add #:resolve-syntax-parameters? kwarg to syntax-local-binding
[bpt/guile.git] / doc / ref / api-macros.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual.
8ae26afe 3@c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013
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4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5@c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
6
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7@node Macros
8@section Macros
9
10At its best, programming in Lisp is an iterative process of building up a
11language appropriate to the problem at hand, and then solving the problem in
12that language. Defining new procedures is part of that, but Lisp also allows
13the user to extend its syntax, with its famous @dfn{macros}.
14
15@cindex macros
16@cindex transformation
17Macros are syntactic extensions which cause the expression that they appear in
18to be transformed in some way @emph{before} being evaluated. In expressions that
19are intended for macro transformation, the identifier that names the relevant
20macro must appear as the first element, like this:
21
22@lisp
23(@var{macro-name} @var{macro-args} @dots{})
24@end lisp
25
26@cindex macro expansion
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27@cindex domain-specific language
28@cindex embedded domain-specific language
29@cindex DSL
30@cindex EDSL
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31Macro expansion is a separate phase of evaluation, run before code is
32interpreted or compiled. A macro is a program that runs on programs, translating
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33an embedded language into core Scheme@footnote{These days such embedded
34languages are often referred to as @dfn{embedded domain-specific
35languages}, or EDSLs.}.
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36
37@menu
38* Defining Macros:: Binding macros, globally and locally.
39* Syntax Rules:: Pattern-driven macros.
40* Syntax Case:: Procedural, hygienic macros.
9b0975f1 41* Syntax Transformer Helpers:: Helpers for use in procedural macros.
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42* Defmacros:: Lisp-style macros.
43* Identifier Macros:: Identifier macros.
9b0975f1 44* Syntax Parameters:: Syntax Parameters.
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45* Eval When:: Affecting the expand-time environment.
46* Internal Macros:: Macros as first-class values.
47@end menu
48
49@node Defining Macros
50@subsection Defining Macros
51
52A macro is a binding between a keyword and a syntax transformer. Since it's
53difficult to discuss @code{define-syntax} without discussing the format of
54transformers, consider the following example macro definition:
55
56@example
57(define-syntax when
58 (syntax-rules ()
59 ((when condition exp ...)
60 (if condition
61 (begin exp ...)))))
62
63(when #t
64 (display "hey ho\n")
65 (display "let's go\n"))
66@print{} hey ho
67@print{} let's go
68@end example
69
70In this example, the @code{when} binding is bound with @code{define-syntax}.
71Syntax transformers are discussed in more depth in @ref{Syntax Rules} and
72@ref{Syntax Case}.
73
74@deffn {Syntax} define-syntax keyword transformer
75Bind @var{keyword} to the syntax transformer obtained by evaluating
76@var{transformer}.
77
78After a macro has been defined, further instances of @var{keyword} in Scheme
79source code will invoke the syntax transformer defined by @var{transformer}.
80@end deffn
81
82One can also establish local syntactic bindings with @code{let-syntax}.
83
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84@deffn {Syntax} let-syntax ((keyword transformer) @dots{}) exp1 exp2 @dots{}
85Bind each @var{keyword} to its corresponding @var{transformer} while
86expanding @var{exp1} @var{exp2} @enddots{}.
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87
88A @code{let-syntax} binding only exists at expansion-time.
89
90@example
91(let-syntax ((unless
92 (syntax-rules ()
93 ((unless condition exp ...)
94 (if (not condition)
95 (begin exp ...))))))
96 (unless #t
97 (primitive-exit 1))
98 "rock rock rock")
99@result{} "rock rock rock"
100@end example
101@end deffn
102
103A @code{define-syntax} form is valid anywhere a definition may appear: at the
104top-level, or locally. Just as a local @code{define} expands out to an instance
105of @code{letrec}, a local @code{define-syntax} expands out to
106@code{letrec-syntax}.
107
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108@deffn {Syntax} letrec-syntax ((keyword transformer) @dots{}) exp1 exp2 @dots{}
109Bind each @var{keyword} to its corresponding @var{transformer} while
110expanding @var{exp1} @var{exp2} @enddots{}.
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111
112In the spirit of @code{letrec} versus @code{let}, an expansion produced by
113@var{transformer} may reference a @var{keyword} bound by the
114same @var{letrec-syntax}.
115
116@example
117(letrec-syntax ((my-or
118 (syntax-rules ()
119 ((my-or)
120 #t)
121 ((my-or exp)
122 exp)
123 ((my-or exp rest ...)
124 (let ((t exp))
125 (if exp
126 exp
127 (my-or rest ...)))))))
128 (my-or #f "rockaway beach"))
129@result{} "rockaway beach"
130@end example
131@end deffn
132
133@node Syntax Rules
134@subsection Syntax-rules Macros
135
136@code{syntax-rules} macros are simple, pattern-driven syntax transformers, with
137a beauty worthy of Scheme.
138
139@deffn {Syntax} syntax-rules literals (pattern template)...
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140Create a syntax transformer that will rewrite an expression using the rules
141embodied in the @var{pattern} and @var{template} clauses.
142@end deffn
143
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144A @code{syntax-rules} macro consists of three parts: the literals (if any), the
145patterns, and as many templates as there are patterns.
146
147When the syntax expander sees the invocation of a @code{syntax-rules} macro, it
148matches the expression against the patterns, in order, and rewrites the
149expression using the template from the first matching pattern. If no pattern
150matches, a syntax error is signalled.
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151
152@subsubsection Patterns
153
154We have already seen some examples of patterns in the previous section:
155@code{(unless condition exp ...)}, @code{(my-or exp)}, and so on. A pattern is
156structured like the expression that it is to match. It can have nested structure
157as well, like @code{(let ((var val) ...) exp exp* ...)}. Broadly speaking,
158patterns are made of lists, improper lists, vectors, identifiers, and datums.
159Users can match a sequence of patterns using the ellipsis (@code{...}).
160
161Identifiers in a pattern are called @dfn{literals} if they are present in the
162@code{syntax-rules} literals list, and @dfn{pattern variables} otherwise. When
163building up the macro output, the expander replaces instances of a pattern
164variable in the template with the matched subexpression.
165
166@example
167(define-syntax kwote
168 (syntax-rules ()
169 ((kwote exp)
170 (quote exp))))
171(kwote (foo . bar))
172@result{} (foo . bar)
173@end example
174
175An improper list of patterns matches as rest arguments do:
176
177@example
178(define-syntax let1
179 (syntax-rules ()
180 ((_ (var val) . exps)
181 (let ((var val)) . exps))))
182@end example
183
184However this definition of @code{let1} probably isn't what you want, as the tail
185pattern @var{exps} will match non-lists, like @code{(let1 (foo 'bar) . baz)}. So
186often instead of using improper lists as patterns, ellipsized patterns are
187better. Instances of a pattern variable in the template must be followed by an
188ellipsis.
189
190@example
191(define-syntax let1
192 (syntax-rules ()
193 ((_ (var val) exp ...)
194 (let ((var val)) exp ...))))
195@end example
196
197This @code{let1} probably still doesn't do what we want, because the body
198matches sequences of zero expressions, like @code{(let1 (foo 'bar))}. In this
199case we need to assert we have at least one body expression. A common idiom for
200this is to name the ellipsized pattern variable with an asterisk:
201
202@example
203(define-syntax let1
204 (syntax-rules ()
205 ((_ (var val) exp exp* ...)
206 (let ((var val)) exp exp* ...))))
207@end example
208
209A vector of patterns matches a vector whose contents match the patterns,
210including ellipsizing and tail patterns.
211
212@example
213(define-syntax letv
214 (syntax-rules ()
215 ((_ #((var val) ...) exp exp* ...)
216 (let ((var val) ...) exp exp* ...))))
217(letv #((foo 'bar)) foo)
218@result{} foo
219@end example
220
221Literals are used to match specific datums in an expression, like the use of
222@code{=>} and @code{else} in @code{cond} expressions.
223
224@example
225(define-syntax cond1
226 (syntax-rules (=> else)
227 ((cond1 test => fun)
228 (let ((exp test))
229 (if exp (fun exp) #f)))
230 ((cond1 test exp exp* ...)
231 (if test (begin exp exp* ...)))
232 ((cond1 else exp exp* ...)
233 (begin exp exp* ...))))
234
235(define (square x) (* x x))
236(cond1 10 => square)
237@result{} 100
238(let ((=> #t))
239 (cond1 10 => square))
240@result{} #<procedure square (x)>
241@end example
242
243A literal matches an input expression if the input expression is an identifier
244with the same name as the literal, and both are unbound@footnote{Language
245lawyers probably see the need here for use of @code{literal-identifier=?} rather
246than @code{free-identifier=?}, and would probably be correct. Patches
247accepted.}.
248
249If a pattern is not a list, vector, or an identifier, it matches as a literal,
250with @code{equal?}.
251
252@example
253(define-syntax define-matcher-macro
254 (syntax-rules ()
255 ((_ name lit)
256 (define-syntax name
257 (syntax-rules ()
258 ((_ lit) #t)
259 ((_ else) #f))))))
260
261(define-matcher-macro is-literal-foo? "foo")
262
263(is-literal-foo? "foo")
264@result{} #t
265(is-literal-foo? "bar")
266@result{} #f
267(let ((foo "foo"))
268 (is-literal-foo? foo))
269@result{} #f
270@end example
271
272The last example indicates that matching happens at expansion-time, not
273at run-time.
274
275Syntax-rules macros are always used as @code{(@var{macro} . @var{args})}, and
276the @var{macro} will always be a symbol. Correspondingly, a @code{syntax-rules}
277pattern must be a list (proper or improper), and the first pattern in that list
278must be an identifier. Incidentally it can be any identifier -- it doesn't have
279to actually be the name of the macro. Thus the following three are equivalent:
280
281@example
282(define-syntax when
283 (syntax-rules ()
284 ((when c e ...)
285 (if c (begin e ...)))))
286
287(define-syntax when
288 (syntax-rules ()
289 ((_ c e ...)
290 (if c (begin e ...)))))
291
292(define-syntax when
293 (syntax-rules ()
294 ((something-else-entirely c e ...)
295 (if c (begin e ...)))))
296@end example
297
298For clarity, use one of the first two variants. Also note that since the pattern
299variable will always match the macro itself (e.g., @code{cond1}), it is actually
300left unbound in the template.
301
302@subsubsection Hygiene
303
304@code{syntax-rules} macros have a magical property: they preserve referential
305transparency. When you read a macro definition, any free bindings in that macro
306are resolved relative to the macro definition; and when you read a macro
307instantiation, all free bindings in that expression are resolved relative to the
308expression.
309
310This property is sometimes known as @dfn{hygiene}, and it does aid in code
311cleanliness. In your macro definitions, you can feel free to introduce temporary
ecb87335 312variables, without worrying about inadvertently introducing bindings into the
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313macro expansion.
314
315Consider the definition of @code{my-or} from the previous section:
316
317@example
318(define-syntax my-or
319 (syntax-rules ()
320 ((my-or)
321 #t)
322 ((my-or exp)
323 exp)
324 ((my-or exp rest ...)
325 (let ((t exp))
326 (if exp
327 exp
328 (my-or rest ...))))))
329@end example
330
331A naive expansion of @code{(let ((t #t)) (my-or #f t))} would yield:
332
333@example
334(let ((t #t))
335 (let ((t #f))
336 (if t t t)))
337@result{} #f
338@end example
339
340@noindent
341Which clearly is not what we want. Somehow the @code{t} in the definition is
342distinct from the @code{t} at the site of use; and it is indeed this distinction
343that is maintained by the syntax expander, when expanding hygienic macros.
344
345This discussion is mostly relevant in the context of traditional Lisp macros
346(@pxref{Defmacros}), which do not preserve referential transparency. Hygiene
347adds to the expressive power of Scheme.
348
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349@subsubsection Shorthands
350
351One often ends up writing simple one-clause @code{syntax-rules} macros.
352There is a convenient shorthand for this idiom, in the form of
353@code{define-syntax-rule}.
354
355@deffn {Syntax} define-syntax-rule (keyword . pattern) [docstring] template
356Define @var{keyword} as a new @code{syntax-rules} macro with one clause.
357@end deffn
358
359Cast into this form, our @code{when} example is significantly shorter:
360
361@example
362(define-syntax-rule (when c e ...)
363 (if c (begin e ...)))
364@end example
365
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366@subsubsection Further Information
367
368For a formal definition of @code{syntax-rules} and its pattern language, see
369@xref{Macros, , Macros, r5rs, Revised(5) Report on the Algorithmic Language
370Scheme}.
371
372@code{syntax-rules} macros are simple and clean, but do they have limitations.
373They do not lend themselves to expressive error messages: patterns either match
374or they don't. Their ability to generate code is limited to template-driven
375expansion; often one needs to define a number of helper macros to get real work
376done. Sometimes one wants to introduce a binding into the lexical context of the
377generated code; this is impossible with @code{syntax-rules}. Relatedly, they
378cannot programmatically generate identifiers.
379
380The solution to all of these problems is to use @code{syntax-case} if you need
381its features. But if for some reason you're stuck with @code{syntax-rules}, you
382might enjoy Joe Marshall's
383@uref{http://sites.google.com/site/evalapply/eccentric.txt,@code{syntax-rules}
384Primer for the Merely Eccentric}.
385
386@node Syntax Case
387@subsection Support for the @code{syntax-case} System
388
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389@code{syntax-case} macros are procedural syntax transformers, with a power
390worthy of Scheme.
391
392@deffn {Syntax} syntax-case syntax literals (pattern [guard] exp)...
393Match the syntax object @var{syntax} against the given patterns, in order. If a
394@var{pattern} matches, return the result of evaluating the associated @var{exp}.
395@end deffn
396
397Compare the following definitions of @code{when}:
398
399@example
400(define-syntax when
401 (syntax-rules ()
402 ((_ test e e* ...)
403 (if test (begin e e* ...)))))
404
405(define-syntax when
406 (lambda (x)
407 (syntax-case x ()
408 ((_ test e e* ...)
409 #'(if test (begin e e* ...))))))
410@end example
411
412Clearly, the @code{syntax-case} definition is similar to its @code{syntax-rules}
413counterpart, and equally clearly there are some differences. The
414@code{syntax-case} definition is wrapped in a @code{lambda}, a function of one
415argument; that argument is passed to the @code{syntax-case} invocation; and the
416``return value'' of the macro has a @code{#'} prefix.
417
418All of these differences stem from the fact that @code{syntax-case} does not
419define a syntax transformer itself -- instead, @code{syntax-case} expressions
420provide a way to destructure a @dfn{syntax object}, and to rebuild syntax
421objects as output.
422
423So the @code{lambda} wrapper is simply a leaky implementation detail, that
424syntax transformers are just functions that transform syntax to syntax. This
425should not be surprising, given that we have already described macros as
426``programs that write programs''. @code{syntax-case} is simply a way to take
427apart and put together program text, and to be a valid syntax transformer it
428needs to be wrapped in a procedure.
429
430Unlike traditional Lisp macros (@pxref{Defmacros}), @code{syntax-case} macros
431transform syntax objects, not raw Scheme forms. Recall the naive expansion of
432@code{my-or} given in the previous section:
433
434@example
435(let ((t #t))
436 (my-or #f t))
437;; naive expansion:
438(let ((t #t))
439 (let ((t #f))
440 (if t t t)))
441@end example
442
443Raw Scheme forms simply don't have enough information to distinguish the first
444two @code{t} instances in @code{(if t t t)} from the third @code{t}. So instead
445of representing identifiers as symbols, the syntax expander represents
446identifiers as annotated syntax objects, attaching such information to those
447syntax objects as is needed to maintain referential transparency.
448
449@deffn {Syntax} syntax form
450Create a syntax object wrapping @var{form} within the current lexical context.
451@end deffn
452
453Syntax objects are typically created internally to the process of expansion, but
454it is possible to create them outside of syntax expansion:
455
456@example
457(syntax (foo bar baz))
458@result{} #<some representation of that syntax>
459@end example
460
461@noindent
462However it is more common, and useful, to create syntax objects when building
463output from a @code{syntax-case} expression.
464
465@example
466(define-syntax add1
467 (lambda (x)
468 (syntax-case x ()
469 ((_ exp)
470 (syntax (+ exp 1))))))
471@end example
472
473It is not strictly necessary for a @code{syntax-case} expression to return a
474syntax object, because @code{syntax-case} expressions can be used in helper
475functions, or otherwise used outside of syntax expansion itself. However a
7545ddd4 476syntax transformer procedure must return a syntax object, so most uses of
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477@code{syntax-case} do end up returning syntax objects.
478
479Here in this case, the form that built the return value was @code{(syntax (+ exp
4801))}. The interesting thing about this is that within a @code{syntax}
7545ddd4 481expression, any appearance of a pattern variable is substituted into the
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482resulting syntax object, carrying with it all relevant metadata from the source
483expression, such as lexical identity and source location.
484
485Indeed, a pattern variable may only be referenced from inside a @code{syntax}
486form. The syntax expander would raise an error when defining @code{add1} if it
487found @var{exp} referenced outside a @code{syntax} form.
488
489Since @code{syntax} appears frequently in macro-heavy code, it has a special
490reader macro: @code{#'}. @code{#'foo} is transformed by the reader into
ecb87335 491@code{(syntax foo)}, just as @code{'foo} is transformed into @code{(quote foo)}.
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492
493The pattern language used by @code{syntax-case} is conveniently the same
494language used by @code{syntax-rules}. Given this, Guile actually defines
495@code{syntax-rules} in terms of @code{syntax-case}:
496
497@example
498(define-syntax syntax-rules
499 (lambda (x)
500 (syntax-case x ()
501 ((_ (k ...) ((keyword . pattern) template) ...)
502 #'(lambda (x)
503 (syntax-case x (k ...)
504 ((dummy . pattern) #'template)
505 ...))))))
506@end example
507
508And that's that.
509
510@subsubsection Why @code{syntax-case}?
511
512The examples we have shown thus far could just as well have been expressed with
513@code{syntax-rules}, and have just shown that @code{syntax-case} is more
514verbose, which is true. But there is a difference: @code{syntax-case} creates
515@emph{procedural} macros, giving the full power of Scheme to the macro expander.
516This has many practical applications.
517
518A common desire is to be able to match a form only if it is an identifier. This
519is impossible with @code{syntax-rules}, given the datum matching forms. But with
520@code{syntax-case} it is easy:
521
522@deffn {Scheme Procedure} identifier? syntax-object
523Returns @code{#t} iff @var{syntax-object} is an identifier.
524@end deffn
525
526@example
7545ddd4 527;; relying on previous add1 definition
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528(define-syntax add1!
529 (lambda (x)
530 (syntax-case x ()
531 ((_ var) (identifier? #'var)
532 #'(set! var (add1 var))))))
533
534(define foo 0)
535(add1! foo)
536foo @result{} 1
537(add1! "not-an-identifier") @result{} error
538@end example
539
540With @code{syntax-rules}, the error for @code{(add1! "not-an-identifier")} would
541be something like ``invalid @code{set!}''. With @code{syntax-case}, it will say
542something like ``invalid @code{add1!}'', because we attach the @dfn{guard
543clause} to the pattern: @code{(identifier? #'var)}. This becomes more important
544with more complicated macros. It is necessary to use @code{identifier?}, because
545to the expander, an identifier is more than a bare symbol.
546
547Note that even in the guard clause, we reference the @var{var} pattern variable
548within a @code{syntax} form, via @code{#'var}.
549
550Another common desire is to introduce bindings into the lexical context of the
551output expression. One example would be in the so-called ``anaphoric macros'',
552like @code{aif}. Anaphoric macros bind some expression to a well-known
553identifier, often @code{it}, within their bodies. For example, in @code{(aif
554(foo) (bar it))}, @code{it} would be bound to the result of @code{(foo)}.
555
556To begin with, we should mention a solution that doesn't work:
557
558@example
559;; doesn't work
560(define-syntax aif
561 (lambda (x)
562 (syntax-case x ()
563 ((_ test then else)
564 #'(let ((it test))
565 (if it then else))))))
566@end example
567
568The reason that this doesn't work is that, by default, the expander will
569preserve referential transparency; the @var{then} and @var{else} expressions
570won't have access to the binding of @code{it}.
571
572But they can, if we explicitly introduce a binding via @code{datum->syntax}.
573
574@deffn {Scheme Procedure} datum->syntax for-syntax datum
575Create a syntax object that wraps @var{datum}, within the lexical context
576corresponding to the syntax object @var{for-syntax}.
577@end deffn
578
579For completeness, we should mention that it is possible to strip the metadata
580from a syntax object, returning a raw Scheme datum:
581
582@deffn {Scheme Procedure} syntax->datum syntax-object
583Strip the metadata from @var{syntax-object}, returning its contents as a raw
584Scheme datum.
585@end deffn
586
587In this case we want to introduce @code{it} in the context of the whole
588expression, so we can create a syntax object as @code{(datum->syntax x 'it)},
589where @code{x} is the whole expression, as passed to the transformer procedure.
590
591Here's another solution that doesn't work:
592
593@example
594;; doesn't work either
595(define-syntax aif
596 (lambda (x)
597 (syntax-case x ()
598 ((_ test then else)
599 (let ((it (datum->syntax x 'it)))
600 #'(let ((it test))
601 (if it then else)))))))
602@end example
603
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604The reason that this one doesn't work is that there are really two
605environments at work here -- the environment of pattern variables, as
606bound by @code{syntax-case}, and the environment of lexical variables,
607as bound by normal Scheme. The outer let form establishes a binding in
608the environment of lexical variables, but the inner let form is inside a
609syntax form, where only pattern variables will be substituted. Here we
610need to introduce a piece of the lexical environment into the pattern
611variable environment, and we can do so using @code{syntax-case} itself:
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612
613@example
614;; works, but is obtuse
615(define-syntax aif
616 (lambda (x)
617 (syntax-case x ()
618 ((_ test then else)
619 ;; invoking syntax-case on the generated
620 ;; syntax object to expose it to `syntax'
621 (syntax-case (datum->syntax x 'it) ()
622 (it
623 #'(let ((it test))
624 (if it then else))))))))
625
626(aif (getuid) (display it) (display "none")) (newline)
627@print{} 500
628@end example
629
630However there are easier ways to write this. @code{with-syntax} is often
631convenient:
632
633@deffn {Syntax} with-syntax ((pat val)...) exp...
634Bind patterns @var{pat} from their corresponding values @var{val}, within the
635lexical context of @var{exp...}.
636
637@example
638;; better
639(define-syntax aif
640 (lambda (x)
641 (syntax-case x ()
642 ((_ test then else)
643 (with-syntax ((it (datum->syntax x 'it)))
644 #'(let ((it test))
645 (if it then else)))))))
646@end example
647@end deffn
648
649As you might imagine, @code{with-syntax} is defined in terms of
650@code{syntax-case}. But even that might be off-putting to you if you are an old
651Lisp macro hacker, used to building macro output with @code{quasiquote}. The
652issue is that @code{with-syntax} creates a separation between the point of
653definition of a value and its point of substitution.
654
655@pindex quasisyntax
656@pindex unsyntax
657@pindex unsyntax-splicing
658So for cases in which a @code{quasiquote} style makes more sense,
659@code{syntax-case} also defines @code{quasisyntax}, and the related
660@code{unsyntax} and @code{unsyntax-splicing}, abbreviated by the reader as
661@code{#`}, @code{#,}, and @code{#,@@}, respectively.
662
663For example, to define a macro that inserts a compile-time timestamp into a
664source file, one may write:
665
666@example
667(define-syntax display-compile-timestamp
668 (lambda (x)
669 (syntax-case x ()
670 ((_)
671 #`(begin
672 (display "The compile timestamp was: ")
673 (display #,(current-time))
674 (newline))))))
675@end example
676
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677Readers interested in further information on @code{syntax-case} macros should
678see R. Kent Dybvig's excellent @cite{The Scheme Programming Language}, either
679edition 3 or 4, in the chapter on syntax. Dybvig was the primary author of the
680@code{syntax-case} system. The book itself is available online at
681@uref{http://scheme.com/tspl4/}.
682
683@node Syntax Transformer Helpers
684@subsection Syntax Transformer Helpers
685
686As noted in the previous section, Guile's syntax expander operates on
687syntax objects. Procedural macros consume and produce syntax objects.
688This section describes some of the auxiliary helpers that procedural
689macros can use to compare, generate, and query objects of this data
690type.
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691
692@deffn {Scheme Procedure} bound-identifier=? a b
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693Return @code{#t} iff the syntax objects @var{a} and @var{b} refer to the
694same lexically-bound identifier.
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695@end deffn
696
697@deffn {Scheme Procedure} free-identifier=? a b
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698Return @code{#t} iff the syntax objects @var{a} and @var{b} refer to the
699same free identifier.
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700@end deffn
701
702@deffn {Scheme Procedure} generate-temporaries ls
703Return a list of temporary identifiers as long as @var{ls} is long.
704@end deffn
705
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706@deffn {Scheme Procedure} syntax-source x
707Return the source properties that correspond to the syntax object
708@var{x}. @xref{Source Properties}, for more information.
709@end deffn
710
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711Guile also offers some more experimental interfaces in a separate
712module. As was the case with the Large Hadron Collider, it is unclear
713to our senior macrologists whether adding these interfaces will result
714in awesomeness or in the destruction of Guile via the creation of a
715singularity. We will preserve their functionality through the 2.0
716series, but we reserve the right to modify them in a future stable
717series, to a more than usual degree.
718
719@example
720(use-modules (system syntax))
721@end example
722
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723@deffn {Scheme Procedure} syntax-module id
724Return the name of the module whose source contains the identifier
725@var{id}.
726@end deffn
727
8ae26afe 728@deffn {Scheme Procedure} syntax-local-binding id [#:resolve-syntax-parameters?=#t]
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729Resolve the identifer @var{id}, a syntax object, within the current
730lexical environment, and return two values, the binding type and a
731binding value. The binding type is a symbol, which may be one of the
732following:
733
734@table @code
735@item lexical
736A lexically-bound variable. The value is a unique token (in the sense
737of @code{eq?}) identifying this binding.
738@item macro
739A syntax transformer, either local or global. The value is the
740transformer procedure.
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741@item syntax-parameter
742A syntax parameter (@pxref{Syntax Parameters}). By default,
743@code{syntax-local-binding} will resolve syntax parameters, so that this
744value will not be returned. Pass @code{#:resolve-syntax-parameters? #f}
745to indicate that you are interested in syntax parameters. The value is
746the default transformer procedure, as in @code{macro}.
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747@item pattern-variable
748A pattern variable, bound via syntax-case. The value is an opaque
749object, internal to the expander.
750@item displaced-lexical
751A lexical variable that has gone out of scope. This can happen if a
752badly-written procedural macro saves a syntax object, then attempts to
753introduce it in a context in which it is unbound. The value is
754@code{#f}.
755@item global
756A global binding. The value is a pair, whose head is the symbol, and
757whose tail is the name of the module in which to resolve the symbol.
758@item other
759Some other binding, like @code{lambda} or other core bindings. The
760value is @code{#f}.
761@end table
762
763This is a very low-level procedure, with limited uses. One case in
764which it is useful is to build abstractions that associate auxiliary
765information with macros:
766
767@example
768(define aux-property (make-object-property))
769(define-syntax-rule (with-aux aux value)
770 (let ((trans value))
771 (set! (aux-property trans) aux)
3d51e57c 772 trans))
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773(define-syntax retrieve-aux
774 (lambda (x)
775 (syntax-case x ()
776 ((x id)
777 (call-with-values (lambda () (syntax-local-binding #'id))
778 (lambda (type val)
779 (with-syntax ((aux (datum->syntax #'here
780 (and (eq? type 'macro)
781 (aux-property val)))))
782 #''aux)))))))
783(define-syntax foo
784 (with-aux 'bar
785 (syntax-rules () ((_) 'foo))))
786(foo)
787@result{} foo
788(retrieve-aux foo)
789@result{} bar
790@end example
791
792@code{syntax-local-binding} must be called within the dynamic extent of
793a syntax transformer; to call it otherwise will signal an error.
794@end deffn
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796@deffn {Scheme Procedure} syntax-locally-bound-identifiers id
797Return a list of identifiers that were visible lexically when the
798identifier @var{id} was created, in order from outermost to innermost.
799
800This procedure is intended to be used in specialized procedural macros,
801to provide a macro with the set of bound identifiers that the macro can
802reference.
803
804As a technical implementation detail, the identifiers returned by
805@code{syntax-locally-bound-identifiers} will be anti-marked, like the
806syntax object that is given as input to a macro. This is to signal to
807the macro expander that these bindings were present in the original
808source, and do not need to be hygienically renamed, as would be the case
809with other introduced identifiers. See the discussion of hygiene in
810section 12.1 of the R6RS, for more information on marks.
811
812@example
813(define (local-lexicals id)
814 (filter (lambda (x)
815 (eq? (syntax-local-binding x) 'lexical))
816 (syntax-locally-bound-identifiers id)))
817(define-syntax lexicals
818 (lambda (x)
819 (syntax-case x ()
820 ((lexicals) #'(lexicals lexicals))
821 ((lexicals scope)
822 (with-syntax (((id ...) (local-lexicals #'scope)))
823 #'(list (cons 'id id) ...))))))
824
825(let* ((x 10) (x 20)) (lexicals))
826@result{} ((x . 10) (x . 20))
827@end example
828@end deffn
829
830
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831@node Defmacros
832@subsection Lisp-style Macro Definitions
833
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834The traditional way to define macros in Lisp is very similar to procedure
835definitions. The key differences are that the macro definition body should
836return a list that describes the transformed expression, and that the definition
837is marked as a macro definition (rather than a procedure definition) by the use
838of a different definition keyword: in Lisp, @code{defmacro} rather than
839@code{defun}, and in Scheme, @code{define-macro} rather than @code{define}.
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840
841@fnindex defmacro
842@fnindex define-macro
843Guile supports this style of macro definition using both @code{defmacro}
844and @code{define-macro}. The only difference between them is how the
845macro name and arguments are grouped together in the definition:
846
847@lisp
848(defmacro @var{name} (@var{args} @dots{}) @var{body} @dots{})
849@end lisp
850
851@noindent
852is the same as
853
854@lisp
855(define-macro (@var{name} @var{args} @dots{}) @var{body} @dots{})
856@end lisp
857
858@noindent
859The difference is analogous to the corresponding difference between
860Lisp's @code{defun} and Scheme's @code{define}.
861
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862Having read the previous section on @code{syntax-case}, it's probably clear that
863Guile actually implements defmacros in terms of @code{syntax-case}, applying the
864transformer on the expression between invocations of @code{syntax->datum} and
865@code{datum->syntax}. This realization leads us to the problem with defmacros,
866that they do not preserve referential transparency. One can be careful to not
867introduce bindings into expanded code, via liberal use of @code{gensym}, but
868there is no getting around the lack of referential transparency for free
869bindings in the macro itself.
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1fc8dcc7 871Even a macro as simple as our @code{when} from before is difficult to get right:
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873@example
874(define-macro (when cond exp . rest)
875 `(if ,cond
876 (begin ,exp . ,rest)))
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878(when #f (display "Launching missiles!\n"))
879@result{} #f
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881(let ((if list))
882 (when #f (display "Launching missiles!\n")))
883@print{} Launching missiles!
884@result{} (#f #<unspecified>)
885@end example
886
887Guile's perspective is that defmacros have had a good run, but that modern
888macros should be written with @code{syntax-rules} or @code{syntax-case}. There
889are still many uses of defmacros within Guile itself, but we will be phasing
890them out over time. Of course we won't take away @code{defmacro} or
891@code{define-macro} themselves, as there is lots of code out there that uses
892them.
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893
894
895@node Identifier Macros
896@subsection Identifier Macros
897
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898When the syntax expander sees a form in which the first element is a macro, the
899whole form gets passed to the macro's syntax transformer. One may visualize this
900as:
901
902@example
903(define-syntax foo foo-transformer)
904(foo @var{arg}...)
905;; expands via
906(foo-transformer #'(foo @var{arg}...))
907@end example
908
909If, on the other hand, a macro is referenced in some other part of a form, the
910syntax transformer is invoked with only the macro reference, not the whole form.
911
912@example
913(define-syntax foo foo-transformer)
914foo
915;; expands via
916(foo-transformer #'foo)
917@end example
918
919This allows bare identifier references to be replaced programmatically via a
920macro. @code{syntax-rules} provides some syntax to effect this transformation
921more easily.
922
923@deffn {Syntax} identifier-syntax exp
ecb87335 924Returns a macro transformer that will replace occurrences of the macro with
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925@var{exp}.
926@end deffn
927
928For example, if you are importing external code written in terms of @code{fx+},
929the fixnum addition operator, but Guile doesn't have @code{fx+}, you may use the
930following to replace @code{fx+} with @code{+}:
931
932@example
933(define-syntax fx+ (identifier-syntax +))
934@end example
935
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936There is also special support for recognizing identifiers on the
937left-hand side of a @code{set!} expression, as in the following:
938
939@example
940(define-syntax foo foo-transformer)
941(set! foo @var{val})
942;; expands via
943(foo-transformer #'(set! foo @var{val}))
944;; iff foo-transformer is a "variable transformer"
945@end example
946
947As the example notes, the transformer procedure must be explicitly
948marked as being a ``variable transformer'', as most macros aren't
7545ddd4 949written to discriminate on the form in the operator position.
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950
951@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-variable-transformer transformer
952Mark the @var{transformer} procedure as being a ``variable
953transformer''. In practice this means that, when bound to a syntactic
954keyword, it may detect references to that keyword on the left-hand-side
955of a @code{set!}.
956
957@example
958(define bar 10)
959(define-syntax bar-alias
960 (make-variable-transformer
961 (lambda (x)
962 (syntax-case x (set!)
963 ((set! var val) #'(set! bar val))
964 ((var arg ...) #'(bar arg ...))
965 (var (identifier? #'var) #'bar)))))
966
967bar-alias @result{} 10
968(set! bar-alias 20)
969bar @result{} 20
970(set! bar 30)
971bar-alias @result{} 30
972@end example
973@end deffn
974
ecb87335 975There is an extension to identifier-syntax which allows it to handle the
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976@code{set!} case as well:
977
978@deffn {Syntax} identifier-syntax (var exp1) ((set! var val) exp2)
979Create a variable transformer. The first clause is used for references
980to the variable in operator or operand position, and the second for
981appearances of the variable on the left-hand-side of an assignment.
982
983For example, the previous @code{bar-alias} example could be expressed
984more succinctly like this:
985
986@example
987(define-syntax bar-alias
988 (identifier-syntax
989 (var bar)
990 ((set! var val) (set! bar val))))
991@end example
992
993@noindent
994As before, the templates in @code{identifier-syntax} forms do not need
995wrapping in @code{#'} syntax forms.
996@end deffn
997
6ffd4131 998
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999@node Syntax Parameters
1000@subsection Syntax Parameters
1001
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1002Syntax parameters@footnote{Described in the paper @cite{Keeping it Clean
1003with Syntax Parameters} by Barzilay, Culpepper and Flatt.} are a
1004mechanism for rebinding a macro definition within the dynamic extent of
1005a macro expansion. This provides a convenient solution to one of the
1006most common types of unhygienic macro: those that introduce a unhygienic
1007binding each time the macro is used. Examples include a @code{lambda}
1008form with a @code{return} keyword, or class macros that introduce a
1009special @code{self} binding.
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1010
1011With syntax parameters, instead of introducing the binding
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1012unhygienically each time, we instead create one binding for the keyword,
1013which we can then adjust later when we want the keyword to have a
1014different meaning. As no new bindings are introduced, hygiene is
1015preserved. This is similar to the dynamic binding mechanisms we have at
1016run-time (@pxref{SRFI-39, parameters}), except that the dynamic binding
1017only occurs during macro expansion. The code after macro expansion
1018remains lexically scoped.
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1019
1020@deffn {Syntax} define-syntax-parameter keyword transformer
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1021Binds @var{keyword} to the value obtained by evaluating
1022@var{transformer}. The @var{transformer} provides the default expansion
1023for the syntax parameter, and in the absence of
1024@code{syntax-parameterize}, is functionally equivalent to
1025@code{define-syntax}. Usually, you will just want to have the
1026@var{transformer} throw a syntax error indicating that the @var{keyword}
1027is supposed to be used in conjunction with another macro, for example:
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1028@example
1029(define-syntax-parameter return
1030 (lambda (stx)
1031 (syntax-violation 'return "return used outside of a lambda^" stx)))
1032@end example
1033@end deffn
1034
1035@deffn {Syntax} syntax-parameterize ((keyword transformer) @dots{}) exp @dots{}
1036Adjusts @var{keyword} @dots{} to use the values obtained by evaluating
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1037their @var{transformer} @dots{}, in the expansion of the @var{exp}
1038@dots{} forms. Each @var{keyword} must be bound to a syntax-parameter.
1039@code{syntax-parameterize} differs from @code{let-syntax}, in that the
1040binding is not shadowed, but adjusted, and so uses of the keyword in the
1041expansion of @var{exp} @dots{} use the new transformers. This is
1042somewhat similar to how @code{parameterize} adjusts the values of
1043regular parameters, rather than creating new bindings.
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1044
1045@example
1046(define-syntax lambda^
1047 (syntax-rules ()
866ecf54 1048 [(lambda^ argument-list body body* ...)
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1049 (lambda argument-list
1050 (call-with-current-continuation
1051 (lambda (escape)
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1052 ;; In the body we adjust the 'return' keyword so that calls
1053 ;; to 'return' are replaced with calls to the escape
1054 ;; continuation.
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1055 (syntax-parameterize ([return (syntax-rules ()
1056 [(return vals (... ...))
1057 (escape vals (... ...))])])
866ecf54 1058 body body* ...))))]))
729b62bd 1059
866ecf54 1060;; Now we can write functions that return early. Here, 'product' will
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1061;; return immediately if it sees any 0 element.
1062(define product
1063 (lambda^ (list)
1064 (fold (lambda (n o)
1065 (if (zero? n)
1066 (return 0)
1067 (* n o)))
1068 1
1069 list)))
1070@end example
1071@end deffn
1072
1073
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1074@node Eval When
1075@subsection Eval-when
1076
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1077As @code{syntax-case} macros have the whole power of Scheme available to them,
1078they present a problem regarding time: when a macro runs, what parts of the
1079program are available for the macro to use?
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1081The default answer to this question is that when you import a module (via
1082@code{define-module} or @code{use-modules}), that module will be loaded up at
1083expansion-time, as well as at run-time. Additionally, top-level syntactic
1084definitions within one compilation unit made by @code{define-syntax} are also
1085evaluated at expansion time, in the order that they appear in the compilation
1086unit (file).
1087
1088But if a syntactic definition needs to call out to a normal procedure at
1089expansion-time, it might well need need special declarations to indicate that
1090the procedure should be made available at expansion-time.
1091
1092For example, the following code will work at a REPL, but not in a file:
1093
1094@example
1095;; incorrect
1096(use-modules (srfi srfi-19))
1097(define (date) (date->string (current-date)))
1098(define-syntax %date (identifier-syntax (date)))
1099(define *compilation-date* %date)
1100@end example
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1102It works at a REPL because the expressions are evaluated one-by-one, in order,
1103but if placed in a file, the expressions are expanded one-by-one, but not
1104evaluated until the compiled file is loaded.
1105
1106The fix is to use @code{eval-when}.
1107
1108@example
1109;; correct: using eval-when
1110(use-modules (srfi srfi-19))
1111(eval-when (compile load eval)
1112 (define (date) (date->string (current-date))))
1113(define-syntax %date (identifier-syntax (date)))
1114(define *compilation-date* %date)
1115@end example
1116
1117@deffn {Syntax} eval-when conditions exp...
1118Evaluate @var{exp...} under the given @var{conditions}. Valid conditions include
1119@code{eval}, @code{load}, and @code{compile}. If you need to use
1120@code{eval-when}, use it with all three conditions, as in the above example.
1121Other uses of @code{eval-when} may void your warranty or poison your cat.
1122@end deffn
1123
1124@node Internal Macros
1125@subsection Internal Macros
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1126
1127@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-syntax-transformer name type binding
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1128Construct a syntax transformer object. This is part of Guile's low-level support
1129for syntax-case.
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1130@end deffn
1131
1132@deffn {Scheme Procedure} macro? obj
1133@deffnx {C Function} scm_macro_p (obj)
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1134Return @code{#t} iff @var{obj} is a syntax transformer.
1135
1136Note that it's a bit difficult to actually get a macro as a first-class object;
1137simply naming it (like @code{case}) will produce a syntax error. But it is
1138possible to get these objects using @code{module-ref}:
1139
1140@example
1141(macro? (module-ref (current-module) 'case))
1142@result{} #t
1143@end example
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1144@end deffn
1145
1146@deffn {Scheme Procedure} macro-type m
1147@deffnx {C Function} scm_macro_type (m)
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1148Return the @var{type} that was given when @var{m} was constructed, via
1149@code{make-syntax-transformer}.
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1150@end deffn
1151
1152@deffn {Scheme Procedure} macro-name m
1153@deffnx {C Function} scm_macro_name (m)
1154Return the name of the macro @var{m}.
1155@end deffn
1156
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1157@deffn {Scheme Procedure} macro-binding m
1158@deffnx {C Function} scm_macro_binding (m)
1159Return the binding of the macro @var{m}.
1160@end deffn
1161
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1162@deffn {Scheme Procedure} macro-transformer m
1163@deffnx {C Function} scm_macro_transformer (m)
1164Return the transformer of the macro @var{m}. This will return a procedure, for
1165which one may ask the docstring. That's the whole reason this section is
1166documented. Actually a part of the result of @code{macro-binding}.
1167@end deffn
1168
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1169
1170@c Local Variables:
1171@c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
1172@c End: