, @code{integer},
1913@code{marker}, @code{overlay}, @code{process}, @code{string},
1914@code{subr}, @code{symbol}, @code{vector}, @code{window}, or
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1915@code{window-configuration}.
1916
1917@example
1918(type-of 1)
1919 @result{} integer
1920@group
1921(type-of 'nil)
1922 @result{} symbol
1923(type-of '()) ; @r{@code{()} is @code{nil}.}
1924 @result{} symbol
1925(type-of '(x))
1926 @result{} cons
1927@end group
1928@end example
1929@end defun
1930
1931@node Equality Predicates
1932@section Equality Predicates
1933@cindex equality
1934
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1935 Here we describe functions that test for equality between two
1936objects. Other functions test equality of contents between objects of
1df7defd 1937specific types, e.g., strings. For these predicates, see the
fead402d 1938appropriate chapter describing the data type.
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1939
1940@defun eq object1 object2
1941This function returns @code{t} if @var{object1} and @var{object2} are
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1942the same object, and @code{nil} otherwise.
1943
1944If @var{object1} and @var{object2} are integers with the same value,
1df7defd 1945they are considered to be the same object (i.e., @code{eq} returns
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1946@code{t}). If @var{object1} and @var{object2} are symbols with the
1947same name, they are normally the same object---but see @ref{Creating
1df7defd 1948Symbols} for exceptions. For other types (e.g., lists, vectors,
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1949strings), two arguments with the same contents or elements are not
1950necessarily @code{eq} to each other: they are @code{eq} only if they
1951are the same object, meaning that a change in the contents of one will
1952be reflected by the same change in the contents of the other.
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1953
1954@example
1955@group
1956(eq 'foo 'foo)
1957 @result{} t
1958@end group
1959
1960@group
1961(eq 456 456)
1962 @result{} t
1963@end group
1964
1965@group
1966(eq "asdf" "asdf")
1967 @result{} nil
1968@end group
1969
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1970@group
1971(eq "" "")
1972 @result{} t
1973;; @r{This exception occurs because Emacs Lisp}
1974;; @r{makes just one multibyte empty string, to save space.}
1975@end group
1976
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1977@group
1978(eq '(1 (2 (3))) '(1 (2 (3))))
1979 @result{} nil
1980@end group
1981
1982@group
1983(setq foo '(1 (2 (3))))
1984 @result{} (1 (2 (3)))
1985(eq foo foo)
1986 @result{} t
1987(eq foo '(1 (2 (3))))
1988 @result{} nil
1989@end group
1990
1991@group
1992(eq [(1 2) 3] [(1 2) 3])
1993 @result{} nil
1994@end group
1995
1996@group
1997(eq (point-marker) (point-marker))
1998 @result{} nil
1999@end group
2000@end example
2001
fead402d 2002@noindent
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2003The @code{make-symbol} function returns an uninterned symbol, distinct
2004from the symbol that is used if you write the name in a Lisp expression.
2005Distinct symbols with the same name are not @code{eq}. @xref{Creating
2006Symbols}.
2007
2008@example
2009@group
2010(eq (make-symbol "foo") 'foo)
2011 @result{} nil
2012@end group
2013@end example
2014@end defun
2015
2016@defun equal object1 object2
2017This function returns @code{t} if @var{object1} and @var{object2} have
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2018equal components, and @code{nil} otherwise. Whereas @code{eq} tests
2019if its arguments are the same object, @code{equal} looks inside
2020nonidentical arguments to see if their elements or contents are the
2021same. So, if two objects are @code{eq}, they are @code{equal}, but
2022the converse is not always true.
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2023
2024@example
2025@group
2026(equal 'foo 'foo)
2027 @result{} t
2028@end group
2029
2030@group
2031(equal 456 456)
2032 @result{} t
2033@end group
2034
2035@group
2036(equal "asdf" "asdf")
2037 @result{} t
2038@end group
2039@group
2040(eq "asdf" "asdf")
2041 @result{} nil
2042@end group
2043
2044@group
2045(equal '(1 (2 (3))) '(1 (2 (3))))
2046 @result{} t
2047@end group
2048@group
2049(eq '(1 (2 (3))) '(1 (2 (3))))
2050 @result{} nil
2051@end group
2052
2053@group
2054(equal [(1 2) 3] [(1 2) 3])
2055 @result{} t
2056@end group
2057@group
2058(eq [(1 2) 3] [(1 2) 3])
2059 @result{} nil
2060@end group
2061
2062@group
2063(equal (point-marker) (point-marker))
2064 @result{} t
2065@end group
2066
2067@group
2068(eq (point-marker) (point-marker))
2069 @result{} nil
2070@end group
2071@end example
2072
2073Comparison of strings is case-sensitive, but does not take account of
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2074text properties---it compares only the characters in the strings.
2075@xref{Text Properties}. Use @code{equal-including-properties} to also
2076compare text properties. For technical reasons, a unibyte string and
2077a multibyte string are @code{equal} if and only if they contain the
2078same sequence of character codes and all these codes are either in the
2079range 0 through 127 (@acronym{ASCII}) or 160 through 255
2080(@code{eight-bit-graphic}). (@pxref{Text Representations}).
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2081
2082@example
2083@group
2084(equal "asdf" "ASDF")
2085 @result{} nil
2086@end group
2087@end example
2088
2089However, two distinct buffers are never considered @code{equal}, even if
2090their textual contents are the same.
2091@end defun
2092
2093 The test for equality is implemented recursively; for example, given
2094two cons cells @var{x} and @var{y}, @code{(equal @var{x} @var{y})}
2095returns @code{t} if and only if both the expressions below return
2096@code{t}:
2097
2098@example
2099(equal (car @var{x}) (car @var{y}))
2100(equal (cdr @var{x}) (cdr @var{y}))
2101@end example
2102
2103Because of this recursive method, circular lists may therefore cause
2104infinite recursion (leading to an error).
2105
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2106@defun equal-including-properties object1 object2
2107This function behaves like @code{equal} in all cases but also requires
2108that for two strings to be equal, they have the same text properties.
2109
2110@example
2111@group
2112(equal "asdf" (propertize "asdf" '(asdf t)))
2113 @result{} t
2114@end group
2115@group
2116(equal-including-properties "asdf"
2117 (propertize "asdf" '(asdf t)))
2118 @result{} nil
2119@end group
2120@end example
2121@end defun