Improve correctness and consistency of 'eval-when' usage.
[bpt/guile.git] / doc / ref / api-evaluation.texi
1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009,
4 @c 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
6
7 @node Read/Load/Eval/Compile
8 @section Reading and Evaluating Scheme Code
9
10 This chapter describes Guile functions that are concerned with reading,
11 loading, evaluating, and compiling Scheme code at run time.
12
13 @menu
14 * Scheme Syntax:: Standard and extended Scheme syntax.
15 * Scheme Read:: Reading Scheme code.
16 * Scheme Write:: Writing Scheme values to a port.
17 * Fly Evaluation:: Procedures for on the fly evaluation.
18 * Compilation:: How to compile Scheme files and procedures.
19 * Loading:: Loading Scheme code from file.
20 * Load Paths:: Where Guile looks for code.
21 * Character Encoding of Source Files:: Loading non-ASCII Scheme code from file.
22 * Delayed Evaluation:: Postponing evaluation until it is needed.
23 * Local Evaluation:: Evaluation in a local lexical environment.
24 * Local Inclusion:: Compile-time inclusion of one file in another.
25 * REPL Servers:: Serving a REPL over a socket.
26 @end menu
27
28
29 @node Scheme Syntax
30 @subsection Scheme Syntax: Standard and Guile Extensions
31
32 @menu
33 * Expression Syntax::
34 * Comments::
35 * Block Comments::
36 * Case Sensitivity::
37 * Keyword Syntax::
38 * Reader Extensions::
39 @end menu
40
41
42 @node Expression Syntax
43 @subsubsection Expression Syntax
44
45 An expression to be evaluated takes one of the following forms.
46
47 @table @nicode
48
49 @item @var{symbol}
50 A symbol is evaluated by dereferencing. A binding of that symbol is
51 sought and the value there used. For example,
52
53 @example
54 (define x 123)
55 x @result{} 123
56 @end example
57
58 @item (@var{proc} @var{args}@dots{})
59 A parenthesised expression is a function call. @var{proc} and each
60 argument are evaluated, then the function (which @var{proc} evaluated
61 to) is called with those arguments.
62
63 The order in which @var{proc} and the arguments are evaluated is
64 unspecified, so be careful when using expressions with side effects.
65
66 @example
67 (max 1 2 3) @result{} 3
68
69 (define (get-some-proc) min)
70 ((get-some-proc) 1 2 3) @result{} 1
71 @end example
72
73 The same sort of parenthesised form is used for a macro invocation,
74 but in that case the arguments are not evaluated. See the
75 descriptions of macros for more on this (@pxref{Macros}, and
76 @pxref{Syntax Rules}).
77
78 @item @var{constant}
79 Number, string, character and boolean constants evaluate ``to
80 themselves'', so can appear as literals.
81
82 @example
83 123 @result{} 123
84 99.9 @result{} 99.9
85 "hello" @result{} "hello"
86 #\z @result{} #\z
87 #t @result{} #t
88 @end example
89
90 Note that an application must not attempt to modify literal strings,
91 since they may be in read-only memory.
92
93 @item (quote @var{data})
94 @itemx '@var{data}
95 @findex quote
96 @findex '
97 Quoting is used to obtain a literal symbol (instead of a variable
98 reference), a literal list (instead of a function call), or a literal
99 vector. @nicode{'} is simply a shorthand for a @code{quote} form.
100 For example,
101
102 @example
103 'x @result{} x
104 '(1 2 3) @result{} (1 2 3)
105 '#(1 (2 3) 4) @result{} #(1 (2 3) 4)
106 (quote x) @result{} x
107 (quote (1 2 3)) @result{} (1 2 3)
108 (quote #(1 (2 3) 4)) @result{} #(1 (2 3) 4)
109 @end example
110
111 Note that an application must not attempt to modify literal lists or
112 vectors obtained from a @code{quote} form, since they may be in
113 read-only memory.
114
115 @item (quasiquote @var{data})
116 @itemx `@var{data}
117 @findex quasiquote
118 @findex `
119 Backquote quasi-quotation is like @code{quote}, but selected
120 sub-expressions are evaluated. This is a convenient way to construct
121 a list or vector structure most of which is constant, but at certain
122 points should have expressions substituted.
123
124 The same effect can always be had with suitable @code{list},
125 @code{cons} or @code{vector} calls, but quasi-quoting is often easier.
126
127 @table @nicode
128
129 @item (unquote @var{expr})
130 @itemx ,@var{expr}
131 @findex unquote
132 @findex ,
133 Within the quasiquote @var{data}, @code{unquote} or @code{,} indicates
134 an expression to be evaluated and inserted. The comma syntax @code{,}
135 is simply a shorthand for an @code{unquote} form. For example,
136
137 @example
138 `(1 2 ,(* 9 9) 3 4) @result{} (1 2 81 3 4)
139 `(1 (unquote (+ 1 1)) 3) @result{} (1 2 3)
140 `#(1 ,(/ 12 2)) @result{} #(1 6)
141 @end example
142
143 @item (unquote-splicing @var{expr})
144 @itemx ,@@@var{expr}
145 @findex unquote-splicing
146 @findex ,@@
147 Within the quasiquote @var{data}, @code{unquote-splicing} or
148 @code{,@@} indicates an expression to be evaluated and the elements of
149 the returned list inserted. @var{expr} must evaluate to a list. The
150 ``comma-at'' syntax @code{,@@} is simply a shorthand for an
151 @code{unquote-splicing} form.
152
153 @example
154 (define x '(2 3))
155 `(1 ,@@x 4) @result{} (1 2 3 4)
156 `(1 (unquote-splicing (map 1+ x))) @result{} (1 3 4)
157 `#(9 ,@@x 9) @result{} #(9 2 3 9)
158 @end example
159
160 Notice @code{,@@} differs from plain @code{,} in the way one level of
161 nesting is stripped. For @code{,@@} the elements of a returned list
162 are inserted, whereas with @code{,} it would be the list itself
163 inserted.
164 @end table
165
166 @c
167 @c FIXME: What can we say about the mutability of a quasiquote
168 @c result? R5RS doesn't seem to specify anything, though where it
169 @c says backquote without commas is the same as plain quote then
170 @c presumably the "fixed" portions of a quasiquote expression must be
171 @c treated as immutable.
172 @c
173
174 @end table
175
176
177 @node Comments
178 @subsubsection Comments
179
180 @c FIXME::martin: Review me!
181
182 Comments in Scheme source files are written by starting them with a
183 semicolon character (@code{;}). The comment then reaches up to the end
184 of the line. Comments can begin at any column, and the may be inserted
185 on the same line as Scheme code.
186
187 @lisp
188 ; Comment
189 ;; Comment too
190 (define x 1) ; Comment after expression
191 (let ((y 1))
192 ;; Display something.
193 (display y)
194 ;;; Comment at left margin.
195 (display (+ y 1)))
196 @end lisp
197
198 It is common to use a single semicolon for comments following
199 expressions on a line, to use two semicolons for comments which are
200 indented like code, and three semicolons for comments which start at
201 column 0, even if they are inside an indented code block. This
202 convention is used when indenting code in Emacs' Scheme mode.
203
204
205 @node Block Comments
206 @subsubsection Block Comments
207 @cindex multiline comments
208 @cindex block comments
209 @cindex #!
210 @cindex !#
211
212 @c FIXME::martin: Review me!
213
214 In addition to the standard line comments defined by R5RS, Guile has
215 another comment type for multiline comments, called @dfn{block
216 comments}. This type of comment begins with the character sequence
217 @code{#!} and ends with the characters @code{!#}, which must appear on a
218 line of their own. These comments are compatible with the block
219 comments in the Scheme Shell @file{scsh} (@pxref{The Scheme shell
220 (scsh)}). The characters @code{#!} were chosen because they are the
221 magic characters used in shell scripts for indicating that the name of
222 the program for executing the script follows on the same line.
223
224 Thus a Guile script often starts like this.
225
226 @lisp
227 #! /usr/local/bin/guile -s
228 !#
229 @end lisp
230
231 More details on Guile scripting can be found in the scripting section
232 (@pxref{Guile Scripting}).
233
234 @cindex R6RS block comments
235 @cindex SRFI-30 block comments
236 Similarly, Guile (starting from version 2.0) supports nested block
237 comments as specified by R6RS and
238 @url{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-30/srfi-30.html, SRFI-30}:
239
240 @lisp
241 (+ 1 #| this is a #| nested |# block comment |# 2)
242 @result{} 3
243 @end lisp
244
245 For backward compatibility, this syntax can be overridden with
246 @code{read-hash-extend} (@pxref{Reader Extensions,
247 @code{read-hash-extend}}).
248
249 There is one special case where the contents of a comment can actually
250 affect the interpretation of code. When a character encoding
251 declaration, such as @code{coding: utf-8} appears in one of the first
252 few lines of a source file, it indicates to Guile's default reader
253 that this source code file is not ASCII. For details see @ref{Character
254 Encoding of Source Files}.
255
256 @node Case Sensitivity
257 @subsubsection Case Sensitivity
258 @cindex fold-case
259 @cindex no-fold-case
260
261 @c FIXME::martin: Review me!
262
263 Scheme as defined in R5RS is not case sensitive when reading symbols.
264 Guile, on the contrary is case sensitive by default, so the identifiers
265
266 @lisp
267 guile-whuzzy
268 Guile-Whuzzy
269 @end lisp
270
271 are the same in R5RS Scheme, but are different in Guile.
272
273 It is possible to turn off case sensitivity in Guile by setting the
274 reader option @code{case-insensitive}. For more information on reader
275 options, @xref{Scheme Read}.
276
277 @lisp
278 (read-enable 'case-insensitive)
279 @end lisp
280
281 It is also possible to disable (or enable) case sensitivity within a
282 single file by placing the reader directives @code{#!fold-case} (or
283 @code{#!no-fold-case}) within the file itself.
284
285 @node Keyword Syntax
286 @subsubsection Keyword Syntax
287
288
289 @node Reader Extensions
290 @subsubsection Reader Extensions
291
292 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} read-hash-extend chr proc
293 @deffnx {C Function} scm_read_hash_extend (chr, proc)
294 Install the procedure @var{proc} for reading expressions
295 starting with the character sequence @code{#} and @var{chr}.
296 @var{proc} will be called with two arguments: the character
297 @var{chr} and the port to read further data from. The object
298 returned will be the return value of @code{read}.
299 Passing @code{#f} for @var{proc} will remove a previous setting.
300
301 @end deffn
302
303
304 @node Scheme Read
305 @subsection Reading Scheme Code
306
307 @rnindex read
308 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} read [port]
309 @deffnx {C Function} scm_read (port)
310 Read an s-expression from the input port @var{port}, or from
311 the current input port if @var{port} is not specified.
312 Any whitespace before the next token is discarded.
313 @end deffn
314
315 The behaviour of Guile's Scheme reader can be modified by manipulating
316 its read options.
317
318 @cindex options - read
319 @cindex read options
320 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} read-options [setting]
321 Display the current settings of the global read options. If
322 @var{setting} is omitted, only a short form of the current read options
323 is printed. Otherwise if @var{setting} is the symbol @code{help}, a
324 complete options description is displayed.
325 @end deffn
326
327 The set of available options, and their default values, may be had by
328 invoking @code{read-options} at the prompt.
329
330 @smalllisp
331 scheme@@(guile-user)> (read-options)
332 (square-brackets keywords #f positions)
333 scheme@@(guile-user)> (read-options 'help)
334 copy no Copy source code expressions.
335 positions yes Record positions of source code expressions.
336 case-insensitive no Convert symbols to lower case.
337 keywords #f Style of keyword recognition: #f, 'prefix or 'postfix.
338 r6rs-hex-escapes no Use R6RS variable-length character and string hex escapes.
339 square-brackets yes Treat `[' and `]' as parentheses, for R6RS compatibility.
340 hungry-eol-escapes no In strings, consume leading whitespace after an
341 escaped end-of-line.
342 curly-infix no Support SRFI-105 curly infix expressions.
343 r7rs-symbols no Support R7RS |...| symbol notation.
344 @end smalllisp
345
346 Note that Guile also includes a preliminary mechanism for setting read
347 options on a per-port basis. For instance, the @code{case-insensitive}
348 read option is set (or unset) on the port when the reader encounters the
349 @code{#!fold-case} or @code{#!no-fold-case} reader directives.
350 Similarly, the @code{#!curly-infix} reader directive sets the
351 @code{curly-infix} read option on the port, and
352 @code{#!curly-infix-and-bracket-lists} sets @code{curly-infix} and
353 unsets @code{square-brackets} on the port (@pxref{SRFI-105}). There is
354 currently no other way to access or set the per-port read options.
355
356 The boolean options may be toggled with @code{read-enable} and
357 @code{read-disable}. The non-boolean @code{keywords} option must be set
358 using @code{read-set!}.
359
360 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} read-enable option-name
361 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} read-disable option-name
362 @deffnx {Scheme Syntax} read-set! option-name value
363 Modify the read options. @code{read-enable} should be used with boolean
364 options and switches them on, @code{read-disable} switches them off.
365
366 @code{read-set!} can be used to set an option to a specific value. Due
367 to historical oddities, it is a macro that expects an unquoted option
368 name.
369 @end deffn
370
371 For example, to make @code{read} fold all symbols to their lower case
372 (perhaps for compatibility with older Scheme code), you can enter:
373
374 @lisp
375 (read-enable 'case-insensitive)
376 @end lisp
377
378 For more information on the effect of the @code{r6rs-hex-escapes} and
379 @code{hungry-eol-escapes} options, see (@pxref{String Syntax}).
380
381 For more information on the @code{r7rs-symbols} option, see
382 (@pxref{Symbol Read Syntax}).
383
384
385 @node Scheme Write
386 @subsection Writing Scheme Values
387
388 Any scheme value may be written to a port. Not all values may be read
389 back in (@pxref{Scheme Read}), however.
390
391 @rnindex write
392 @rnindex print
393 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} write obj [port]
394 Send a representation of @var{obj} to @var{port} or to the current
395 output port if not given.
396
397 The output is designed to be machine readable, and can be read back
398 with @code{read} (@pxref{Scheme Read}). Strings are printed in
399 double quotes, with escapes if necessary, and characters are printed in
400 @samp{#\} notation.
401 @end deffn
402
403 @rnindex display
404 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} display obj [port]
405 Send a representation of @var{obj} to @var{port} or to the current
406 output port if not given.
407
408 The output is designed for human readability, it differs from
409 @code{write} in that strings are printed without double quotes and
410 escapes, and characters are printed as per @code{write-char}, not in
411 @samp{#\} form.
412 @end deffn
413
414 As was the case with the Scheme reader, there are a few options that
415 affect the behavior of the Scheme printer.
416
417 @cindex options - print
418 @cindex print options
419 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} print-options [setting]
420 Display the current settings of the read options. If @var{setting} is
421 omitted, only a short form of the current read options is
422 printed. Otherwise if @var{setting} is the symbol @code{help}, a
423 complete options description is displayed.
424 @end deffn
425
426 The set of available options, and their default values, may be had by
427 invoking @code{print-options} at the prompt.
428
429 @smalllisp
430 scheme@@(guile-user)> (print-options)
431 (quote-keywordish-symbols reader highlight-suffix "@}" highlight-prefix "@{")
432 scheme@@(guile-user)> (print-options 'help)
433 highlight-prefix @{ The string to print before highlighted values.
434 highlight-suffix @} The string to print after highlighted values.
435 quote-keywordish-symbols reader How to print symbols that have a colon
436 as their first or last character. The
437 value '#f' does not quote the colons;
438 '#t' quotes them; 'reader' quotes them
439 when the reader option 'keywords' is
440 not '#f'.
441 escape-newlines yes Render newlines as \n when printing
442 using `write'.
443 r7rs-symbols no Escape symbols using R7RS |...| symbol
444 notation.
445 @end smalllisp
446
447 These options may be modified with the print-set! syntax.
448
449 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} print-set! option-name value
450 Modify the print options. Due to historical oddities, @code{print-set!}
451 is a macro that expects an unquoted option name.
452 @end deffn
453
454
455 @node Fly Evaluation
456 @subsection Procedures for On the Fly Evaluation
457
458 Scheme has the lovely property that its expressions may be represented
459 as data. The @code{eval} procedure takes a Scheme datum and evaluates
460 it as code.
461
462 @rnindex eval
463 @c ARGFIXME environment/environment specifier
464 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} eval exp module_or_state
465 @deffnx {C Function} scm_eval (exp, module_or_state)
466 Evaluate @var{exp}, a list representing a Scheme expression,
467 in the top-level environment specified by @var{module_or_state}.
468 While @var{exp} is evaluated (using @code{primitive-eval}),
469 @var{module_or_state} is made the current module. The current module
470 is reset to its previous value when @code{eval} returns.
471 XXX - dynamic states.
472 Example: (eval '(+ 1 2) (interaction-environment))
473 @end deffn
474
475 @rnindex interaction-environment
476 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} interaction-environment
477 @deffnx {C Function} scm_interaction_environment ()
478 Return a specifier for the environment that contains
479 implementation--defined bindings, typically a superset of those
480 listed in the report. The intent is that this procedure will
481 return the environment in which the implementation would
482 evaluate expressions dynamically typed by the user.
483 @end deffn
484
485 @xref{Environments}, for other environments.
486
487 One does not always receive code as Scheme data, of course, and this is
488 especially the case for Guile's other language implementations
489 (@pxref{Other Languages}). For the case in which all you have is a
490 string, we have @code{eval-string}. There is a legacy version of this
491 procedure in the default environment, but you really want the one from
492 @code{(ice-9 eval-string)}, so load it up:
493
494 @example
495 (use-modules (ice-9 eval-string))
496 @end example
497
498 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} eval-string string [#:module=#f] [#:file=#f] @
499 [#:line=#f] [#:column=#f] @
500 [#:lang=(current-language)] @
501 [#:compile?=#f]
502 Parse @var{string} according to the current language, normally Scheme.
503 Evaluate or compile the expressions it contains, in order, returning the
504 last expression.
505
506 If the @var{module} keyword argument is set, save a module excursion
507 (@pxref{Module System Reflection}) and set the current module to
508 @var{module} before evaluation.
509
510 The @var{file}, @var{line}, and @var{column} keyword arguments can be
511 used to indicate that the source string begins at a particular source
512 location.
513
514 Finally, @var{lang} is a language, defaulting to the current language,
515 and the expression is compiled if @var{compile?} is true or there is no
516 evaluator for the given language.
517 @end deffn
518
519 @deffn {C Function} scm_eval_string (string)
520 @deffnx {C Function} scm_eval_string_in_module (string, module)
521 These C bindings call @code{eval-string} from @code{(ice-9
522 eval-string)}, evaluating within @var{module} or the current module.
523 @end deffn
524
525 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_eval_string (const char *string)
526 @code{scm_eval_string}, but taking a C string in locale encoding instead
527 of an @code{SCM}.
528 @end deftypefn
529
530 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} apply proc arg @dots{} arglst
531 @deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_0 (proc, arglst)
532 @deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_1 (proc, arg1, arglst)
533 @deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_2 (proc, arg1, arg2, arglst)
534 @deffnx {C Function} scm_apply_3 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arglst)
535 @deffnx {C Function} scm_apply (proc, arg, rest)
536 @rnindex apply
537 Call @var{proc} with arguments @var{arg} @dots{} and the
538 elements of the @var{arglst} list.
539
540 @code{scm_apply} takes parameters corresponding to a Scheme level
541 @code{(lambda (proc arg1 . rest) ...)}. So @var{arg1} and all but the
542 last element of the @var{rest} list make up @var{arg} @dots{}, and the
543 last element of @var{rest} is the @var{arglst} list. Or if @var{rest}
544 is the empty list @code{SCM_EOL} then there's no @var{arg} @dots{}, and
545 (@var{arg1}) is the @var{arglst}.
546
547 @var{arglst} is not modified, but the @var{rest} list passed to
548 @code{scm_apply} is modified.
549 @end deffn
550
551 @deffn {C Function} scm_call_0 (proc)
552 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_1 (proc, arg1)
553 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_2 (proc, arg1, arg2)
554 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_3 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3)
555 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_4 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4)
556 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_5 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5)
557 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_6 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6)
558 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_7 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7)
559 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_8 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8)
560 @deffnx {C Function} scm_call_9 (proc, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9)
561 Call @var{proc} with the given arguments.
562 @end deffn
563
564 @deffn {C Function} scm_call (proc, ...)
565 Call @var{proc} with any number of arguments. The argument list must be
566 terminated by @code{SCM_UNDEFINED}. For example:
567
568 @example
569 scm_call (scm_c_public_ref ("guile", "+"),
570 scm_from_int (1),
571 scm_from_int (2),
572 SCM_UNDEFINED);
573 @end example
574 @end deffn
575
576 @deffn {C Function} scm_call_n (proc, argv, nargs)
577 Call @var{proc} with the array of arguments @var{argv}, as a
578 @code{SCM*}. The length of the arguments should be passed in
579 @var{nargs}, as a @code{size_t}.
580 @end deffn
581
582 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} apply:nconc2last lst
583 @deffnx {C Function} scm_nconc2last (lst)
584 @var{lst} should be a list (@var{arg1} @dots{} @var{argN}
585 @var{arglst}), with @var{arglst} being a list. This function returns
586 a list comprising @var{arg1} to @var{argN} plus the elements of
587 @var{arglst}. @var{lst} is modified to form the return. @var{arglst}
588 is not modified, though the return does share structure with it.
589
590 This operation collects up the arguments from a list which is
591 @code{apply} style parameters.
592 @end deffn
593
594 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-eval exp
595 @deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_eval (exp)
596 Evaluate @var{exp} in the top-level environment specified by
597 the current module.
598 @end deffn
599
600
601 @node Compilation
602 @subsection Compiling Scheme Code
603
604 The @code{eval} procedure directly interprets the S-expression
605 representation of Scheme. An alternate strategy for evaluation is to
606 determine ahead of time what computations will be necessary to
607 evaluate the expression, and then use that recipe to produce the
608 desired results. This is known as @dfn{compilation}.
609
610 While it is possible to compile simple Scheme expressions such as
611 @code{(+ 2 2)} or even @code{"Hello world!"}, compilation is most
612 interesting in the context of procedures. Compiling a lambda expression
613 produces a compiled procedure, which is just like a normal procedure
614 except typically much faster, because it can bypass the generic
615 interpreter.
616
617 Functions from system modules in a Guile installation are normally
618 compiled already, so they load and run quickly.
619
620 @cindex automatic compilation
621 Note that well-written Scheme programs will not typically call the
622 procedures in this section, for the same reason that it is often bad
623 taste to use @code{eval}. By default, Guile automatically compiles any
624 files it encounters that have not been compiled yet (@pxref{Invoking
625 Guile, @code{--auto-compile}}). The compiler can also be invoked
626 explicitly from the shell as @code{guild compile foo.scm}.
627
628 (Why are calls to @code{eval} and @code{compile} usually in bad taste?
629 Because they are limited, in that they can only really make sense for
630 top-level expressions. Also, most needs for ``compile-time''
631 computation are fulfilled by macros and closures. Of course one good
632 counterexample is the REPL itself, or any code that reads expressions
633 from a port.)
634
635 Automatic compilation generally works transparently, without any need
636 for user intervention. However Guile does not yet do proper dependency
637 tracking, so that if file @file{@var{a}.scm} uses macros from
638 @file{@var{b}.scm}, and @var{@var{b}.scm} changes, @code{@var{a}.scm}
639 would not be automatically recompiled. To forcibly invalidate the
640 auto-compilation cache, pass the @code{--fresh-auto-compile} option to
641 Guile, or set the @code{GUILE_AUTO_COMPILE} environment variable to
642 @code{fresh} (instead of to @code{0} or @code{1}).
643
644 For more information on the compiler itself, see @ref{Compiling to the
645 Virtual Machine}. For information on the virtual machine, see @ref{A
646 Virtual Machine for Guile}.
647
648 The command-line interface to Guile's compiler is the @command{guild
649 compile} command:
650
651 @deffn {Command} {guild compile} [@option{option}...] @var{file}...
652 Compile @var{file}, a source file, and store bytecode in the compilation cache
653 or in the file specified by the @option{-o} option. The following options are
654 available:
655
656 @table @option
657
658 @item -L @var{dir}
659 @itemx --load-path=@var{dir}
660 Add @var{dir} to the front of the module load path.
661
662 @item -o @var{ofile}
663 @itemx --output=@var{ofile}
664 Write output bytecode to @var{ofile}. By convention, bytecode file
665 names end in @code{.go}. When @option{-o} is omitted, the output file
666 name is as for @code{compile-file} (see below).
667
668 @item -W @var{warning}
669 @itemx --warn=@var{warning}
670 @cindex warnings, compiler
671 Emit warnings of type @var{warning}; use @code{--warn=help} for a list
672 of available warnings and their description. Currently recognized
673 warnings include @code{unused-variable}, @code{unused-toplevel},
674 @code{unbound-variable}, @code{arity-mismatch}, @code{format},
675 @code{duplicate-case-datum}, and @code{bad-case-datum}.
676
677 @item -f @var{lang}
678 @itemx --from=@var{lang}
679 Use @var{lang} as the source language of @var{file}. If this option is omitted,
680 @code{scheme} is assumed.
681
682 @item -t @var{lang}
683 @itemx --to=@var{lang}
684 Use @var{lang} as the target language of @var{file}. If this option is omitted,
685 @code{objcode} is assumed.
686
687 @item -T @var{target}
688 @itemx --target=@var{target}
689 Produce bytecode for @var{target} instead of @var{%host-type}
690 (@pxref{Build Config, %host-type}). Target must be a valid GNU triplet,
691 such as @code{armv5tel-unknown-linux-gnueabi} (@pxref{Specifying Target
692 Triplets,,, autoconf, GNU Autoconf Manual}).
693
694 @end table
695
696 Each @var{file} is assumed to be UTF-8-encoded, unless it contains a
697 coding declaration as recognized by @code{file-encoding}
698 (@pxref{Character Encoding of Source Files}).
699 @end deffn
700
701 The compiler can also be invoked directly by Scheme code using the procedures
702 below:
703
704 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} compile exp [#:env=#f] @
705 [#:from=(current-language)] @
706 [#:to=value] [#:opts=()]
707 Compile the expression @var{exp} in the environment @var{env}. If
708 @var{exp} is a procedure, the result will be a compiled procedure;
709 otherwise @code{compile} is mostly equivalent to @code{eval}.
710
711 For a discussion of languages and compiler options, @xref{Compiling to
712 the Virtual Machine}.
713 @end deffn
714
715 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} compile-file file [#:output-file=#f] @
716 [#:from=(current-language)] [#:to='objcode] @
717 [#:env=(default-environment from)] @
718 [#:opts='()] @
719 [#:canonicalization='relative]
720 Compile the file named @var{file}.
721
722 Output will be written to a @var{output-file}. If you do not supply an
723 output file name, output is written to a file in the cache directory, as
724 computed by @code{(compiled-file-name @var{file})}.
725
726 @var{from} and @var{to} specify the source and target languages.
727 @xref{Compiling to the Virtual Machine}, for more information on these
728 options, and on @var{env} and @var{opts}.
729
730 As with @command{guild compile}, @var{file} is assumed to be
731 UTF-8-encoded unless it contains a coding declaration.
732 @end deffn
733
734 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} compiled-file-name file
735 Compute a cached location for a compiled version of a Scheme file named
736 @var{file}.
737
738 This file will usually be below the @file{$HOME/.cache/guile/ccache}
739 directory, depending on the value of the @env{XDG_CACHE_HOME}
740 environment variable. The intention is that @code{compiled-file-name}
741 provides a fallback location for caching auto-compiled files. If you
742 want to place a compile file in the @code{%load-compiled-path}, you
743 should pass the @var{output-file} option to @code{compile-file},
744 explicitly.
745 @end deffn
746
747 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %auto-compilation-options
748 This variable contains the options passed to the @code{compile-file}
749 procedure when auto-compiling source files. By default, it enables
750 useful compilation warnings. It can be customized from @file{~/.guile}.
751 @end defvr
752
753 @node Loading
754 @subsection Loading Scheme Code from File
755
756 @rnindex load
757 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} load filename [reader]
758 Load @var{filename} and evaluate its contents in the top-level
759 environment.
760
761 @var{reader} if provided should be either @code{#f}, or a procedure with
762 the signature @code{(lambda (port) @dots{})} which reads the next
763 expression from @var{port}. If @var{reader} is @code{#f} or absent,
764 Guile's built-in @code{read} procedure is used (@pxref{Scheme Read}).
765
766 The @var{reader} argument takes effect by setting the value of the
767 @code{current-reader} fluid (see below) before loading the file, and
768 restoring its previous value when loading is complete. The Scheme code
769 inside @var{filename} can itself change the current reader procedure on
770 the fly by setting @code{current-reader} fluid.
771
772 If the variable @code{%load-hook} is defined, it should be bound to a
773 procedure that will be called before any code is loaded. See
774 documentation for @code{%load-hook} later in this section.
775 @end deffn
776
777 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} load-compiled filename
778 Load the compiled file named @var{filename}.
779
780 Compiling a source file (@pxref{Read/Load/Eval/Compile}) and then
781 calling @code{load-compiled} on the resulting file is equivalent to
782 calling @code{load} on the source file.
783 @end deffn
784
785 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-load filename
786 @deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_load (filename)
787 Load the file named @var{filename} and evaluate its contents in the
788 top-level environment. @var{filename} must either be a full pathname or
789 be a pathname relative to the current directory. If the variable
790 @code{%load-hook} is defined, it should be bound to a procedure that
791 will be called before any code is loaded. See the documentation for
792 @code{%load-hook} later in this section.
793 @end deffn
794
795 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_primitive_load (const char *filename)
796 @code{scm_primitive_load}, but taking a C string instead of an
797 @code{SCM}.
798 @end deftypefn
799
800 @defvar current-reader
801 @code{current-reader} holds the read procedure that is currently being
802 used by the above loading procedures to read expressions (from the file
803 that they are loading). @code{current-reader} is a fluid, so it has an
804 independent value in each dynamic root and should be read and set using
805 @code{fluid-ref} and @code{fluid-set!} (@pxref{Fluids and Dynamic
806 States}).
807
808 Changing @code{current-reader} is typically useful to introduce local
809 syntactic changes, such that code following the @code{fluid-set!} call
810 is read using the newly installed reader. The @code{current-reader}
811 change should take place at evaluation time when the code is evaluated,
812 or at compilation time when the code is compiled:
813
814 @findex eval-when
815 @example
816 (eval-when (compile eval)
817 (fluid-set! current-reader my-own-reader))
818 @end example
819
820 The @code{eval-when} form above ensures that the @code{current-reader}
821 change occurs at the right time.
822 @end defvar
823
824 @defvar %load-hook
825 A procedure to be called @code{(%load-hook @var{filename})} whenever a
826 file is loaded, or @code{#f} for no such call. @code{%load-hook} is
827 used by all of the loading functions (@code{load} and
828 @code{primitive-load}, and @code{load-from-path} and
829 @code{primitive-load-path} documented in the next section).
830
831 For example an application can set this to show what's loaded,
832
833 @example
834 (set! %load-hook (lambda (filename)
835 (format #t "Loading ~a ...\n" filename)))
836 (load-from-path "foo.scm")
837 @print{} Loading /usr/local/share/guile/site/foo.scm ...
838 @end example
839 @end defvar
840
841 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} current-load-port
842 @deffnx {C Function} scm_current_load_port ()
843 Return the current-load-port.
844 The load port is used internally by @code{primitive-load}.
845 @end deffn
846
847 @node Load Paths
848 @subsection Load Paths
849
850 The procedure in the previous section look for Scheme code in the file
851 system at specific location. Guile also has some procedures to search
852 the load path for code.
853
854 @defvar %load-path
855 List of directories which should be searched for Scheme modules and
856 libraries. When Guile starts up, @code{%load-path} is initialized to
857 the default load path @code{(list (%library-dir) (%site-dir)
858 (%global-site-dir) (%package-data-dir))}. The @env{GUILE_LOAD_PATH}
859 environment variable can be used to prepend or append additional
860 directories (@pxref{Environment Variables}).
861
862 @xref{Build Config}, for more on @code{%site-dir} and related
863 procedures.
864 @end defvar
865
866 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} load-from-path filename
867 Similar to @code{load}, but searches for @var{filename} in the load
868 paths. Preferentially loads a compiled version of the file, if it is
869 available and up-to-date.
870 @end deffn
871
872 A user can extend the load path by calling @code{add-to-load-path}.
873
874 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} add-to-load-path dir
875 Add @var{dir} to the load path.
876 @end deffn
877
878 For example, a script might include this form to add the directory that
879 it is in to the load path:
880
881 @example
882 (add-to-load-path (dirname (current-filename)))
883 @end example
884
885 It's better to use @code{add-to-load-path} than to modify
886 @code{%load-path} directly, because @code{add-to-load-path} takes care
887 of modifying the path both at compile-time and at run-time.
888
889 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-load-path filename [exception-on-not-found]
890 @deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_load_path (filename)
891 Search @code{%load-path} for the file named @var{filename} and
892 load it into the top-level environment. If @var{filename} is a
893 relative pathname and is not found in the list of search paths,
894 an error is signalled. Preferentially loads a compiled version of the
895 file, if it is available and up-to-date.
896
897 If @var{filename} is a relative pathname and is not found in the list of
898 search paths, one of three things may happen, depending on the optional
899 second argument, @var{exception-on-not-found}. If it is @code{#f},
900 @code{#f} will be returned. If it is a procedure, it will be called
901 with no arguments. (This allows a distinction to be made between
902 exceptions raised by loading a file, and exceptions related to the
903 loader itself.) Otherwise an error is signalled.
904
905 For compatibility with Guile 1.8 and earlier, the C function takes only
906 one argument, which can be either a string (the file name) or an
907 argument list.
908 @end deffn
909
910 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} %search-load-path filename
911 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sys_search_load_path (filename)
912 Search @code{%load-path} for the file named @var{filename}, which must
913 be readable by the current user. If @var{filename} is found in the list
914 of paths to search or is an absolute pathname, return its full pathname.
915 Otherwise, return @code{#f}. Filenames may have any of the optional
916 extensions in the @code{%load-extensions} list; @code{%search-load-path}
917 will try each extension automatically.
918 @end deffn
919
920 @defvar %load-extensions
921 A list of default file extensions for files containing Scheme code.
922 @code{%search-load-path} tries each of these extensions when looking for
923 a file to load. By default, @code{%load-extensions} is bound to the
924 list @code{("" ".scm")}.
925 @end defvar
926
927 As mentioned above, when Guile searches the @code{%load-path} for a
928 source file, it will also search the @code{%load-compiled-path} for a
929 corresponding compiled file. If the compiled file is as new or newer
930 than the source file, it will be loaded instead of the source file,
931 using @code{load-compiled}.
932
933 @defvar %load-compiled-path
934 Like @code{%load-path}, but for compiled files. By default, this path
935 has two entries: one for compiled files from Guile itself, and one for
936 site packages. The @env{GUILE_LOAD_COMPILED_PATH} environment variable
937 can be used to prepend or append additional directories
938 (@pxref{Environment Variables}).
939 @end defvar
940
941 When @code{primitive-load-path} searches the @code{%load-compiled-path}
942 for a corresponding compiled file for a relative path it does so by
943 appending @code{.go} to the relative path. For example, searching for
944 @code{ice-9/popen} could find
945 @code{/usr/lib/guile/2.0/ccache/ice-9/popen.go}, and use it instead of
946 @code{/usr/share/guile/2.0/ice-9/popen.scm}.
947
948 If @code{primitive-load-path} does not find a corresponding @code{.go}
949 file in the @code{%load-compiled-path}, or the @code{.go} file is out of
950 date, it will search for a corresponding auto-compiled file in the
951 fallback path, possibly creating one if one does not exist.
952
953 @xref{Installing Site Packages}, for more on how to correctly install
954 site packages. @xref{Modules and the File System}, for more on the
955 relationship between load paths and modules. @xref{Compilation}, for
956 more on the fallback path and auto-compilation.
957
958 Finally, there are a couple of helper procedures for general path
959 manipulation.
960
961 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} parse-path path [tail]
962 @deffnx {C Function} scm_parse_path (path, tail)
963 Parse @var{path}, which is expected to be a colon-separated string, into
964 a list and return the resulting list with @var{tail} appended. If
965 @var{path} is @code{#f}, @var{tail} is returned.
966 @end deffn
967
968 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} parse-path-with-ellipsis path base
969 @deffnx {C Function} scm_parse_path_with_ellipsis (path, base)
970 Parse @var{path}, which is expected to be a colon-separated string, into
971 a list and return the resulting list with @var{base} (a list) spliced in
972 place of the @code{...} path component, if present, or else @var{base}
973 is added to the end. If @var{path} is @code{#f}, @var{base} is
974 returned.
975 @end deffn
976
977 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} search-path path filename [extensions [require-exts?]]
978 @deffnx {C Function} scm_search_path (path, filename, rest)
979 Search @var{path} for a directory containing a file named
980 @var{filename}. The file must be readable, and not a directory. If we
981 find one, return its full filename; otherwise, return @code{#f}. If
982 @var{filename} is absolute, return it unchanged. If given,
983 @var{extensions} is a list of strings; for each directory in @var{path},
984 we search for @var{filename} concatenated with each @var{extension}. If
985 @var{require-exts?} is true, require that the returned file name have
986 one of the given extensions; if @var{require-exts?} is not given, it
987 defaults to @code{#f}.
988
989 For compatibility with Guile 1.8 and earlier, the C function takes only
990 three arguments.
991 @end deffn
992
993
994 @node Character Encoding of Source Files
995 @subsection Character Encoding of Source Files
996
997 @cindex source file encoding
998 @cindex primitive-load
999 @cindex load
1000 Scheme source code files are usually encoded in ASCII or UTF-8, but the
1001 built-in reader can interpret other character encodings as well. When
1002 Guile loads Scheme source code, it uses the @code{file-encoding}
1003 procedure (described below) to try to guess the encoding of the file.
1004 In the absence of any hints, UTF-8 is assumed. One way to provide a
1005 hint about the encoding of a source file is to place a coding
1006 declaration in the top 500 characters of the file.
1007
1008 A coding declaration has the form @code{coding: XXXXXX}, where
1009 @code{XXXXXX} is the name of a character encoding in which the source
1010 code file has been encoded. The coding declaration must appear in a
1011 scheme comment. It can either be a semicolon-initiated comment, or the
1012 first block @code{#!} comment in the file.
1013
1014 The name of the character encoding in the coding declaration is
1015 typically lower case and containing only letters, numbers, and hyphens,
1016 as recognized by @code{set-port-encoding!} (@pxref{Ports,
1017 @code{set-port-encoding!}}). Common examples of character encoding
1018 names are @code{utf-8} and @code{iso-8859-1},
1019 @url{http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets, as defined by
1020 IANA}. Thus, the coding declaration is mostly compatible with Emacs.
1021
1022 However, there are some differences in encoding names recognized by
1023 Emacs and encoding names defined by IANA, the latter being essentially a
1024 subset of the former. For instance, @code{latin-1} is a valid encoding
1025 name for Emacs, but it's not according to the IANA standard, which Guile
1026 follows; instead, you should use @code{iso-8859-1}, which is both
1027 understood by Emacs and dubbed by IANA (IANA writes it uppercase but
1028 Emacs wants it lowercase and Guile is case insensitive.)
1029
1030 For source code, only a subset of all possible character encodings can
1031 be interpreted by the built-in source code reader. Only those
1032 character encodings in which ASCII text appears unmodified can be
1033 used. This includes @code{UTF-8} and @code{ISO-8859-1} through
1034 @code{ISO-8859-15}. The multi-byte character encodings @code{UTF-16}
1035 and @code{UTF-32} may not be used because they are not compatible with
1036 ASCII.
1037
1038 @cindex read
1039 @cindex encoding
1040 @cindex port encoding
1041 @findex set-port-encoding!
1042 There might be a scenario in which one would want to read non-ASCII
1043 code from a port, such as with the function @code{read}, instead of
1044 with @code{load}. If the port's character encoding is the same as the
1045 encoding of the code to be read by the port, not other special
1046 handling is necessary. The port will automatically do the character
1047 encoding conversion. The functions @code{setlocale} or by
1048 @code{set-port-encoding!} are used to set port encodings
1049 (@pxref{Ports}).
1050
1051 If a port is used to read code of unknown character encoding, it can
1052 accomplish this in three steps. First, the character encoding of the
1053 port should be set to ISO-8859-1 using @code{set-port-encoding!}.
1054 Then, the procedure @code{file-encoding}, described below, is used to
1055 scan for a coding declaration when reading from the port. As a side
1056 effect, it rewinds the port after its scan is complete. After that,
1057 the port's character encoding should be set to the encoding returned
1058 by @code{file-encoding}, if any, again by using
1059 @code{set-port-encoding!}. Then the code can be read as normal.
1060
1061 Alternatively, one can use the @code{#:guess-encoding} keyword argument
1062 of @code{open-file} and related procedures. @xref{File Ports}.
1063
1064 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} file-encoding port
1065 @deffnx {C Function} scm_file_encoding (port)
1066 Attempt to scan the first few hundred bytes from the @var{port} for
1067 hints about its character encoding. Return a string containing the
1068 encoding name or @code{#f} if the encoding cannot be determined. The
1069 port is rewound.
1070
1071 Currently, the only supported method is to look for an Emacs-like
1072 character coding declaration (@pxref{Recognize Coding, how Emacs
1073 recognizes file encoding,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Reference Manual}). The
1074 coding declaration is of the form @code{coding: XXXXX} and must appear
1075 in a Scheme comment. Additional heuristics may be added in the future.
1076 @end deffn
1077
1078
1079 @node Delayed Evaluation
1080 @subsection Delayed Evaluation
1081 @cindex delayed evaluation
1082 @cindex promises
1083
1084 Promises are a convenient way to defer a calculation until its result
1085 is actually needed, and to run such a calculation only once. Also
1086 @pxref{SRFI-45}.
1087
1088 @deffn syntax delay expr
1089 @rnindex delay
1090 Return a promise object which holds the given @var{expr} expression,
1091 ready to be evaluated by a later @code{force}.
1092 @end deffn
1093
1094 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} promise? obj
1095 @deffnx {C Function} scm_promise_p (obj)
1096 Return true if @var{obj} is a promise.
1097 @end deffn
1098
1099 @rnindex force
1100 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} force p
1101 @deffnx {C Function} scm_force (p)
1102 Return the value obtained from evaluating the @var{expr} in the given
1103 promise @var{p}. If @var{p} has previously been forced then its
1104 @var{expr} is not evaluated again, instead the value obtained at that
1105 time is simply returned.
1106
1107 During a @code{force}, an @var{expr} can call @code{force} again on
1108 its own promise, resulting in a recursive evaluation of that
1109 @var{expr}. The first evaluation to return gives the value for the
1110 promise. Higher evaluations run to completion in the normal way, but
1111 their results are ignored, @code{force} always returns the first
1112 value.
1113 @end deffn
1114
1115
1116 @node Local Evaluation
1117 @subsection Local Evaluation
1118
1119 Guile includes a facility to capture a lexical environment, and later
1120 evaluate a new expression within that environment. This code is
1121 implemented in a module.
1122
1123 @example
1124 (use-modules (ice-9 local-eval))
1125 @end example
1126
1127 @deffn syntax the-environment
1128 Captures and returns a lexical environment for use with
1129 @code{local-eval} or @code{local-compile}.
1130 @end deffn
1131
1132 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} local-eval exp env
1133 @deffnx {C Function} scm_local_eval (exp, env)
1134 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} local-compile exp env [opts=()]
1135 Evaluate or compile the expression @var{exp} in the lexical environment
1136 @var{env}.
1137 @end deffn
1138
1139 Here is a simple example, illustrating that it is the variable
1140 that gets captured, not just its value at one point in time.
1141
1142 @example
1143 (define e (let ((x 100)) (the-environment)))
1144 (define fetch-x (local-eval '(lambda () x) e))
1145 (fetch-x)
1146 @result{} 100
1147 (local-eval '(set! x 42) e)
1148 (fetch-x)
1149 @result{} 42
1150 @end example
1151
1152 While @var{exp} is evaluated within the lexical environment of
1153 @code{(the-environment)}, it has the dynamic environment of the call to
1154 @code{local-eval}.
1155
1156 @code{local-eval} and @code{local-compile} can only evaluate
1157 expressions, not definitions.
1158
1159 @example
1160 (local-eval '(define foo 42)
1161 (let ((x 100)) (the-environment)))
1162 @result{} syntax error: definition in expression context
1163 @end example
1164
1165 Note that the current implementation of @code{(the-environment)} only
1166 captures ``normal'' lexical bindings, and pattern variables bound by
1167 @code{syntax-case}. It does not currently capture local syntax
1168 transformers bound by @code{let-syntax}, @code{letrec-syntax} or
1169 non-top-level @code{define-syntax} forms. Any attempt to reference such
1170 captured syntactic keywords via @code{local-eval} or
1171 @code{local-compile} produces an error.
1172
1173
1174 @node Local Inclusion
1175 @subsection Local Inclusion
1176
1177 This section has discussed various means of linking Scheme code
1178 together: fundamentally, loading up files at run-time using @code{load}
1179 and @code{load-compiled}. Guile provides another option to compose
1180 parts of programs together at expansion-time instead of at run-time.
1181
1182 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} include file-name
1183 Open @var{file-name}, at expansion-time, and read the Scheme forms that
1184 it contains, splicing them into the location of the @code{include},
1185 within a @code{begin}.
1186
1187 If @var{file-name} is a relative path, it is searched for relative to
1188 the path that contains the file that the @code{include} for appears in.
1189 @end deffn
1190
1191 If you are a C programmer, if @code{load} in Scheme is like
1192 @code{dlopen} in C, consider @code{include} to be like the C
1193 preprocessor's @code{#include}. When you use @code{include}, it is as
1194 if the contents of the included file were typed in instead of the
1195 @code{include} form.
1196
1197 Because the code is included at compile-time, it is available to the
1198 macroexpander. Syntax definitions in the included file are available to
1199 later code in the form in which the @code{include} appears, without the
1200 need for @code{eval-when}. (@xref{Eval When}.)
1201
1202 For the same reason, compiling a form that uses @code{include} results
1203 in one compilation unit, composed of multiple files. Loading the
1204 compiled file is one @code{stat} operation for the compilation unit,
1205 instead of @code{2*@var{n}} in the case of @code{load} (once for each
1206 loaded source file, and once each corresponding compiled file, in the
1207 best case).
1208
1209 Unlike @code{load}, @code{include} also works within nested lexical
1210 contexts. It so happens that the optimizer works best within a lexical
1211 context, because all of the uses of bindings in a lexical context are
1212 visible, so composing files by including them within a @code{(let ()
1213 ...)} can sometimes lead to important speed improvements.
1214
1215 On the other hand, @code{include} does have all the disadvantages of
1216 early binding: once the code with the @code{include} is compiled, no
1217 change to the included file is reflected in the future behavior of the
1218 including form.
1219
1220 Also, the particular form of @code{include}, which requires an absolute
1221 path, or a path relative to the current directory at compile-time, is
1222 not very amenable to compiling the source in one place, but then
1223 installing the source to another place. For this reason, Guile provides
1224 another form, @code{include-from-path}, which looks for the source file
1225 to include within a load path.
1226
1227 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} include-from-path file-name
1228 Like @code{include}, but instead of expecting @code{file-name} to be an
1229 absolute file name, it is expected to be a relative path to search in
1230 the @code{%load-path}.
1231 @end deffn
1232
1233 @code{include-from-path} is more useful when you want to install all of
1234 the source files for a package (as you should!). It makes it possible
1235 to evaluate an installed file from source, instead of relying on the
1236 @code{.go} file being up to date.
1237
1238 @node REPL Servers
1239 @subsection REPL Servers
1240
1241 @cindex REPL server
1242
1243 The procedures in this section are provided by
1244 @lisp
1245 (use-modules (system repl server))
1246 @end lisp
1247
1248 When an application is written in Guile, it is often convenient to
1249 allow the user to be able to interact with it by evaluating Scheme
1250 expressions in a REPL.
1251
1252 The procedures of this module allow you to spawn a @dfn{REPL server},
1253 which permits interaction over a local or TCP connection. Guile itself
1254 uses them internally to implement the @option{--listen} switch,
1255 @ref{Command-line Options}.
1256
1257 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-tcp-server-socket [#:host=#f] @
1258 [#:addr] [#:port=37146]
1259 Return a stream socket bound to a given address @var{addr} and port
1260 number @var{port}. If the @var{host} is given, and @var{addr} is not,
1261 then the @var{host} string is converted to an address. If neither is
1262 given, we use the loopback address.
1263 @end deffn
1264
1265 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-unix-domain-server-socket [#:path="/tmp/guile-socket"]
1266 Return a UNIX domain socket, bound to a given @var{path}.
1267 @end deffn
1268
1269 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} run-server [server-socket]
1270 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} spawn-server [server-socket]
1271 Create and run a REPL, making it available over the given
1272 @var{server-socket}. If @var{server-socket} is not provided, it
1273 defaults to the socket created by calling @code{make-tcp-server-socket}
1274 with no arguments.
1275
1276 @code{run-server} runs the server in the current thread, whereas
1277 @code{spawn-server} runs the server in a new thread.
1278 @end deffn
1279
1280 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stop-server-and-clients!
1281 Closes the connection on all running server sockets.
1282 @end deffn
1283
1284 @c Local Variables:
1285 @c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
1286 @c End: