(c-neutralize-syntax-in-CPP): Fix a bug on typing "#" at EOB.
[bpt/emacs.git] / lispref / eval.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, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003,
4 @c 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @setfilename ../info/eval
7 @node Evaluation, Control Structures, Symbols, Top
8 @chapter Evaluation
9 @cindex evaluation
10 @cindex interpreter
11 @cindex interpreter
12 @cindex value of expression
13
14 The @dfn{evaluation} of expressions in Emacs Lisp is performed by the
15 @dfn{Lisp interpreter}---a program that receives a Lisp object as input
16 and computes its @dfn{value as an expression}. How it does this depends
17 on the data type of the object, according to rules described in this
18 chapter. The interpreter runs automatically to evaluate portions of
19 your program, but can also be called explicitly via the Lisp primitive
20 function @code{eval}.
21
22 @ifnottex
23 @menu
24 * Intro Eval:: Evaluation in the scheme of things.
25 * Forms:: How various sorts of objects are evaluated.
26 * Quoting:: Avoiding evaluation (to put constants in the program).
27 * Eval:: How to invoke the Lisp interpreter explicitly.
28 @end menu
29
30 @node Intro Eval
31 @section Introduction to Evaluation
32
33 The Lisp interpreter, or evaluator, is the program that computes
34 the value of an expression that is given to it. When a function
35 written in Lisp is called, the evaluator computes the value of the
36 function by evaluating the expressions in the function body. Thus,
37 running any Lisp program really means running the Lisp interpreter.
38
39 How the evaluator handles an object depends primarily on the data
40 type of the object.
41 @end ifnottex
42
43 @cindex forms
44 @cindex expression
45 A Lisp object that is intended for evaluation is called an
46 @dfn{expression} or a @dfn{form}. The fact that expressions are data
47 objects and not merely text is one of the fundamental differences
48 between Lisp-like languages and typical programming languages. Any
49 object can be evaluated, but in practice only numbers, symbols, lists
50 and strings are evaluated very often.
51
52 It is very common to read a Lisp expression and then evaluate the
53 expression, but reading and evaluation are separate activities, and
54 either can be performed alone. Reading per se does not evaluate
55 anything; it converts the printed representation of a Lisp object to the
56 object itself. It is up to the caller of @code{read} whether this
57 object is a form to be evaluated, or serves some entirely different
58 purpose. @xref{Input Functions}.
59
60 Do not confuse evaluation with command key interpretation. The
61 editor command loop translates keyboard input into a command (an
62 interactively callable function) using the active keymaps, and then
63 uses @code{call-interactively} to invoke the command. The execution of
64 the command itself involves evaluation if the command is written in
65 Lisp, but that is not a part of command key interpretation itself.
66 @xref{Command Loop}.
67
68 @cindex recursive evaluation
69 Evaluation is a recursive process. That is, evaluation of a form may
70 call @code{eval} to evaluate parts of the form. For example, evaluation
71 of a function call first evaluates each argument of the function call,
72 and then evaluates each form in the function body. Consider evaluation
73 of the form @code{(car x)}: the subform @code{x} must first be evaluated
74 recursively, so that its value can be passed as an argument to the
75 function @code{car}.
76
77 Evaluation of a function call ultimately calls the function specified
78 in it. @xref{Functions}. The execution of the function may itself work
79 by evaluating the function definition; or the function may be a Lisp
80 primitive implemented in C, or it may be a byte-compiled function
81 (@pxref{Byte Compilation}).
82
83 @cindex environment
84 The evaluation of forms takes place in a context called the
85 @dfn{environment}, which consists of the current values and bindings of
86 all Lisp variables.@footnote{This definition of ``environment'' is
87 specifically not intended to include all the data that can affect the
88 result of a program.} Whenever a form refers to a variable without
89 creating a new binding for it, the value of the variable's binding in
90 the current environment is used. @xref{Variables}.
91
92 @cindex side effect
93 Evaluation of a form may create new environments for recursive
94 evaluation by binding variables (@pxref{Local Variables}). These
95 environments are temporary and vanish by the time evaluation of the form
96 is complete. The form may also make changes that persist; these changes
97 are called @dfn{side effects}. An example of a form that produces side
98 effects is @code{(setq foo 1)}.
99
100 The details of what evaluation means for each kind of form are
101 described below (@pxref{Forms}).
102
103 @node Forms
104 @section Kinds of Forms
105
106 A Lisp object that is intended to be evaluated is called a @dfn{form}.
107 How Emacs evaluates a form depends on its data type. Emacs has three
108 different kinds of form that are evaluated differently: symbols, lists,
109 and ``all other types.'' This section describes all three kinds, one by
110 one, starting with the ``all other types'' which are self-evaluating
111 forms.
112
113 @menu
114 * Self-Evaluating Forms:: Forms that evaluate to themselves.
115 * Symbol Forms:: Symbols evaluate as variables.
116 * Classifying Lists:: How to distinguish various sorts of list forms.
117 * Function Indirection:: When a symbol appears as the car of a list,
118 we find the real function via the symbol.
119 * Function Forms:: Forms that call functions.
120 * Macro Forms:: Forms that call macros.
121 * Special Forms:: "Special forms" are idiosyncratic primitives,
122 most of them extremely important.
123 * Autoloading:: Functions set up to load files
124 containing their real definitions.
125 @end menu
126
127 @node Self-Evaluating Forms
128 @subsection Self-Evaluating Forms
129 @cindex vector evaluation
130 @cindex literal evaluation
131 @cindex self-evaluating form
132
133 A @dfn{self-evaluating form} is any form that is not a list or symbol.
134 Self-evaluating forms evaluate to themselves: the result of evaluation
135 is the same object that was evaluated. Thus, the number 25 evaluates to
136 25, and the string @code{"foo"} evaluates to the string @code{"foo"}.
137 Likewise, evaluation of a vector does not cause evaluation of the
138 elements of the vector---it returns the same vector with its contents
139 unchanged.
140
141 @example
142 @group
143 '123 ; @r{A number, shown without evaluation.}
144 @result{} 123
145 @end group
146 @group
147 123 ; @r{Evaluated as usual---result is the same.}
148 @result{} 123
149 @end group
150 @group
151 (eval '123) ; @r{Evaluated ``by hand''---result is the same.}
152 @result{} 123
153 @end group
154 @group
155 (eval (eval '123)) ; @r{Evaluating twice changes nothing.}
156 @result{} 123
157 @end group
158 @end example
159
160 It is common to write numbers, characters, strings, and even vectors
161 in Lisp code, taking advantage of the fact that they self-evaluate.
162 However, it is quite unusual to do this for types that lack a read
163 syntax, because there's no way to write them textually. It is possible
164 to construct Lisp expressions containing these types by means of a Lisp
165 program. Here is an example:
166
167 @example
168 @group
169 ;; @r{Build an expression containing a buffer object.}
170 (setq print-exp (list 'print (current-buffer)))
171 @result{} (print #<buffer eval.texi>)
172 @end group
173 @group
174 ;; @r{Evaluate it.}
175 (eval print-exp)
176 @print{} #<buffer eval.texi>
177 @result{} #<buffer eval.texi>
178 @end group
179 @end example
180
181 @node Symbol Forms
182 @subsection Symbol Forms
183 @cindex symbol evaluation
184
185 When a symbol is evaluated, it is treated as a variable. The result
186 is the variable's value, if it has one. If it has none (if its value
187 cell is void), an error is signaled. For more information on the use of
188 variables, see @ref{Variables}.
189
190 In the following example, we set the value of a symbol with
191 @code{setq}. Then we evaluate the symbol, and get back the value that
192 @code{setq} stored.
193
194 @example
195 @group
196 (setq a 123)
197 @result{} 123
198 @end group
199 @group
200 (eval 'a)
201 @result{} 123
202 @end group
203 @group
204 a
205 @result{} 123
206 @end group
207 @end example
208
209 The symbols @code{nil} and @code{t} are treated specially, so that the
210 value of @code{nil} is always @code{nil}, and the value of @code{t} is
211 always @code{t}; you cannot set or bind them to any other values. Thus,
212 these two symbols act like self-evaluating forms, even though
213 @code{eval} treats them like any other symbol. A symbol whose name
214 starts with @samp{:} also self-evaluates in the same way; likewise,
215 its value ordinarily cannot be changed. @xref{Constant Variables}.
216
217 @node Classifying Lists
218 @subsection Classification of List Forms
219 @cindex list form evaluation
220
221 A form that is a nonempty list is either a function call, a macro
222 call, or a special form, according to its first element. These three
223 kinds of forms are evaluated in different ways, described below. The
224 remaining list elements constitute the @dfn{arguments} for the function,
225 macro, or special form.
226
227 The first step in evaluating a nonempty list is to examine its first
228 element. This element alone determines what kind of form the list is
229 and how the rest of the list is to be processed. The first element is
230 @emph{not} evaluated, as it would be in some Lisp dialects such as
231 Scheme.
232
233 @node Function Indirection
234 @subsection Symbol Function Indirection
235 @cindex symbol function indirection
236 @cindex indirection for functions
237 @cindex void function
238
239 If the first element of the list is a symbol then evaluation examines
240 the symbol's function cell, and uses its contents instead of the
241 original symbol. If the contents are another symbol, this process,
242 called @dfn{symbol function indirection}, is repeated until it obtains a
243 non-symbol. @xref{Function Names}, for more information about using a
244 symbol as a name for a function stored in the function cell of the
245 symbol.
246
247 One possible consequence of this process is an infinite loop, in the
248 event that a symbol's function cell refers to the same symbol. Or a
249 symbol may have a void function cell, in which case the subroutine
250 @code{symbol-function} signals a @code{void-function} error. But if
251 neither of these things happens, we eventually obtain a non-symbol,
252 which ought to be a function or other suitable object.
253
254 @kindex invalid-function
255 More precisely, we should now have a Lisp function (a lambda
256 expression), a byte-code function, a primitive function, a Lisp macro, a
257 special form, or an autoload object. Each of these types is a case
258 described in one of the following sections. If the object is not one of
259 these types, the error @code{invalid-function} is signaled.
260
261 The following example illustrates the symbol indirection process. We
262 use @code{fset} to set the function cell of a symbol and
263 @code{symbol-function} to get the function cell contents
264 (@pxref{Function Cells}). Specifically, we store the symbol @code{car}
265 into the function cell of @code{first}, and the symbol @code{first} into
266 the function cell of @code{erste}.
267
268 @smallexample
269 @group
270 ;; @r{Build this function cell linkage:}
271 ;; ------------- ----- ------- -------
272 ;; | #<subr car> | <-- | car | <-- | first | <-- | erste |
273 ;; ------------- ----- ------- -------
274 @end group
275 @end smallexample
276
277 @smallexample
278 @group
279 (symbol-function 'car)
280 @result{} #<subr car>
281 @end group
282 @group
283 (fset 'first 'car)
284 @result{} car
285 @end group
286 @group
287 (fset 'erste 'first)
288 @result{} first
289 @end group
290 @group
291 (erste '(1 2 3)) ; @r{Call the function referenced by @code{erste}.}
292 @result{} 1
293 @end group
294 @end smallexample
295
296 By contrast, the following example calls a function without any symbol
297 function indirection, because the first element is an anonymous Lisp
298 function, not a symbol.
299
300 @smallexample
301 @group
302 ((lambda (arg) (erste arg))
303 '(1 2 3))
304 @result{} 1
305 @end group
306 @end smallexample
307
308 @noindent
309 Executing the function itself evaluates its body; this does involve
310 symbol function indirection when calling @code{erste}.
311
312 The built-in function @code{indirect-function} provides an easy way to
313 perform symbol function indirection explicitly.
314
315 @c Emacs 19 feature
316 @defun indirect-function function &optional noerror
317 @anchor{Definition of indirect-function}
318 This function returns the meaning of @var{function} as a function. If
319 @var{function} is a symbol, then it finds @var{function}'s function
320 definition and starts over with that value. If @var{function} is not a
321 symbol, then it returns @var{function} itself.
322
323 This function signals a @code{void-function} error if the final symbol
324 is unbound and optional argument @var{noerror} is @code{nil} or
325 omitted. Otherwise, if @var{noerror} is non-@code{nil}, it returns
326 @code{nil} if the final symbol is unbound.
327
328 It signals a @code{cyclic-function-indirection} error if there is a
329 loop in the chain of symbols.
330
331 Here is how you could define @code{indirect-function} in Lisp:
332
333 @smallexample
334 (defun indirect-function (function)
335 (if (symbolp function)
336 (indirect-function (symbol-function function))
337 function))
338 @end smallexample
339 @end defun
340
341 @node Function Forms
342 @subsection Evaluation of Function Forms
343 @cindex function form evaluation
344 @cindex function call
345
346 If the first element of a list being evaluated is a Lisp function
347 object, byte-code object or primitive function object, then that list is
348 a @dfn{function call}. For example, here is a call to the function
349 @code{+}:
350
351 @example
352 (+ 1 x)
353 @end example
354
355 The first step in evaluating a function call is to evaluate the
356 remaining elements of the list from left to right. The results are the
357 actual argument values, one value for each list element. The next step
358 is to call the function with this list of arguments, effectively using
359 the function @code{apply} (@pxref{Calling Functions}). If the function
360 is written in Lisp, the arguments are used to bind the argument
361 variables of the function (@pxref{Lambda Expressions}); then the forms
362 in the function body are evaluated in order, and the value of the last
363 body form becomes the value of the function call.
364
365 @node Macro Forms
366 @subsection Lisp Macro Evaluation
367 @cindex macro call evaluation
368
369 If the first element of a list being evaluated is a macro object, then
370 the list is a @dfn{macro call}. When a macro call is evaluated, the
371 elements of the rest of the list are @emph{not} initially evaluated.
372 Instead, these elements themselves are used as the arguments of the
373 macro. The macro definition computes a replacement form, called the
374 @dfn{expansion} of the macro, to be evaluated in place of the original
375 form. The expansion may be any sort of form: a self-evaluating
376 constant, a symbol, or a list. If the expansion is itself a macro call,
377 this process of expansion repeats until some other sort of form results.
378
379 Ordinary evaluation of a macro call finishes by evaluating the
380 expansion. However, the macro expansion is not necessarily evaluated
381 right away, or at all, because other programs also expand macro calls,
382 and they may or may not evaluate the expansions.
383
384 Normally, the argument expressions are not evaluated as part of
385 computing the macro expansion, but instead appear as part of the
386 expansion, so they are computed when the expansion is evaluated.
387
388 For example, given a macro defined as follows:
389
390 @example
391 @group
392 (defmacro cadr (x)
393 (list 'car (list 'cdr x)))
394 @end group
395 @end example
396
397 @noindent
398 an expression such as @code{(cadr (assq 'handler list))} is a macro
399 call, and its expansion is:
400
401 @example
402 (car (cdr (assq 'handler list)))
403 @end example
404
405 @noindent
406 Note that the argument @code{(assq 'handler list)} appears in the
407 expansion.
408
409 @xref{Macros}, for a complete description of Emacs Lisp macros.
410
411 @node Special Forms
412 @subsection Special Forms
413 @cindex special form evaluation
414
415 A @dfn{special form} is a primitive function specially marked so that
416 its arguments are not all evaluated. Most special forms define control
417 structures or perform variable bindings---things which functions cannot
418 do.
419
420 Each special form has its own rules for which arguments are evaluated
421 and which are used without evaluation. Whether a particular argument is
422 evaluated may depend on the results of evaluating other arguments.
423
424 Here is a list, in alphabetical order, of all of the special forms in
425 Emacs Lisp with a reference to where each is described.
426
427 @table @code
428 @item and
429 @pxref{Combining Conditions}
430
431 @item catch
432 @pxref{Catch and Throw}
433
434 @item cond
435 @pxref{Conditionals}
436
437 @item condition-case
438 @pxref{Handling Errors}
439
440 @item defconst
441 @pxref{Defining Variables}
442
443 @item defmacro
444 @pxref{Defining Macros}
445
446 @item defun
447 @pxref{Defining Functions}
448
449 @item defvar
450 @pxref{Defining Variables}
451
452 @item function
453 @pxref{Anonymous Functions}
454
455 @item if
456 @pxref{Conditionals}
457
458 @item interactive
459 @pxref{Interactive Call}
460
461 @item let
462 @itemx let*
463 @pxref{Local Variables}
464
465 @item or
466 @pxref{Combining Conditions}
467
468 @item prog1
469 @itemx prog2
470 @itemx progn
471 @pxref{Sequencing}
472
473 @item quote
474 @pxref{Quoting}
475
476 @item save-current-buffer
477 @pxref{Current Buffer}
478
479 @item save-excursion
480 @pxref{Excursions}
481
482 @item save-restriction
483 @pxref{Narrowing}
484
485 @item save-window-excursion
486 @pxref{Window Configurations}
487
488 @item setq
489 @pxref{Setting Variables}
490
491 @item setq-default
492 @pxref{Creating Buffer-Local}
493
494 @item track-mouse
495 @pxref{Mouse Tracking}
496
497 @item unwind-protect
498 @pxref{Nonlocal Exits}
499
500 @item while
501 @pxref{Iteration}
502
503 @item with-output-to-temp-buffer
504 @pxref{Temporary Displays}
505 @end table
506
507 @cindex CL note---special forms compared
508 @quotation
509 @b{Common Lisp note:} Here are some comparisons of special forms in
510 GNU Emacs Lisp and Common Lisp. @code{setq}, @code{if}, and
511 @code{catch} are special forms in both Emacs Lisp and Common Lisp.
512 @code{defun} is a special form in Emacs Lisp, but a macro in Common
513 Lisp. @code{save-excursion} is a special form in Emacs Lisp, but
514 doesn't exist in Common Lisp. @code{throw} is a special form in
515 Common Lisp (because it must be able to throw multiple values), but it
516 is a function in Emacs Lisp (which doesn't have multiple
517 values).@refill
518 @end quotation
519
520 @node Autoloading
521 @subsection Autoloading
522
523 The @dfn{autoload} feature allows you to call a function or macro
524 whose function definition has not yet been loaded into Emacs. It
525 specifies which file contains the definition. When an autoload object
526 appears as a symbol's function definition, calling that symbol as a
527 function automatically loads the specified file; then it calls the real
528 definition loaded from that file. @xref{Autoload}.
529
530 @node Quoting
531 @section Quoting
532
533 The special form @code{quote} returns its single argument, as written,
534 without evaluating it. This provides a way to include constant symbols
535 and lists, which are not self-evaluating objects, in a program. (It is
536 not necessary to quote self-evaluating objects such as numbers, strings,
537 and vectors.)
538
539 @defspec quote object
540 This special form returns @var{object}, without evaluating it.
541 @end defspec
542
543 @cindex @samp{'} for quoting
544 @cindex quoting using apostrophe
545 @cindex apostrophe for quoting
546 Because @code{quote} is used so often in programs, Lisp provides a
547 convenient read syntax for it. An apostrophe character (@samp{'})
548 followed by a Lisp object (in read syntax) expands to a list whose first
549 element is @code{quote}, and whose second element is the object. Thus,
550 the read syntax @code{'x} is an abbreviation for @code{(quote x)}.
551
552 Here are some examples of expressions that use @code{quote}:
553
554 @example
555 @group
556 (quote (+ 1 2))
557 @result{} (+ 1 2)
558 @end group
559 @group
560 (quote foo)
561 @result{} foo
562 @end group
563 @group
564 'foo
565 @result{} foo
566 @end group
567 @group
568 ''foo
569 @result{} (quote foo)
570 @end group
571 @group
572 '(quote foo)
573 @result{} (quote foo)
574 @end group
575 @group
576 ['foo]
577 @result{} [(quote foo)]
578 @end group
579 @end example
580
581 Other quoting constructs include @code{function} (@pxref{Anonymous
582 Functions}), which causes an anonymous lambda expression written in Lisp
583 to be compiled, and @samp{`} (@pxref{Backquote}), which is used to quote
584 only part of a list, while computing and substituting other parts.
585
586 @node Eval
587 @section Eval
588
589 Most often, forms are evaluated automatically, by virtue of their
590 occurrence in a program being run. On rare occasions, you may need to
591 write code that evaluates a form that is computed at run time, such as
592 after reading a form from text being edited or getting one from a
593 property list. On these occasions, use the @code{eval} function.
594
595 The functions and variables described in this section evaluate forms,
596 specify limits to the evaluation process, or record recently returned
597 values. Loading a file also does evaluation (@pxref{Loading}).
598
599 It is generally cleaner and more flexible to store a function in a
600 data structure, and call it with @code{funcall} or @code{apply}, than
601 to store an expression in the data structure and evaluate it. Using
602 functions provides the ability to pass information to them as
603 arguments.
604
605 @defun eval form
606 This is the basic function evaluating an expression. It evaluates
607 @var{form} in the current environment and returns the result. How the
608 evaluation proceeds depends on the type of the object (@pxref{Forms}).
609
610 Since @code{eval} is a function, the argument expression that appears
611 in a call to @code{eval} is evaluated twice: once as preparation before
612 @code{eval} is called, and again by the @code{eval} function itself.
613 Here is an example:
614
615 @example
616 @group
617 (setq foo 'bar)
618 @result{} bar
619 @end group
620 @group
621 (setq bar 'baz)
622 @result{} baz
623 ;; @r{Here @code{eval} receives argument @code{foo}}
624 (eval 'foo)
625 @result{} bar
626 ;; @r{Here @code{eval} receives argument @code{bar}, which is the value of @code{foo}}
627 (eval foo)
628 @result{} baz
629 @end group
630 @end example
631
632 The number of currently active calls to @code{eval} is limited to
633 @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} (see below).
634 @end defun
635
636 @deffn Command eval-region start end &optional stream read-function
637 @anchor{Definition of eval-region}
638 This function evaluates the forms in the current buffer in the region
639 defined by the positions @var{start} and @var{end}. It reads forms from
640 the region and calls @code{eval} on them until the end of the region is
641 reached, or until an error is signaled and not handled.
642
643 By default, @code{eval-region} does not produce any output. However,
644 if @var{stream} is non-@code{nil}, any output produced by output
645 functions (@pxref{Output Functions}), as well as the values that
646 result from evaluating the expressions in the region are printed using
647 @var{stream}. @xref{Output Streams}.
648
649 If @var{read-function} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function,
650 which is used instead of @code{read} to read expressions one by one.
651 This function is called with one argument, the stream for reading
652 input. You can also use the variable @code{load-read-function}
653 (@pxref{Definition of load-read-function,, How Programs Do Loading})
654 to specify this function, but it is more robust to use the
655 @var{read-function} argument.
656
657 @code{eval-region} does not move point. It always returns @code{nil}.
658 @end deffn
659
660 @cindex evaluation of buffer contents
661 @deffn Command eval-buffer &optional buffer-or-name stream filename unibyte print
662 This is similar to @code{eval-region}, but the arguments provide
663 different optional features. @code{eval-buffer} operates on the
664 entire accessible portion of buffer @var{buffer-or-name}.
665 @var{buffer-or-name} can be a buffer, a buffer name (a string), or
666 @code{nil} (or omitted), which means to use the current buffer.
667 @var{stream} is used as in @code{eval-region}, unless @var{stream} is
668 @code{nil} and @var{print} non-@code{nil}. In that case, values that
669 result from evaluating the expressions are still discarded, but the
670 output of the output functions is printed in the echo area.
671 @var{filename} is the file name to use for @code{load-history}
672 (@pxref{Unloading}), and defaults to @code{buffer-file-name}
673 (@pxref{Buffer File Name}). If @var{unibyte} is non-@code{nil},
674 @code{read} converts strings to unibyte whenever possible.
675
676 @findex eval-current-buffer
677 @code{eval-current-buffer} is an alias for this command.
678 @end deffn
679
680 @defvar max-lisp-eval-depth
681 @anchor{Definition of max-lisp-eval-depth}
682 This variable defines the maximum depth allowed in calls to @code{eval},
683 @code{apply}, and @code{funcall} before an error is signaled (with error
684 message @code{"Lisp nesting exceeds max-lisp-eval-depth"}).
685
686 This limit, with the associated error when it is exceeded, is one way
687 Emacs Lisp avoids infinite recursion on an ill-defined function. If
688 you increase the value of @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} too much, such
689 code can cause stack overflow instead.
690 @cindex Lisp nesting error
691
692 The depth limit counts internal uses of @code{eval}, @code{apply}, and
693 @code{funcall}, such as for calling the functions mentioned in Lisp
694 expressions, and recursive evaluation of function call arguments and
695 function body forms, as well as explicit calls in Lisp code.
696
697 The default value of this variable is 300. If you set it to a value
698 less than 100, Lisp will reset it to 100 if the given value is reached.
699 Entry to the Lisp debugger increases the value, if there is little room
700 left, to make sure the debugger itself has room to execute.
701
702 @code{max-specpdl-size} provides another limit on nesting.
703 @xref{Definition of max-specpdl-size,, Local Variables}.
704 @end defvar
705
706 @defvar values
707 The value of this variable is a list of the values returned by all the
708 expressions that were read, evaluated, and printed from buffers
709 (including the minibuffer) by the standard Emacs commands which do
710 this. (Note that this does @emph{not} include evaluation in
711 @samp{*ielm*} buffers, nor evaluation using @kbd{C-j} in
712 @code{lisp-interaction-mode}.) The elements are ordered most recent
713 first.
714
715 @example
716 @group
717 (setq x 1)
718 @result{} 1
719 @end group
720 @group
721 (list 'A (1+ 2) auto-save-default)
722 @result{} (A 3 t)
723 @end group
724 @group
725 values
726 @result{} ((A 3 t) 1 @dots{})
727 @end group
728 @end example
729
730 This variable is useful for referring back to values of forms recently
731 evaluated. It is generally a bad idea to print the value of
732 @code{values} itself, since this may be very long. Instead, examine
733 particular elements, like this:
734
735 @example
736 @group
737 ;; @r{Refer to the most recent evaluation result.}
738 (nth 0 values)
739 @result{} (A 3 t)
740 @end group
741 @group
742 ;; @r{That put a new element on,}
743 ;; @r{so all elements move back one.}
744 (nth 1 values)
745 @result{} (A 3 t)
746 @end group
747 @group
748 ;; @r{This gets the element that was next-to-most-recent}
749 ;; @r{before this example.}
750 (nth 3 values)
751 @result{} 1
752 @end group
753 @end example
754 @end defvar
755
756 @ignore
757 arch-tag: f723a4e0-31b3-453f-8afc-0bf8fd276d57
758 @end ignore