(x_clear_frame_selections): Don't call redisplay_preserve_echo_area here.
[bpt/emacs.git] / lispref / streams.texi
1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
5 @setfilename ../info/streams
6 @node Read and Print, Minibuffers, Debugging, Top
7 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
8 @chapter Reading and Printing Lisp Objects
9
10 @dfn{Printing} and @dfn{reading} are the operations of converting Lisp
11 objects to textual form and vice versa. They use the printed
12 representations and read syntax described in @ref{Lisp Data Types}.
13
14 This chapter describes the Lisp functions for reading and printing.
15 It also describes @dfn{streams}, which specify where to get the text (if
16 reading) or where to put it (if printing).
17
18 @menu
19 * Streams Intro:: Overview of streams, reading and printing.
20 * Input Streams:: Various data types that can be used as input streams.
21 * Input Functions:: Functions to read Lisp objects from text.
22 * Output Streams:: Various data types that can be used as output streams.
23 * Output Functions:: Functions to print Lisp objects as text.
24 * Output Variables:: Variables that control what the printing functions do.
25 @end menu
26
27 @node Streams Intro
28 @section Introduction to Reading and Printing
29 @cindex Lisp reader
30 @cindex printing
31 @cindex reading
32
33 @dfn{Reading} a Lisp object means parsing a Lisp expression in textual
34 form and producing a corresponding Lisp object. This is how Lisp
35 programs get into Lisp from files of Lisp code. We call the text the
36 @dfn{read syntax} of the object. For example, the text @samp{(a .@: 5)}
37 is the read syntax for a cons cell whose @sc{car} is @code{a} and whose
38 @sc{cdr} is the number 5.
39
40 @dfn{Printing} a Lisp object means producing text that represents that
41 object---converting the object to its printed representation. Printing
42 the cons cell described above produces the text @samp{(a .@: 5)}.
43
44 Reading and printing are more or less inverse operations: printing the
45 object that results from reading a given piece of text often produces
46 the same text, and reading the text that results from printing an object
47 usually produces a similar-looking object. For example, printing the
48 symbol @code{foo} produces the text @samp{foo}, and reading that text
49 returns the symbol @code{foo}. Printing a list whose elements are
50 @code{a} and @code{b} produces the text @samp{(a b)}, and reading that
51 text produces a list (but not the same list) with elements @code{a}
52 and @code{b}.
53
54 However, these two operations are not precisely inverses. There are
55 three kinds of exceptions:
56
57 @itemize @bullet
58 @item
59 Printing can produce text that cannot be read. For example, buffers,
60 windows, frames, subprocesses and markers print into text that starts
61 with @samp{#}; if you try to read this text, you get an error. There is
62 no way to read those data types.
63
64 @item
65 One object can have multiple textual representations. For example,
66 @samp{1} and @samp{01} represent the same integer, and @samp{(a b)} and
67 @samp{(a .@: (b))} represent the same list. Reading will accept any of
68 the alternatives, but printing must choose one of them.
69
70 @item
71 Comments can appear at certain points in the middle of an object's
72 read sequence without affecting the result of reading it.
73 @end itemize
74
75 @node Input Streams
76 @section Input Streams
77 @cindex stream (for reading)
78 @cindex input stream
79
80 Most of the Lisp functions for reading text take an @dfn{input stream}
81 as an argument. The input stream specifies where or how to get the
82 characters of the text to be read. Here are the possible types of input
83 stream:
84
85 @table @asis
86 @item @var{buffer}
87 @cindex buffer input stream
88 The input characters are read from @var{buffer}, starting with the
89 character directly after point. Point advances as characters are read.
90
91 @item @var{marker}
92 @cindex marker input stream
93 The input characters are read from the buffer that @var{marker} is in,
94 starting with the character directly after the marker. The marker
95 position advances as characters are read. The value of point in the
96 buffer has no effect when the stream is a marker.
97
98 @item @var{string}
99 @cindex string input stream
100 The input characters are taken from @var{string}, starting at the first
101 character in the string and using as many characters as required.
102
103 @item @var{function}
104 @cindex function input stream
105 The input characters are generated by @var{function}, one character per
106 call. Normally @var{function} is called with no arguments, and should
107 return a character.
108
109 @cindex unreading
110 Occasionally @var{function} is called with one argument (always a
111 character). When that happens, @var{function} should save the argument
112 and arrange to return it on the next call. This is called
113 @dfn{unreading} the character; it happens when the Lisp reader reads one
114 character too many and wants to ``put it back where it came from''.
115
116 @item @code{t}
117 @cindex @code{t} input stream
118 @code{t} used as a stream means that the input is read from the
119 minibuffer. In fact, the minibuffer is invoked once and the text
120 given by the user is made into a string that is then used as the
121 input stream.
122
123 @item @code{nil}
124 @cindex @code{nil} input stream
125 @code{nil} supplied as an input stream means to use the value of
126 @code{standard-input} instead; that value is the @dfn{default input
127 stream}, and must be a non-@code{nil} input stream.
128
129 @item @var{symbol}
130 A symbol as input stream is equivalent to the symbol's function
131 definition (if any).
132 @end table
133
134 Here is an example of reading from a stream that is a buffer, showing
135 where point is located before and after:
136
137 @example
138 @group
139 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
140 This@point{} is the contents of foo.
141 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
142 @end group
143
144 @group
145 (read (get-buffer "foo"))
146 @result{} is
147 @end group
148 @group
149 (read (get-buffer "foo"))
150 @result{} the
151 @end group
152
153 @group
154 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
155 This is the@point{} contents of foo.
156 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
157 @end group
158 @end example
159
160 @noindent
161 Note that the first read skips a space. Reading skips any amount of
162 whitespace preceding the significant text.
163
164 In Emacs 18, reading a symbol discarded the delimiter terminating the
165 symbol. Thus, point would end up at the beginning of @samp{contents}
166 rather than after @samp{the}. The Emacs 19 behavior is superior because
167 it correctly handles input such as @samp{bar(foo)}, where the
168 open-parenthesis that ends one object is needed as the beginning of
169 another object.
170
171 Here is an example of reading from a stream that is a marker,
172 initially positioned at the beginning of the buffer shown. The value
173 read is the symbol @code{This}.
174
175 @example
176 @group
177
178 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
179 This is the contents of foo.
180 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
181 @end group
182
183 @group
184 (setq m (set-marker (make-marker) 1 (get-buffer "foo")))
185 @result{} #<marker at 1 in foo>
186 @end group
187 @group
188 (read m)
189 @result{} This
190 @end group
191 @group
192 m
193 @result{} #<marker at 5 in foo> ;; @r{Before the first space.}
194 @end group
195 @end example
196
197 Here we read from the contents of a string:
198
199 @example
200 @group
201 (read "(When in) the course")
202 @result{} (When in)
203 @end group
204 @end example
205
206 The following example reads from the minibuffer. The
207 prompt is: @w{@samp{Lisp expression: }}. (That is always the prompt
208 used when you read from the stream @code{t}.) The user's input is shown
209 following the prompt.
210
211 @example
212 @group
213 (read t)
214 @result{} 23
215 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
216 Lisp expression: @kbd{23 @key{RET}}
217 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
218 @end group
219 @end example
220
221 Finally, here is an example of a stream that is a function, named
222 @code{useless-stream}. Before we use the stream, we initialize the
223 variable @code{useless-list} to a list of characters. Then each call to
224 the function @code{useless-stream} obtains the next character in the list
225 or unreads a character by adding it to the front of the list.
226
227 @example
228 @group
229 (setq useless-list (append "XY()" nil))
230 @result{} (88 89 40 41)
231 @end group
232
233 @group
234 (defun useless-stream (&optional unread)
235 (if unread
236 (setq useless-list (cons unread useless-list))
237 (prog1 (car useless-list)
238 (setq useless-list (cdr useless-list)))))
239 @result{} useless-stream
240 @end group
241 @end example
242
243 @noindent
244 Now we read using the stream thus constructed:
245
246 @example
247 @group
248 (read 'useless-stream)
249 @result{} XY
250 @end group
251
252 @group
253 useless-list
254 @result{} (40 41)
255 @end group
256 @end example
257
258 @noindent
259 Note that the open and close parentheses remains in the list. The Lisp
260 reader encountered the open parenthesis, decided that it ended the
261 input, and unread it. Another attempt to read from the stream at this
262 point would read @samp{()} and return @code{nil}.
263
264 @defun get-file-char
265 This function is used internally as an input stream to read from the
266 input file opened by the function @code{load}. Don't use this function
267 yourself.
268 @end defun
269
270 @node Input Functions
271 @section Input Functions
272
273 This section describes the Lisp functions and variables that pertain
274 to reading.
275
276 In the functions below, @var{stream} stands for an input stream (see
277 the previous section). If @var{stream} is @code{nil} or omitted, it
278 defaults to the value of @code{standard-input}.
279
280 @kindex end-of-file
281 An @code{end-of-file} error is signaled if reading encounters an
282 unterminated list, vector, or string.
283
284 @defun read &optional stream
285 This function reads one textual Lisp expression from @var{stream},
286 returning it as a Lisp object. This is the basic Lisp input function.
287 @end defun
288
289 @defun read-from-string string &optional start end
290 @cindex string to object
291 This function reads the first textual Lisp expression from the text in
292 @var{string}. It returns a cons cell whose @sc{car} is that expression,
293 and whose @sc{cdr} is an integer giving the position of the next
294 remaining character in the string (i.e., the first one not read).
295
296 If @var{start} is supplied, then reading begins at index @var{start} in
297 the string (where the first character is at index 0). If @var{end} is
298 also supplied, then reading stops just before that index, as if the rest
299 of the string were not there.
300
301 For example:
302
303 @example
304 @group
305 (read-from-string "(setq x 55) (setq y 5)")
306 @result{} ((setq x 55) . 11)
307 @end group
308 @group
309 (read-from-string "\"A short string\"")
310 @result{} ("A short string" . 16)
311 @end group
312
313 @group
314 ;; @r{Read starting at the first character.}
315 (read-from-string "(list 112)" 0)
316 @result{} ((list 112) . 10)
317 @end group
318 @group
319 ;; @r{Read starting at the second character.}
320 (read-from-string "(list 112)" 1)
321 @result{} (list . 5)
322 @end group
323 @group
324 ;; @r{Read starting at the seventh character,}
325 ;; @r{and stopping at the ninth.}
326 (read-from-string "(list 112)" 6 8)
327 @result{} (11 . 8)
328 @end group
329 @end example
330 @end defun
331
332 @defvar standard-input
333 This variable holds the default input stream---the stream that
334 @code{read} uses when the @var{stream} argument is @code{nil}.
335 @end defvar
336
337 @node Output Streams
338 @section Output Streams
339 @cindex stream (for printing)
340 @cindex output stream
341
342 An output stream specifies what to do with the characters produced
343 by printing. Most print functions accept an output stream as an
344 optional argument. Here are the possible types of output stream:
345
346 @table @asis
347 @item @var{buffer}
348 @cindex buffer output stream
349 The output characters are inserted into @var{buffer} at point.
350 Point advances as characters are inserted.
351
352 @item @var{marker}
353 @cindex marker output stream
354 The output characters are inserted into the buffer that @var{marker}
355 points into, at the marker position. The marker position advances as
356 characters are inserted. The value of point in the buffer has no effect
357 on printing when the stream is a marker.
358
359 @item @var{function}
360 @cindex function output stream
361 The output characters are passed to @var{function}, which is responsible
362 for storing them away. It is called with a single character as
363 argument, as many times as there are characters to be output, and is
364 free to do anything at all with the characters it receives.
365
366 @item @code{t}
367 @cindex @code{t} output stream
368 The output characters are displayed in the echo area.
369
370 @item @code{nil}
371 @cindex @code{nil} output stream
372 @code{nil} specified as an output stream means to the value of
373 @code{standard-output} instead; that value is the @dfn{default output
374 stream}, and must be a non-@code{nil} output stream.
375
376 @item @var{symbol}
377 A symbol as output stream is equivalent to the symbol's function
378 definition (if any).
379 @end table
380
381 Many of the valid output streams are also valid as input streams. The
382 difference between input and output streams is therefore mostly one of
383 how you use a Lisp object, not a distinction of types of object.
384
385 Here is an example of a buffer used as an output stream. Point is
386 initially located as shown immediately before the @samp{h} in
387 @samp{the}. At the end, point is located directly before that same
388 @samp{h}.
389
390 @cindex print example
391 @example
392 @group
393 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
394 This is t@point{}he contents of foo.
395 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
396 @end group
397
398 (print "This is the output" (get-buffer "foo"))
399 @result{} "This is the output"
400
401 @group
402 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
403 This is t
404 "This is the output"
405 @point{}he contents of foo.
406 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
407 @end group
408 @end example
409
410 Now we show a use of a marker as an output stream. Initially, the
411 marker is in buffer @code{foo}, between the @samp{t} and the @samp{h} in
412 the word @samp{the}. At the end, the marker has advanced over the
413 inserted text so that it remains positioned before the same @samp{h}.
414 Note that the location of point, shown in the usual fashion, has no
415 effect.
416
417 @example
418 @group
419 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
420 "This is the @point{}output"
421 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
422 @end group
423
424 @group
425 m
426 @result{} #<marker at 11 in foo>
427 @end group
428
429 @group
430 (print "More output for foo." m)
431 @result{} "More output for foo."
432 @end group
433
434 @group
435 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
436 "This is t
437 "More output for foo."
438 he @point{}output"
439 ---------- Buffer: foo ----------
440 @end group
441
442 @group
443 m
444 @result{} #<marker at 35 in foo>
445 @end group
446 @end example
447
448 The following example shows output to the echo area:
449
450 @example
451 @group
452 (print "Echo Area output" t)
453 @result{} "Echo Area output"
454 ---------- Echo Area ----------
455 "Echo Area output"
456 ---------- Echo Area ----------
457 @end group
458 @end example
459
460 Finally, we show the use of a function as an output stream. The
461 function @code{eat-output} takes each character that it is given and
462 conses it onto the front of the list @code{last-output} (@pxref{Building
463 Lists}). At the end, the list contains all the characters output, but
464 in reverse order.
465
466 @example
467 @group
468 (setq last-output nil)
469 @result{} nil
470 @end group
471
472 @group
473 (defun eat-output (c)
474 (setq last-output (cons c last-output)))
475 @result{} eat-output
476 @end group
477
478 @group
479 (print "This is the output" 'eat-output)
480 @result{} "This is the output"
481 @end group
482
483 @group
484 last-output
485 @result{} (10 34 116 117 112 116 117 111 32 101 104
486 116 32 115 105 32 115 105 104 84 34 10)
487 @end group
488 @end example
489
490 @noindent
491 Now we can put the output in the proper order by reversing the list:
492
493 @example
494 @group
495 (concat (nreverse last-output))
496 @result{} "
497 \"This is the output\"
498 "
499 @end group
500 @end example
501
502 @noindent
503 Calling @code{concat} converts the list to a string so you can see its
504 contents more clearly.
505
506 @node Output Functions
507 @section Output Functions
508
509 This section describes the Lisp functions for printing Lisp objects.
510
511 @cindex @samp{"} in printing
512 @cindex @samp{\} in printing
513 @cindex quoting characters in printing
514 @cindex escape characters in printing
515 Some of the Emacs printing functions add quoting characters to the
516 output when necessary so that it can be read properly. The quoting
517 characters used are @samp{"} and @samp{\}; they distinguish strings from
518 symbols, and prevent punctuation characters in strings and symbols from
519 being taken as delimiters when reading. @xref{Printed Representation},
520 for full details. You specify quoting or no quoting by the choice of
521 printing function.
522
523 If the text is to be read back into Lisp, then it is best to print
524 with quoting characters to avoid ambiguity. Likewise, if the purpose is
525 to describe a Lisp object clearly for a Lisp programmer. However, if
526 the purpose of the output is to look nice for humans, then it is better
527 to print without quoting.
528
529 Printing a self-referent Lisp object requires an infinite amount of
530 text. In certain cases, trying to produce this text leads to a stack
531 overflow. Emacs detects such recursion and prints @samp{#@var{level}}
532 instead of recursively printing an object already being printed. For
533 example, here @samp{#0} indicates a recursive reference to the object at
534 level 0 of the current print operation:
535
536 @example
537 (setq foo (list nil))
538 @result{} (nil)
539 (setcar foo foo)
540 @result{} (#0)
541 @end example
542
543 In the functions below, @var{stream} stands for an output stream.
544 (See the previous section for a description of output streams.) If
545 @var{stream} is @code{nil} or omitted, it defaults to the value of
546 @code{standard-output}.
547
548 @defun print object &optional stream
549 @cindex Lisp printer
550 The @code{print} function is a convenient way of printing. It outputs
551 the printed representation of @var{object} to @var{stream}, printing in
552 addition one newline before @var{object} and another after it. Quoting
553 characters are used. @code{print} returns @var{object}. For example:
554
555 @example
556 @group
557 (progn (print 'The\ cat\ in)
558 (print "the hat")
559 (print " came back"))
560 @print{}
561 @print{} The\ cat\ in
562 @print{}
563 @print{} "the hat"
564 @print{}
565 @print{} " came back"
566 @print{}
567 @result{} " came back"
568 @end group
569 @end example
570 @end defun
571
572 @defun prin1 object &optional stream
573 This function outputs the printed representation of @var{object} to
574 @var{stream}. It does not print newlines to separate output as
575 @code{print} does, but it does use quoting characters just like
576 @code{print}. It returns @var{object}.
577
578 @example
579 @group
580 (progn (prin1 'The\ cat\ in)
581 (prin1 "the hat")
582 (prin1 " came back"))
583 @print{} The\ cat\ in"the hat"" came back"
584 @result{} " came back"
585 @end group
586 @end example
587 @end defun
588
589 @defun princ object &optional stream
590 This function outputs the printed representation of @var{object} to
591 @var{stream}. It returns @var{object}.
592
593 This function is intended to produce output that is readable by people,
594 not by @code{read}, so it doesn't insert quoting characters and doesn't
595 put double-quotes around the contents of strings. It does not add any
596 spacing between calls.
597
598 @example
599 @group
600 (progn
601 (princ 'The\ cat)
602 (princ " in the \"hat\""))
603 @print{} The cat in the "hat"
604 @result{} " in the \"hat\""
605 @end group
606 @end example
607 @end defun
608
609 @defun terpri &optional stream
610 @cindex newline in print
611 This function outputs a newline to @var{stream}. The name stands
612 for ``terminate print''.
613 @end defun
614
615 @defun write-char character &optional stream
616 This function outputs @var{character} to @var{stream}. It returns
617 @var{character}.
618 @end defun
619
620 @defun prin1-to-string object &optional noescape
621 @cindex object to string
622 This function returns a string containing the text that @code{prin1}
623 would have printed for the same argument.
624
625 @example
626 @group
627 (prin1-to-string 'foo)
628 @result{} "foo"
629 @end group
630 @group
631 (prin1-to-string (mark-marker))
632 @result{} "#<marker at 2773 in strings.texi>"
633 @end group
634 @end example
635
636 If @var{noescape} is non-@code{nil}, that inhibits use of quoting
637 characters in the output. (This argument is supported in Emacs versions
638 19 and later.)
639
640 @example
641 @group
642 (prin1-to-string "foo")
643 @result{} "\"foo\""
644 @end group
645 @group
646 (prin1-to-string "foo" t)
647 @result{} "foo"
648 @end group
649 @end example
650
651 See @code{format}, in @ref{String Conversion}, for other ways to obtain
652 the printed representation of a Lisp object as a string.
653 @end defun
654
655 @node Output Variables
656 @section Variables Affecting Output
657
658 @defvar standard-output
659 The value of this variable is the default output stream---the stream
660 that print functions use when the @var{stream} argument is @code{nil}.
661 @end defvar
662
663 @defvar print-escape-newlines
664 @cindex @samp{\n} in print
665 @cindex escape characters
666 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, then newline characters in strings
667 are printed as @samp{\n} and formfeeds are printed as @samp{\f}.
668 Normally these characters are printed as actual newlines and formfeeds.
669
670 This variable affects the print functions @code{prin1} and @code{print},
671 as well as everything that uses them. It does not affect @code{princ}.
672 Here is an example using @code{prin1}:
673
674 @example
675 @group
676 (prin1 "a\nb")
677 @print{} "a
678 @print{} b"
679 @result{} "a
680 b"
681 @end group
682
683 @group
684 (let ((print-escape-newlines t))
685 (prin1 "a\nb"))
686 @print{} "a\nb"
687 @result{} "a
688 b"
689 @end group
690 @end example
691
692 @noindent
693 In the second expression, the local binding of
694 @code{print-escape-newlines} is in effect during the call to
695 @code{prin1}, but not during the printing of the result.
696 @end defvar
697
698 @defvar print-length
699 @cindex printing limits
700 The value of this variable is the maximum number of elements of a list
701 that will be printed. If a list being printed has more than this many
702 elements, it is abbreviated with an ellipsis.
703
704 If the value is @code{nil} (the default), then there is no limit.
705
706 @example
707 @group
708 (setq print-length 2)
709 @result{} 2
710 @end group
711 @group
712 (print '(1 2 3 4 5))
713 @print{} (1 2 ...)
714 @result{} (1 2 ...)
715 @end group
716 @end example
717 @end defvar
718
719 @defvar print-level
720 The value of this variable is the maximum depth of nesting of
721 parentheses and brackets when printed. Any list or vector at a depth
722 exceeding this limit is abbreviated with an ellipsis. A value of
723 @code{nil} (which is the default) means no limit.
724
725 This variable exists in version 19 and later versions.
726 @end defvar