Add missing implicit `SCM_API' for `scm_c_make_objcode_slice'.
[bpt/guile.git] / doc / ref / api-evaluation.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual.
c869f0c1 3@c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011
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4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5@c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
6
00ce5125 7@node Read/Load/Eval/Compile
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8@section Reading and Evaluating Scheme Code
9
10This chapter describes Guile functions that are concerned with reading,
00ce5125 11loading, evaluating, and compiling Scheme code at run time.
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12
13@menu
14* Scheme Syntax:: Standard and extended Scheme syntax.
15* Scheme Read:: Reading Scheme code.
1518f649 16* Scheme Write:: Writing Scheme values to a port.
07d83abe 17* Fly Evaluation:: Procedures for on the fly evaluation.
00ce5125 18* Compilation:: How to compile Scheme files and procedures.
07d83abe 19* Loading:: Loading Scheme code from file.
8748ffea 20* Character Encoding of Source Files:: Loading non-ASCII Scheme code from file.
07d83abe 21* Delayed Evaluation:: Postponing evaluation until it is needed.
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22@end menu
23
24
25@node Scheme Syntax
26@subsection Scheme Syntax: Standard and Guile Extensions
27
28@menu
29* Expression Syntax::
30* Comments::
31* Block Comments::
32* Case Sensitivity::
33* Keyword Syntax::
34* Reader Extensions::
35@end menu
36
37
38@node Expression Syntax
39@subsubsection Expression Syntax
40
41An expression to be evaluated takes one of the following forms.
42
43@table @nicode
44
45@item @var{symbol}
46A symbol is evaluated by dereferencing. A binding of that symbol is
47sought and the value there used. For example,
48
49@example
50(define x 123)
51x @result{} 123
52@end example
53
54@item (@var{proc} @var{args}@dots{})
55A parenthesised expression is a function call. @var{proc} and each
56argument are evaluated, then the function (which @var{proc} evaluated
57to) is called with those arguments.
58
59The order in which @var{proc} and the arguments are evaluated is
60unspecified, so be careful when using expressions with side effects.
61
62@example
63(max 1 2 3) @result{} 3
64
65(define (get-some-proc) min)
66((get-some-proc) 1 2 3) @result{} 1
67@end example
68
69The same sort of parenthesised form is used for a macro invocation,
70but in that case the arguments are not evaluated. See the
71descriptions of macros for more on this (@pxref{Macros}, and
72@pxref{Syntax Rules}).
73
74@item @var{constant}
75Number, string, character and boolean constants evaluate ``to
76themselves'', so can appear as literals.
77
78@example
79123 @result{} 123
8099.9 @result{} 99.9
81"hello" @result{} "hello"
82#\z @result{} #\z
83#t @result{} #t
84@end example
85
86Note that an application must not attempt to modify literal strings,
87since they may be in read-only memory.
88
89@item (quote @var{data})
90@itemx '@var{data}
91@findex quote
92@findex '
93Quoting is used to obtain a literal symbol (instead of a variable
94reference), a literal list (instead of a function call), or a literal
95vector. @nicode{'} is simply a shorthand for a @code{quote} form.
96For example,
97
98@example
99'x @result{} x
100'(1 2 3) @result{} (1 2 3)
101'#(1 (2 3) 4) @result{} #(1 (2 3) 4)
102(quote x) @result{} x
103(quote (1 2 3)) @result{} (1 2 3)
104(quote #(1 (2 3) 4)) @result{} #(1 (2 3) 4)
105@end example
106
107Note that an application must not attempt to modify literal lists or
108vectors obtained from a @code{quote} form, since they may be in
109read-only memory.
110
111@item (quasiquote @var{data})
112@itemx `@var{data}
113@findex quasiquote
114@findex `
115Backquote quasi-quotation is like @code{quote}, but selected
116sub-expressions are evaluated. This is a convenient way to construct
117a list or vector structure most of which is constant, but at certain
118points should have expressions substituted.
119
120The same effect can always be had with suitable @code{list},
121@code{cons} or @code{vector} calls, but quasi-quoting is often easier.
122
123@table @nicode
124
125@item (unquote @var{expr})
126@itemx ,@var{expr}
127@findex unquote
128@findex ,
129Within the quasiquote @var{data}, @code{unquote} or @code{,} indicates
130an expression to be evaluated and inserted. The comma syntax @code{,}
131is simply a shorthand for an @code{unquote} form. For example,
132
133@example
134`(1 2 ,(* 9 9) 3 4) @result{} (1 2 81 3 4)
135`(1 (unquote (+ 1 1)) 3) @result{} (1 2 3)
136`#(1 ,(/ 12 2)) @result{} #(1 6)
137@end example
138
139@item (unquote-splicing @var{expr})
140@itemx ,@@@var{expr}
141@findex unquote-splicing
142@findex ,@@
143Within the quasiquote @var{data}, @code{unquote-splicing} or
144@code{,@@} indicates an expression to be evaluated and the elements of
145the returned list inserted. @var{expr} must evaluate to a list. The
146``comma-at'' syntax @code{,@@} is simply a shorthand for an
147@code{unquote-splicing} form.
148
149@example
150(define x '(2 3))
151`(1 ,@@x 4) @result{} (1 2 3 4)
152`(1 (unquote-splicing (map 1+ x))) @result{} (1 3 4)
153`#(9 ,@@x 9) @result{} #(9 2 3 9)
154@end example
155
156Notice @code{,@@} differs from plain @code{,} in the way one level of
157nesting is stripped. For @code{,@@} the elements of a returned list
158are inserted, whereas with @code{,} it would be the list itself
159inserted.
160@end table
161
162@c
163@c FIXME: What can we say about the mutability of a quasiquote
164@c result? R5RS doesn't seem to specify anything, though where it
165@c says backquote without commas is the same as plain quote then
166@c presumably the "fixed" portions of a quasiquote expression must be
167@c treated as immutable.
168@c
169
170@end table
171
172
173@node Comments
174@subsubsection Comments
175
176@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
177
178Comments in Scheme source files are written by starting them with a
179semicolon character (@code{;}). The comment then reaches up to the end
180of the line. Comments can begin at any column, and the may be inserted
181on the same line as Scheme code.
182
183@lisp
184; Comment
185;; Comment too
186(define x 1) ; Comment after expression
187(let ((y 1))
188 ;; Display something.
189 (display y)
190;;; Comment at left margin.
191 (display (+ y 1)))
192@end lisp
193
194It is common to use a single semicolon for comments following
195expressions on a line, to use two semicolons for comments which are
196indented like code, and three semicolons for comments which start at
197column 0, even if they are inside an indented code block. This
198convention is used when indenting code in Emacs' Scheme mode.
199
200
201@node Block Comments
202@subsubsection Block Comments
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203@cindex multiline comments
204@cindex block comments
205@cindex #!
206@cindex !#
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207
208@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
209
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210In addition to the standard line comments defined by R5RS, Guile has
211another comment type for multiline comments, called @dfn{block
212comments}. This type of comment begins with the character sequence
213@code{#!} and ends with the characters @code{!#}, which must appear on a
214line of their own. These comments are compatible with the block
215comments in the Scheme Shell @file{scsh} (@pxref{The Scheme shell
216(scsh)}). The characters @code{#!} were chosen because they are the
217magic characters used in shell scripts for indicating that the name of
218the program for executing the script follows on the same line.
219
220Thus a Guile script often starts like this.
221
222@lisp
223#! /usr/local/bin/guile -s
224!#
225@end lisp
226
227More details on Guile scripting can be found in the scripting section
228(@pxref{Guile Scripting}).
229
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230@cindex R6RS block comments
231@cindex SRFI-30 block comments
232Similarly, Guile (starting from version 2.0) supports nested block
233comments as specified by R6RS and
234@url{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-30/srfi-30.html, SRFI-30}:
235
236@lisp
237(+ #| this is a #| nested |# block comment |# 2)
238@result{} 3
239@end lisp
240
241For backward compatibility, this syntax can be overridden with
242@code{read-hash-extend} (@pxref{Reader Extensions,
243@code{read-hash-extend}}).
244
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245There is one special case where the contents of a comment can actually
246affect the interpretation of code. When a character encoding
247declaration, such as @code{coding: utf-8} appears in one of the first
248few lines of a source file, it indicates to Guile's default reader
249that this source code file is not ASCII. For details see @ref{Character
250Encoding of Source Files}.
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251
252@node Case Sensitivity
253@subsubsection Case Sensitivity
254
255@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
256
257Scheme as defined in R5RS is not case sensitive when reading symbols.
258Guile, on the contrary is case sensitive by default, so the identifiers
259
260@lisp
261guile-whuzzy
262Guile-Whuzzy
263@end lisp
264
265are the same in R5RS Scheme, but are different in Guile.
266
267It is possible to turn off case sensitivity in Guile by setting the
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268reader option @code{case-insensitive}. For more information on reader
269options, @xref{Scheme Read}.
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270
271@lisp
272(read-enable 'case-insensitive)
273@end lisp
274
275Note that this is seldom a problem, because Scheme programmers tend not
276to use uppercase letters in their identifiers anyway.
277
278
279@node Keyword Syntax
280@subsubsection Keyword Syntax
281
282
283@node Reader Extensions
284@subsubsection Reader Extensions
285
286@deffn {Scheme Procedure} read-hash-extend chr proc
287@deffnx {C Function} scm_read_hash_extend (chr, proc)
288Install the procedure @var{proc} for reading expressions
289starting with the character sequence @code{#} and @var{chr}.
290@var{proc} will be called with two arguments: the character
291@var{chr} and the port to read further data from. The object
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292returned will be the return value of @code{read}.
293Passing @code{#f} for @var{proc} will remove a previous setting.
294
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295@end deffn
296
297
298@node Scheme Read
299@subsection Reading Scheme Code
300
301@rnindex read
302@deffn {Scheme Procedure} read [port]
303@deffnx {C Function} scm_read (port)
304Read an s-expression from the input port @var{port}, or from
305the current input port if @var{port} is not specified.
306Any whitespace before the next token is discarded.
307@end deffn
308
309The behaviour of Guile's Scheme reader can be modified by manipulating
1518f649 310its read options.
07d83abe 311
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312@cindex options - read
313@cindex read options
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314@deffn {Scheme Procedure} read-options [setting]
315Display the current settings of the read options. If @var{setting} is
316omitted, only a short form of the current read options is printed.
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317Otherwise if @var{setting} is the symbol @code{help}, a complete options
318description is displayed.
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319@end deffn
320
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321The set of available options, and their default values, may be had by
322invoking @code{read-options} at the prompt.
323
324@smalllisp
325scheme@@(guile-user)> (read-options)
326(square-brackets keywords #f positions)
327scheme@@(guile-user)> (read-options 'help)
328copy no Copy source code expressions.
329positions yes Record positions of source code expressions.
330case-insensitive no Convert symbols to lower case.
331keywords #f Style of keyword recognition: #f, 'prefix or 'postfix.
332r6rs-hex-escapes no Use R6RS variable-length character and string hex escapes.
333square-brackets yes Treat `[' and `]' as parentheses, for R6RS compatibility.
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334hungry-eol-escapes no In strings, consume leading whitespace after an
335 escaped end-of-line.
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336@end smalllisp
337
338The boolean options may be toggled with @code{read-enable} and
339@code{read-disable}. The non-boolean @code{keywords} option must be set
340using @code{read-set!}.
341
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342@deffn {Scheme Procedure} read-enable option-name
343@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} read-disable option-name
1233b383 344@deffnx {Scheme Syntax} read-set! option-name value
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345Modify the read options. @code{read-enable} should be used with boolean
346options and switches them on, @code{read-disable} switches them off.
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347
348@code{read-set!} can be used to set an option to a specific value. Due
349to historical oddities, it is a macro that expects an unquoted option
350name.
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351@end deffn
352
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353For example, to make @code{read} fold all symbols to their lower case
354(perhaps for compatibility with older Scheme code), you can enter:
355
356@lisp
357(read-enable 'case-insensitive)
358@end lisp
359
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360For more information on the effect of the @code{r6rs-hex-escapes} and
361@code{hungry-eol-escapes} options, see (@pxref{String Syntax}).
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362
363
364@node Scheme Write
365@subsection Writing Scheme Values
366
367Any scheme value may be written to a port. Not all values may be read
368back in (@pxref{Scheme Read}), however.
369
370@rnindex write
371@rnindex print
372@deffn {Scheme Procedure} write obj [port]
373Send a representation of @var{obj} to @var{port} or to the current
374output port if not given.
375
376The output is designed to be machine readable, and can be read back
377with @code{read} (@pxref{Scheme Read}). Strings are printed in
378double quotes, with escapes if necessary, and characters are printed in
379@samp{#\} notation.
380@end deffn
381
382@rnindex display
383@deffn {Scheme Procedure} display obj [port]
384Send a representation of @var{obj} to @var{port} or to the current
385output port if not given.
386
387The output is designed for human readability, it differs from
388@code{write} in that strings are printed without double quotes and
389escapes, and characters are printed as per @code{write-char}, not in
390@samp{#\} form.
391@end deffn
392
393As was the case with the Scheme reader, there are a few options that
394affect the behavior of the Scheme printer.
395
396@cindex options - print
397@cindex print options
398@deffn {Scheme Procedure} print-options [setting]
399Display the current settings of the read options. If @var{setting} is
400omitted, only a short form of the current read options is
401printed. Otherwise if @var{setting} is the symbol @code{help}, a
402complete options description is displayed.
403@end deffn
404
405The set of available options, and their default values, may be had by
406invoking @code{print-options} at the prompt.
407
408@smalllisp
409scheme@@(guile-user)> (print-options)
410(quote-keywordish-symbols reader highlight-suffix "@}" highlight-prefix "@{")
411scheme@@(guile-user)> (print-options 'help)
412highlight-prefix @{ The string to print before highlighted values.
413highlight-suffix @} The string to print after highlighted values.
414quote-keywordish-symbols reader How to print symbols that have a colon
415 as their first or last character. The
416 value '#f' does not quote the colons;
417 '#t' quotes them; 'reader' quotes them
418 when the reader option 'keywords' is
419 not '#f'.
420@end smalllisp
421
1233b383 422These options may be modified with the print-set! syntax.
1518f649 423
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424@deffn {Scheme Syntax} print-set! option-name value
425Modify the print options. Due to historical oddities, @code{print-set!}
426is a macro that expects an unquoted option name.
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427@end deffn
428
429
430@node Fly Evaluation
431@subsection Procedures for On the Fly Evaluation
432
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433Scheme has the lovely property that its expressions may be represented
434as data. The @code{eval} procedure takes a Scheme datum and evaluates
435it as code.
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436
437@rnindex eval
438@c ARGFIXME environment/environment specifier
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439@deffn {Scheme Procedure} eval exp module_or_state
440@deffnx {C Function} scm_eval (exp, module_or_state)
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441Evaluate @var{exp}, a list representing a Scheme expression,
442in the top-level environment specified by @var{module}.
443While @var{exp} is evaluated (using @code{primitive-eval}),
444@var{module} is made the current module. The current module
445is reset to its previous value when @var{eval} returns.
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446XXX - dynamic states.
447Example: (eval '(+ 1 2) (interaction-environment))
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448@end deffn
449
450@rnindex interaction-environment
451@deffn {Scheme Procedure} interaction-environment
452@deffnx {C Function} scm_interaction_environment ()
453Return a specifier for the environment that contains
454implementation--defined bindings, typically a superset of those
455listed in the report. The intent is that this procedure will
456return the environment in which the implementation would
457evaluate expressions dynamically typed by the user.
458@end deffn
459
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460@xref{Environments}, for other environments.
461
462One does not always receive code as Scheme data, of course, and this is
463especially the case for Guile's other language implementations
464(@pxref{Other Languages}). For the case in which all you have is a
465string, we have @code{eval-string}. There is a legacy version of this
466procedure in the default environment, but you really want the one from
467@code{(ice-9 eval-string)}, so load it up:
468
469@example
470(use-modules (ice-9 eval-string))
471@end example
472
473@deffn {Scheme Procedure} eval-string string [module=#f] [file=#f] [line=#f] [column=#f] [lang=(current-language)] [compile?=#f]
474Parse @var{string} according to the current language, normally Scheme.
475Evaluate or compile the expressions it contains, in order, returning the
476last expression.
477
478If the @var{module} keyword argument is set, save a module excursion
479(@pxref{Module System Reflection}) and set the current module to
480@var{module} before evaluation.
481
482The @var{file}, @var{line}, and @var{column} keyword arguments can be
483used to indicate that the source string begins at a particular source
484location.
485
486Finally, @var{lang} is a language, defaulting to the current language,
487and the expression is compiled if @var{compile?} is true or there is no
488evaluator for the given language.
489@end deffn
490
491@deffn {C Function} scm_eval_string (string)
07d83abe 492@deffnx {C Function} scm_eval_string_in_module (string, module)
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493These C bindings call @code{eval-string} from @code{(ice-9
494eval-string)}, evaluating within @var{module} or the current module.
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495@end deffn
496
40296bab 497@deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_eval_string (const char *string)
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498@code{scm_eval_string}, but taking a C string in locale encoding instead
499of an @code{SCM}.
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500@end deftypefn
501
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502@deffn {Scheme Procedure} apply proc arg1 @dots{} argN arglst
503@deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_0 (proc, arglst)
504@deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_1 (proc, arg1, arglst)
505@deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_2 (proc, arg1, arg2, arglst)
506@deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_3 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arglst)
507@deffnx {C Function} scm_apply (proc, arg, rest)
508@rnindex apply
509Call @var{proc} with arguments @var{arg1} @dots{} @var{argN} plus the
510elements of the @var{arglst} list.
511
512@code{scm_apply} takes parameters corresponding to a Scheme level
513@code{(lambda (proc arg . rest) ...)}. So @var{arg} and all but the
514last element of the @var{rest} list make up
515@var{arg1}@dots{}@var{argN} and the last element of @var{rest} is the
516@var{arglst} list. Or if @var{rest} is the empty list @code{SCM_EOL}
517then there's no @var{arg1}@dots{}@var{argN} and @var{arg} is the
518@var{arglst}.
519
520@var{arglst} is not modified, but the @var{rest} list passed to
521@code{scm_apply} is modified.
522@end deffn
523
524@deffn {C Function} scm_call_0 (proc)
525@deffnx {C Function} scm_call_1 (proc, arg1)
526@deffnx {C Function} scm_call_2 (proc, arg1, arg2)
527@deffnx {C Function} scm_call_3 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3)
8d596b11 528@deffnx {C Function} scm_call_4 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4)
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529@deffnx {C Function} scm_call_5 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5)
530@deffnx {C Function} scm_call_6 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6)
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531Call @var{proc} with the given arguments.
532@end deffn
533
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534@deffn {C Function} scm_call_n (proc, argv, nargs)
535Call @var{proc} with the array of arguments @var{argv}, as a
536@code{SCM*}. The length of the arguments should be passed in
537@var{nargs}, as a @code{size_t}.
538@end deffn
539
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540@deffn {Scheme Procedure} apply:nconc2last lst
541@deffnx {C Function} scm_nconc2last (lst)
542@var{lst} should be a list (@var{arg1} @dots{} @var{argN}
543@var{arglst}), with @var{arglst} being a list. This function returns
544a list comprising @var{arg1} to @var{argN} plus the elements of
545@var{arglst}. @var{lst} is modified to form the return. @var{arglst}
546is not modified, though the return does share structure with it.
547
548This operation collects up the arguments from a list which is
549@code{apply} style parameters.
550@end deffn
551
552@deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-eval exp
553@deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_eval (exp)
554Evaluate @var{exp} in the top-level environment specified by
555the current module.
556@end deffn
557
558
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559@node Compilation
560@subsection Compiling Scheme Code
561
562The @code{eval} procedure directly interprets the S-expression
563representation of Scheme. An alternate strategy for evaluation is to
564determine ahead of time what computations will be necessary to
565evaluate the expression, and then use that recipe to produce the
566desired results. This is known as @dfn{compilation}.
567
568While it is possible to compile simple Scheme expressions such as
569@code{(+ 2 2)} or even @code{"Hello world!"}, compilation is most
ca445ba5 570interesting in the context of procedures. Compiling a lambda expression
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571produces a compiled procedure, which is just like a normal procedure
572except typically much faster, because it can bypass the generic
573interpreter.
574
575Functions from system modules in a Guile installation are normally
576compiled already, so they load and run quickly.
577
14d2ee31 578@cindex automatic compilation
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579Note that well-written Scheme programs will not typically call the
580procedures in this section, for the same reason that it is often bad
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581taste to use @code{eval}. By default, Guile automatically compiles any
582files it encounters that have not been compiled yet (@pxref{Invoking
583Guile, @code{--auto-compile}}). The compiler can also be invoked
b8b06598 584explicitly from the shell as @code{guild compile foo.scm}.
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585
586(Why are calls to @code{eval} and @code{compile} usually in bad taste?
587Because they are limited, in that they can only really make sense for
588top-level expressions. Also, most needs for ``compile-time''
589computation are fulfilled by macros and closures. Of course one good
590counterexample is the REPL itself, or any code that reads expressions
591from a port.)
592
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593Automatic compilation generally works transparently, without any need
594for user intervention. However Guile does not yet do proper dependency
595tracking, so that if file @file{@var{a}.scm} uses macros from
596@file{@var{b}.scm}, and @var{@var{b}.scm} changes, @code{@var{a}.scm}
597would not be automatically recompiled. To forcibly invalidate the
598auto-compilation cache, pass the @code{--fresh-auto-compile} option to
599Guile, or set the @code{GUILE_AUTO_COMPILE} environment variable to
600@code{fresh} (instead of to @code{0} or @code{1}).
601
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602For more information on the compiler itself, see @ref{Compiling to the
603Virtual Machine}. For information on the virtual machine, see @ref{A
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604Virtual Machine for Guile}.
605
b8b06598 606The command-line interface to Guile's compiler is the @command{guild
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607compile} command:
608
b8b06598 609@deffn {Command} {guild compile} [@option{option}...] @var{file}...
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610Compile @var{file}, a source file, and store bytecode in the compilation cache
611or in the file specified by the @option{-o} option. The following options are
612available:
613
614@table @option
615
616@item -L @var{dir}
617@itemx --load-path=@var{dir}
618Add @var{dir} to the front of the module load path.
619
620@item -o @var{ofile}
621@itemx --output=@var{ofile}
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622Write output bytecode to @var{ofile}. By convention, bytecode file
623names end in @code{.go}. When @option{-o} is omitted, the output file
624name is as for @code{compile-file} (see below).
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625
626@item -W @var{warning}
627@itemx --warn=@var{warning}
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628Emit warnings of type @var{warning}; use @code{--warn=help} for a list
629of available warnings and their description. Currently recognized
630warnings include @code{unused-variable}, @code{unused-toplevel},
631@code{unbound-variable}, @code{arity-mismatch}, and @code{format}.
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632
633@item -f @var{lang}
634@itemx --from=@var{lang}
635Use @var{lang} as the source language of @var{file}. If this option is omitted,
636@code{scheme} is assumed.
637
638@item -t @var{lang}
639@itemx --to=@var{lang}
640Use @var{lang} as the target language of @var{file}. If this option is omitted,
641@code{objcode} is assumed.
642
643@end table
644
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645Each @var{file} is assumed to be UTF-8-encoded, unless it contains a
646coding declaration as recognized by @code{file-encoding}
647(@pxref{Character Encoding of Source Files}).
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648@end deffn
649
650The compiler can also be invoked directly by Scheme code using the procedures
651below:
652
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653@deffn {Scheme Procedure} compile exp [env=#f] [from=(current-language)] [to=value] [opts=()]
654Compile the expression @var{exp} in the environment @var{env}. If
655@var{exp} is a procedure, the result will be a compiled procedure;
656otherwise @code{compile} is mostly equivalent to @code{eval}.
657
658For a discussion of languages and compiler options, @xref{Compiling to
659the Virtual Machine}.
660@end deffn
661
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662@deffn {Scheme Procedure} compile-file file [output-file=#f] @
663 [from=(current-language)] [to='objcode] @
664 [env=(default-environment from)] [opts='()] @
665 [canonicalization 'relative]
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666Compile the file named @var{file}.
667
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668Output will be written to a @var{output-file}. If you do not supply an
669output file name, output is written to a file in the cache directory, as
670computed by @code{(compiled-file-name @var{file})}.
671
672@var{from} and @var{to} specify the source and target languages.
673@xref{Compiling to the Virtual Machine}, for more information on these
674options, and on @var{env} and @var{opts}.
eda06220 675
b8b06598 676As with @command{guild compile}, @var{file} is assumed to be
eda06220 677UTF-8-encoded unless it contains a coding declaration.
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678@end deffn
679
680@deffn {Scheme Procedure} compiled-file-name file
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681Compute a cached location for a compiled version of a Scheme file named
682@var{file}.
683
684This file will usually be below the @file{$HOME/.cache/guile/ccache}
685directory, depending on the value of the @env{XDG_CACHE_HOME}
686environment variable. The intention is that @code{compiled-file-name}
687provides a fallback location for caching auto-compiled files. If you
688want to place a compile file in the @code{%load-compiled-path}, you
689should pass the @var{output-file} option to @code{compile-file},
690explicitly.
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691@end deffn
692
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693@defvr {Scheme Variable} %auto-compilation-options
694This variable contains the options passed to the @code{compile-file}
695procedure when auto-compiling source files. By default, it enables
696useful compilation warnings. It can be customized from @file{~/.guile}.
697@end defvr
698
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699@node Loading
700@subsection Loading Scheme Code from File
701
702@rnindex load
ec3a8ace 703@deffn {Scheme Procedure} load filename [reader]
07d83abe 704Load @var{filename} and evaluate its contents in the top-level
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705environment. The load paths are not searched.
706
707@var{reader} if provided should be either @code{#f}, or a procedure with
708the signature @code{(lambda (port) @dots{})} which reads the next
709expression from @var{port}. If @var{reader} is @code{#f} or absent,
710Guile's built-in @code{read} procedure is used (@pxref{Scheme Read}).
711
712The @var{reader} argument takes effect by setting the value of the
713@code{current-reader} fluid (see below) before loading the file, and
714restoring its previous value when loading is complete. The Scheme code
715inside @var{filename} can itself change the current reader procedure on
716the fly by setting @code{current-reader} fluid.
717
718If the variable @code{%load-hook} is defined, it should be bound to a
719procedure that will be called before any code is loaded. See
720documentation for @code{%load-hook} later in this section.
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721@end deffn
722
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723@deffn {Scheme Procedure} load-compiled filename
724Load the compiled file named @var{filename}. The load paths are not
725searched.
726
727Compiling a source file (@pxref{Read/Load/Eval/Compile}) and then
728calling @code{load-compiled} on the resulting file is equivalent to
729calling @code{load} on the source file.
730@end deffn
731
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732@deffn {Scheme Procedure} load-from-path filename
733Similar to @code{load}, but searches for @var{filename} in the load
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734paths. Preferentially loads a compiled version of the file, if it is
735available and up-to-date.
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736@end deffn
737
738@deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-load filename
739@deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_load (filename)
740Load the file named @var{filename} and evaluate its contents in
741the top-level environment. The load paths are not searched;
742@var{filename} must either be a full pathname or be a pathname
743relative to the current directory. If the variable
744@code{%load-hook} is defined, it should be bound to a procedure
745that will be called before any code is loaded. See the
746documentation for @code{%load-hook} later in this section.
747@end deffn
748
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749@deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_primitive_load (const char *filename)
750@code{scm_primitive_load}, but taking a C string instead of an
751@code{SCM}.
752@end deftypefn
753
31ab99de 754@deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-load-path filename [exception-on-not-found]
07d83abe 755@deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_load_path (filename)
5c132e68 756Search @code{%load-path} for the file named @var{filename} and
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757load it into the top-level environment. If @var{filename} is a
758relative pathname and is not found in the list of search paths,
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759an error is signalled. Preferentially loads a compiled version of the
760file, if it is available and up-to-date.
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761
762By default or if @var{exception-on-not-found} is true, an exception is
763raised if @var{filename} is not found. If @var{exception-on-not-found}
764is @code{#f} and @var{filename} is not found, no exception is raised and
765@code{#f} is returned. For compatibility with Guile 1.8 and earlier,
766the C function takes only one argument, which can be either a string
767(the file name) or an argument list.
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768@end deffn
769
770@deffn {Scheme Procedure} %search-load-path filename
771@deffnx {C Function} scm_sys_search_load_path (filename)
5c132e68 772Search @code{%load-path} for the file named @var{filename},
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773which must be readable by the current user. If @var{filename}
774is found in the list of paths to search or is an absolute
775pathname, return its full pathname. Otherwise, return
776@code{#f}. Filenames may have any of the optional extensions
777in the @code{%load-extensions} list; @code{%search-load-path}
778will try each extension automatically.
779@end deffn
780
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781@defvar current-reader
782@code{current-reader} holds the read procedure that is currently being
783used by the above loading procedures to read expressions (from the file
784that they are loading). @code{current-reader} is a fluid, so it has an
785independent value in each dynamic root and should be read and set using
786@code{fluid-ref} and @code{fluid-set!} (@pxref{Fluids and Dynamic
787States}).
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788
789Changing @code{current-reader} is typically useful to introduce local
790syntactic changes, such that code following the @code{fluid-set!} call
791is read using the newly installed reader. The @code{current-reader}
792change should take place at evaluation time when the code is evaluated,
793or at compilation time when the code is compiled:
794
795@findex eval-when
796@example
797(eval-when (compile eval)
798 (fluid-set! current-reader my-own-reader))
799@end example
800
801The @code{eval-when} form above ensures that the @code{current-reader}
802change occurs at the right time.
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803@end defvar
804
07d83abe 805@defvar %load-hook
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806A procedure to be called @code{(%load-hook @var{filename})} whenever a
807file is loaded, or @code{#f} for no such call. @code{%load-hook} is
808used by all of the above loading functions (@code{load},
809@code{load-path}, @code{primitive-load} and
810@code{primitive-load-path}).
811
812For example an application can set this to show what's loaded,
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813
814@example
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815(set! %load-hook (lambda (filename)
816 (format #t "Loading ~a ...\n" filename)))
07d83abe 817(load-from-path "foo.scm")
42ad91f7 818@print{} Loading /usr/local/share/guile/site/foo.scm ...
07d83abe 819@end example
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820@end defvar
821
822@deffn {Scheme Procedure} current-load-port
823@deffnx {C Function} scm_current_load_port ()
824Return the current-load-port.
825The load port is used internally by @code{primitive-load}.
826@end deffn
827
828@defvar %load-extensions
829A list of default file extensions for files containing Scheme code.
830@code{%search-load-path} tries each of these extensions when looking for
831a file to load. By default, @code{%load-extensions} is bound to the
832list @code{("" ".scm")}.
833@end defvar
834
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835@node Character Encoding of Source Files
836@subsection Character Encoding of Source Files
837
4c7b9975 838@cindex source file encoding
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839@cindex primitive-load
840@cindex load
841Scheme source code files are usually encoded in ASCII, but, the
842built-in reader can interpret other character encodings. The
843procedure @code{primitive-load}, and by extension the functions that
844call it, such as @code{load}, first scan the top 500 characters of the
845file for a coding declaration.
846
847A coding declaration has the form @code{coding: XXXXXX}, where
848@code{XXXXXX} is the name of a character encoding in which the source
849code file has been encoded. The coding declaration must appear in a
850scheme comment. It can either be a semicolon-initiated comment or a block
851@code{#!} comment.
852
853The name of the character encoding in the coding declaration is
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854typically lower case and containing only letters, numbers, and hyphens,
855as recognized by @code{set-port-encoding!} (@pxref{Ports,
856@code{set-port-encoding!}}). Common examples of character encoding
857names are @code{utf-8} and @code{iso-8859-1},
858@url{http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets, as defined by
859IANA}. Thus, the coding declaration is mostly compatible with Emacs.
860
861However, there are some differences in encoding names recognized by
862Emacs and encoding names defined by IANA, the latter being essentially a
863subset of the former. For instance, @code{latin-1} is a valid encoding
864name for Emacs, but it's not according to the IANA standard, which Guile
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865follows; instead, you should use @code{iso-8859-1}, which is both
866understood by Emacs and dubbed by IANA (IANA writes it uppercase but
867Emacs wants it lowercase and Guile is case insensitive.)
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868
869For source code, only a subset of all possible character encodings can
870be interpreted by the built-in source code reader. Only those
871character encodings in which ASCII text appears unmodified can be
872used. This includes @code{UTF-8} and @code{ISO-8859-1} through
873@code{ISO-8859-15}. The multi-byte character encodings @code{UTF-16}
874and @code{UTF-32} may not be used because they are not compatible with
875ASCII.
876
877@cindex read
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878@cindex encoding
879@cindex port encoding
880@findex set-port-encoding!
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881There might be a scenario in which one would want to read non-ASCII
882code from a port, such as with the function @code{read}, instead of
883with @code{load}. If the port's character encoding is the same as the
884encoding of the code to be read by the port, not other special
885handling is necessary. The port will automatically do the character
886encoding conversion. The functions @code{setlocale} or by
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887@code{set-port-encoding!} are used to set port encodings
888(@pxref{Ports}).
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889
890If a port is used to read code of unknown character encoding, it can
891accomplish this in three steps. First, the character encoding of the
892port should be set to ISO-8859-1 using @code{set-port-encoding!}.
893Then, the procedure @code{file-encoding}, described below, is used to
894scan for a coding declaration when reading from the port. As a side
895effect, it rewinds the port after its scan is complete. After that,
896the port's character encoding should be set to the encoding returned
897by @code{file-encoding}, if any, again by using
898@code{set-port-encoding!}. Then the code can be read as normal.
899
900@deffn {Scheme Procedure} file-encoding port
901@deffnx {C Function} scm_file_encoding port
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902Scan the port for an Emacs-like character coding declaration near the
903top of the contents of a port with random-accessible contents
904(@pxref{Recognize Coding, how Emacs recognizes file encoding,, emacs,
905The GNU Emacs Reference Manual}). The coding declaration is of the form
906@code{coding: XXXXX} and must appear in a Scheme comment. Return a
907string containing the character encoding of the file if a declaration
908was found, or @code{#f} otherwise. The port is rewound.
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909@end deffn
910
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911
912@node Delayed Evaluation
913@subsection Delayed Evaluation
914@cindex delayed evaluation
915@cindex promises
916
917Promises are a convenient way to defer a calculation until its result
918is actually needed, and to run such a calculation only once.
919
920@deffn syntax delay expr
921@rnindex delay
922Return a promise object which holds the given @var{expr} expression,
923ready to be evaluated by a later @code{force}.
924@end deffn
925
926@deffn {Scheme Procedure} promise? obj
927@deffnx {C Function} scm_promise_p (obj)
928Return true if @var{obj} is a promise.
929@end deffn
930
931@rnindex force
932@deffn {Scheme Procedure} force p
933@deffnx {C Function} scm_force (p)
934Return the value obtained from evaluating the @var{expr} in the given
935promise @var{p}. If @var{p} has previously been forced then its
936@var{expr} is not evaluated again, instead the value obtained at that
937time is simply returned.
938
939During a @code{force}, an @var{expr} can call @code{force} again on
940its own promise, resulting in a recursive evaluation of that
941@var{expr}. The first evaluation to return gives the value for the
942promise. Higher evaluations run to completion in the normal way, but
943their results are ignored, @code{force} always returns the first
944value.
945@end deffn
946
947
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948@c Local Variables:
949@c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
950@c End: