An Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp

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This is An Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp, for people who are not programmers.



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This master menu first lists each chapter and index; then it lists every node in every chapter.

Table of Contents

Short Table of Contents


Preface

Most of the GNU Emacs integrated environment is written in the programming language called Emacs Lisp. The code written in this programming language is the software—the sets of instructions—that tell the computer what to do when you give it commands. Emacs is designed so that you can write new code in Emacs Lisp and easily install it as an extension to the editor.

(GNU Emacs is sometimes called an “extensible editor”, but it does much more than provide editing capabilities. It is better to refer to Emacs as an “extensible computing environment”. However, that phrase is quite a mouthful. It is easier to refer to Emacs simply as an editor. Moreover, everything you do in Emacs—find the Mayan date and phases of the moon, simplify polynomials, debug code, manage files, read letters, write books—all these activities are kinds of editing in the most general sense of the word.)


Why Study Emacs Lisp?

Although Emacs Lisp is usually thought of in association only with Emacs, it is a full computer programming language. You can use Emacs Lisp as you would any other programming language.

Perhaps you want to understand programming; perhaps you want to extend Emacs; or perhaps you want to become a programmer. This introduction to Emacs Lisp is designed to get you started: to guide you in learning the fundamentals of programming, and more importantly, to show you how you can teach yourself to go further.


On Reading this Text

All through this document, you will see little sample programs you can run inside of Emacs. If you read this document in Info inside of GNU Emacs, you can run the programs as they appear. (This is easy to do and is explained when the examples are presented.) Alternatively, you can read this introduction as a printed book while sitting beside a computer running Emacs. (This is what I like to do; I like printed books.) If you don’t have a running Emacs beside you, you can still read this book, but in this case, it is best to treat it as a novel or as a travel guide to a country not yet visited: interesting, but not the same as being there.

Much of this introduction is dedicated to walkthroughs or guided tours of code used in GNU Emacs. These tours are designed for two purposes: first, to give you familiarity with real, working code (code you use every day); and, second, to give you familiarity with the way Emacs works. It is interesting to see how a working environment is implemented. Also, I hope that you will pick up the habit of browsing through source code. You can learn from it and mine it for ideas. Having GNU Emacs is like having a dragon’s cave of treasures.

In addition to learning about Emacs as an editor and Emacs Lisp as a programming language, the examples and guided tours will give you an opportunity to get acquainted with Emacs as a Lisp programming environment. GNU Emacs supports programming and provides tools that you will want to become comfortable using, such as M-. (the key which invokes the xref-find-definitions command). You will also learn about buffers and other objects that are part of the environment. Learning about these features of Emacs is like learning new routes around your home town.

Finally, I hope to convey some of the skills for using Emacs to learn aspects of programming that you don’t know. You can often use Emacs to help you understand what puzzles you or to find out how to do something new. This self-reliance is not only a pleasure, but an advantage.


For Whom This is Written

This text is written as an elementary introduction for people who are not programmers. If you are a programmer, you may not be satisfied with this primer. The reason is that you may have become expert at reading reference manuals and be put off by the way this text is organized.

An expert programmer who reviewed this text said to me:

I prefer to learn from reference manuals. I “dive into” each paragraph, and “come up for air” between paragraphs.

When I get to the end of a paragraph, I assume that subject is done, finished, that I know everything I need (with the possible exception of the case when the next paragraph starts talking about it in more detail). I expect that a well written reference manual will not have a lot of redundancy, and that it will have excellent pointers to the (one) place where the information I want is.

This introduction is not written for this person!

Firstly, I try to say everything at least three times: first, to introduce it; second, to show it in context; and third, to show it in a different context, or to review it.

Secondly, I hardly ever put all the information about a subject in one place, much less in one paragraph. To my way of thinking, that imposes too heavy a burden on the reader. Instead I try to explain only what you need to know at the time. (Sometimes I include a little extra information so you won’t be surprised later when the additional information is formally introduced.)

When you read this text, you are not expected to learn everything the first time. Frequently, you need make only a nodding acquaintance with some of the items mentioned. My hope is that I have structured the text and given you enough hints that you will be alert to what is important, and concentrate on it.

You will need to dive into some paragraphs; there is no other way to read them. But I have tried to keep down the number of such paragraphs. This book is intended as an approachable hill, rather than as a daunting mountain.

This book, An Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp, has a companion document, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. The reference manual has more detail than this introduction. In the reference manual, all the information about one topic is concentrated in one place. You should turn to it if you are like the programmer quoted above. And, of course, after you have read this Introduction, you will find the Reference Manual useful when you are writing your own programs.


Lisp History

Lisp was first developed in the late 1950s at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for research in artificial intelligence. The great power of the Lisp language makes it superior for other purposes as well, such as writing editor commands and integrated environments.

GNU Emacs Lisp is largely inspired by Maclisp, which was written at MIT in the 1960s. It is somewhat inspired by Common Lisp, which became a standard in the 1980s. However, Emacs Lisp is much simpler than Common Lisp. (The standard Emacs distribution contains an optional extensions file, cl-lib.el, that adds many Common Lisp features to Emacs Lisp.)


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A Note for Novices

If you don’t know GNU Emacs, you can still read this document profitably. However, I recommend you learn Emacs, if only to learn to move around your computer screen. You can teach yourself how to use Emacs with the built-in tutorial. To use it, type C-h t. (This means you press and release the CTRL key and the h at the same time, and then press and release t.)

Also, I often refer to one of Emacs’s standard commands by listing the keys which you press to invoke the command and then giving the name of the command in parentheses, like this: M-C-\ (indent-region). What this means is that the indent-region command is customarily invoked by typing M-C-\. (You can, if you wish, change the keys that are typed to invoke the command; this is called rebinding. See Keymaps.) The abbreviation M-C-\ means that you type your META key, CTRL key and \ key all at the same time. (On many modern keyboards the META key is labeled ALT.) Sometimes a combination like this is called a keychord, since it is similar to the way you play a chord on a piano. If your keyboard does not have a META key, the ESC key prefix is used in place of it. In this case, M-C-\ means that you press and release your ESC key and then type the CTRL key and the \ key at the same time. But usually M-C-\ means press the CTRL key along with the key that is labeled ALT and, at the same time, press the \ key.

In addition to typing a lone keychord, you can prefix what you type with C-u, which is called the universal argument. The C-u keychord passes an argument to the subsequent command. Thus, to indent a region of plain text by 6 spaces, mark the region, and then type C-u 6 M-C-\. (If you do not specify a number, Emacs either passes the number 4 to the command or otherwise runs the command differently than it would otherwise.) See Numeric Arguments in The GNU Emacs Manual.

If you are reading this in Info using GNU Emacs, you can read through this whole document just by pressing the space bar, SPC. (To learn about Info, type C-h i and then select Info.)

A note on terminology: when I use the word Lisp alone, I often am referring to the various dialects of Lisp in general, but when I speak of Emacs Lisp, I am referring to GNU Emacs Lisp in particular.


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Thank You

My thanks to all who helped me with this book. My especial thanks to Jim Blandy, Noah Friedman, Jim Kingdon, Roland McGrath, Frank Ritter, Randy Smith, Richard M. Stallman, and Melissa Weisshaus. My thanks also go to both Philip Johnson and David Stampe for their patient encouragement. My mistakes are my own.

Robert J. Chassell [email protected]


1 List Processing

To the untutored eye, Lisp is a strange programming language. In Lisp code there are parentheses everywhere. Some people even claim that the name stands for “Lots of Isolated Silly Parentheses”. But the claim is unwarranted. Lisp stands for LISt Processing, and the programming language handles lists (and lists of lists) by putting them between parentheses. The parentheses mark the boundaries of the list. Sometimes a list is preceded by an apostrophe ‘'’, called a single-quote in Lisp.1 Lists are the basis of Lisp.


1.1 Lisp Lists

In Lisp, a list looks like this: '(rose violet daisy buttercup). This list is preceded by a single apostrophe. It could just as well be written as follows, which looks more like the kind of list you are likely to be familiar with:

'(rose
  violet
  daisy
  buttercup)

The elements of this list are the names of the four different flowers, separated from each other by whitespace and surrounded by parentheses, like flowers in a field with a stone wall around them.


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Numbers, Lists inside of Lists

Lists can also have numbers in them, as in this list: (+ 2 2). This list has a plus-sign, ‘+’, followed by two ‘2’s, each separated by whitespace.

In Lisp, both data and programs are represented the same way; that is, they are both lists of words, numbers, or other lists, separated by whitespace and surrounded by parentheses. (Since a program looks like data, one program may easily serve as data for another; this is a very powerful feature of Lisp.) (Incidentally, these two parenthetical remarks are not Lisp lists, because they contain ‘;’ and ‘.’ as punctuation marks.)

Here is another list, this time with a list inside of it:

'(this list has (a list inside of it))

The components of this list are the words ‘this’, ‘list’, ‘has’, and the list ‘(a list inside of it)’. The interior list is made up of the words ‘a’, ‘list’, ‘inside’, ‘of’, ‘it’.


1.1.1 Lisp Atoms

In Lisp, what we have been calling words are called atoms. This term comes from the historical meaning of the word atom, which means “indivisible”. As far as Lisp is concerned, the words we have been using in the lists cannot be divided into any smaller parts and still mean the same thing as part of a program; likewise with numbers and single character symbols like ‘+’. On the other hand, unlike an ancient atom, a list can be split into parts. (See car cdr & cons Fundamental Functions.)

In a list, atoms are separated from each other by whitespace. They can be right next to a parenthesis.

Technically speaking, a list in Lisp consists of parentheses surrounding atoms separated by whitespace or surrounding other lists or surrounding both atoms and other lists. A list can have just one atom in it or have nothing in it at all. A list with nothing in it looks like this: (), and is called the empty list. Unlike anything else, an empty list is considered both an atom and a list at the same time.

The printed representation of both atoms and lists are called symbolic expressions or, more concisely, s-expressions. The word expression by itself can refer to either the printed representation, or to the atom or list as it is held internally in the computer. Often, people use the term expression indiscriminately. (Also, in many texts, the word form is used as a synonym for expression.)

Incidentally, the atoms that make up our universe were named such when they were thought to be indivisible; but it has been found that physical atoms are not indivisible. Parts can split off an atom or it can fission into two parts of roughly equal size. Physical atoms were named prematurely, before their truer nature was found. In Lisp, certain kinds of atom, such as an array, can be separated into parts; but the mechanism for doing this is different from the mechanism for splitting a list. As far as list operations are concerned, the atoms of a list are unsplittable.

As in English, the meanings of the component letters of a Lisp atom are different from the meaning the letters make as a word. For example, the word for the South American sloth, the ‘ai’, is completely different from the two words, ‘a’, and ‘i’.

There are many kinds of atom in nature but only a few in Lisp: for example, numbers, such as 37, 511, or 1729, and symbols, such as ‘+’, ‘foo’, or ‘forward-line’. The words we have listed in the examples above are all symbols. In everyday Lisp conversation, the word “atom” is not often used, because programmers usually try to be more specific about what kind of atom they are dealing with. Lisp programming is mostly about symbols (and sometimes numbers) within lists. (Incidentally, the preceding three word parenthetical remark is a proper list in Lisp, since it consists of atoms, which in this case are symbols, separated by whitespace and enclosed by parentheses, without any non-Lisp punctuation.)

Text between double quotation marks—even sentences or paragraphs—is also an atom. Here is an example:

'(this list includes "text between quotation marks.")

In Lisp, all of the quoted text including the punctuation mark and the blank spaces is a single atom. This kind of atom is called a string (for “string of characters”) and is the sort of thing that is used for messages that a computer can print for a human to read. Strings are a different kind of atom than numbers or symbols and are used differently.


1.1.2 Whitespace in Lists

The amount of whitespace in a list does not matter. From the point of view of the Lisp language,

'(this list
   looks like this)

is exactly the same as this:

'(this list looks like this)

Both examples show what to Lisp is the same list, the list made up of the symbols ‘this’, ‘list’, ‘looks’, ‘like’, and ‘this’ in that order.

Extra whitespace and newlines are designed to make a list more readable by humans. When Lisp reads the expression, it gets rid of all the extra whitespace (but it needs to have at least one space between atoms in order to tell them apart.)

Odd as it seems, the examples we have seen cover almost all of what Lisp lists look like! Every other list in Lisp looks more or less like one of these examples, except that the list may be longer and more complex. In brief, a list is between parentheses, a string is between quotation marks, a symbol looks like a word, and a number looks like a number. (For certain situations, square brackets, dots and a few other special characters may be used; however, we will go quite far without them.)


1.1.3 GNU Emacs Helps You Type Lists

When you type a Lisp expression in GNU Emacs using either Lisp Interaction mode or Emacs Lisp mode, you have available to you several commands to format the Lisp expression so it is easy to read. For example, pressing the TAB key automatically indents the line the cursor is on by the right amount. A command to properly indent the code in a region is customarily bound to M-C-\. Indentation is designed so that you can see which elements of a list belong to which list—elements of a sub-list are indented more than the elements of the enclosing list.

In addition, when you type a closing parenthesis, Emacs momentarily jumps the cursor back to the matching opening parenthesis, so you can see which one it is. This is very useful, since every list you type in Lisp must have its closing parenthesis match its opening parenthesis. (See Major Modes in The GNU Emacs Manual, for more information about Emacs’s modes.)


1.2 Run a Program

A list in Lisp—any list—is a program ready to run. If you run it (for which the Lisp jargon is evaluate), the computer will do one of three things: do nothing except return to you the list itself; send you an error message; or, treat the first symbol in the list as a command to do something. (Usually, of course, it is the last of these three things that you really want!)

The single apostrophe, ', that I put in front of some of the example lists in preceding sections is called a quote; when it precedes a list, it tells Lisp to do nothing with the list, other than take it as it is written. But if there is no quote preceding a list, the first item of the list is special: it is a command for the computer to obey. (In Lisp, these commands are called functions.) The list (+ 2 2) shown above did not have a quote in front of it, so Lisp understands that the + is an instruction to do something with the rest of the list: add the numbers that follow.

If you are reading this inside of GNU Emacs in Info, here is how you can evaluate such a list: place your cursor immediately after the right hand parenthesis of the following list and then type C-x C-e:

(+ 2 2)

You will see the number 4 appear in the echo area2. (What you have just done is evaluate the list. The echo area is the line at the bottom of the screen that displays or echoes text.) Now try the same thing with a quoted list: place the cursor right after the following list and type C-x C-e:

'(this is a quoted list)

You will see (this is a quoted list) appear in the echo area.

In both cases, what you are doing is giving a command to the program inside of GNU Emacs called the Lisp interpreter—giving the interpreter a command to evaluate the expression. The name of the Lisp interpreter comes from the word for the task done by a human who comes up with the meaning of an expression—who interprets it.

You can also evaluate an atom that is not part of a list—one that is not surrounded by parentheses; again, the Lisp interpreter translates from the humanly readable expression to the language of the computer. But before discussing this (see Variables), we will discuss what the Lisp interpreter does when you make an error.


1.3 Generate an Error Message

Partly so you won’t worry if you do it accidentally, we will now give a command to the Lisp interpreter that generates an error message. This is a harmless activity; and indeed, we will often try to generate error messages intentionally. Once you understand the jargon, error messages can be informative. Instead of being called “error” messages, they should be called “help” messages. They are like signposts to a traveler in a strange country; deciphering them can be hard, but once understood, they can point the way.

The error message is generated by a built-in GNU Emacs debugger. We will enter the debugger. You get out of the debugger by typing q.

What we will do is evaluate a list that is not quoted and does not have a meaningful command as its first element. Here is a list almost exactly the same as the one we just used, but without the single-quote in front of it. Position the cursor right after it and type C-x C-e:

(this is an unquoted list)

A *Backtrace* window will open up and you should see the following in it:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function this)
  (this is an unquoted list)
  eval((this is an unquoted list) nil)
  elisp--eval-last-sexp(nil)
  eval-last-sexp(nil)
  funcall-interactively(eval-last-sexp nil)
  call-interactively(eval-last-sexp nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-last-sexp)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

Your cursor will be in this window (you may have to wait a few seconds before it becomes visible). To quit the debugger and make the debugger window go away, type:

q

Please type q right now, so you become confident that you can get out of the debugger. Then, type C-x C-e again to re-enter it.

Based on what we already know, we can almost read this error message.

You read the *Backtrace* buffer from the bottom up; it tells you what Emacs did. When you typed C-x C-e, you made an interactive call to the command eval-last-sexp. eval is an abbreviation for “evaluate” and sexp is an abbreviation for “symbolic expression”. The command means “evaluate last symbolic expression”, which is the expression just before your cursor.

Each line above tells you what the Lisp interpreter evaluated next. The most recent action is at the top. The buffer is called the *Backtrace* buffer because it enables you to track Emacs backwards.

At the top of the *Backtrace* buffer, you see the line:

Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function this)

The Lisp interpreter tried to evaluate the first atom of the list, the word ‘this’. It is this action that generated the error message ‘void-function this’.

The message contains the words ‘void-function’ and ‘this’.

The word ‘function’ was mentioned once before. It is a very important word. For our purposes, we can define it by saying that a function is a set of instructions to the computer that tell the computer to do something.

Now we can begin to understand the error message: ‘void-function this’. The function (that is, the word ‘this’) does not have a definition of any set of instructions for the computer to carry out.

The slightly odd word, ‘void-function’, is designed to cover the way Emacs Lisp is implemented, which is that when a symbol does not have a function definition attached to it, the place that should contain the instructions is void.

On the other hand, since we were able to add 2 plus 2 successfully, by evaluating (+ 2 2), we can infer that the symbol + must have a set of instructions for the computer to obey and those instructions must be to add the numbers that follow the +.

It is possible to prevent Emacs entering the debugger in cases like this. We do not explain how to do that here, but we will mention what the result looks like, because you may encounter a similar situation if there is a bug in some Emacs code that you are using. In such cases, you will see only one line of error message; it will appear in the echo area and look like this:

Symbol's function definition is void: this

The message goes away as soon as you type a key, even just to move the cursor.

We know the meaning of the word ‘Symbol’. It refers to the first atom of the list, the word ‘this’. The word ‘function’ refers to the instructions that tell the computer what to do. (Technically, the symbol tells the computer where to find the instructions, but this is a complication we can ignore for the moment.)

The error message can be understood: ‘Symbol's function definition is void: this’. The symbol (that is, the word ‘this’) lacks instructions for the computer to carry out.


1.4 Symbol Names and Function Definitions

We can articulate another characteristic of Lisp based on what we have discussed so far—an important characteristic: a symbol, like +, is not itself the set of instructions for the computer to carry out. Instead, the symbol is used, perhaps temporarily, as a way of locating the definition or set of instructions. What we see is the name through which the instructions can be found. Names of people work the same way. I can be referred to as ‘Bob’; however, I am not the letters ‘B’, ‘o’, ‘b’ but am, or was, the consciousness consistently associated with a particular life-form. The name is not me, but it can be used to refer to me.

In Lisp, one set of instructions can be attached to several names. For example, the computer instructions for adding numbers can be linked to the symbol plus as well as to the symbol + (and are in some dialects of Lisp). Among humans, I can be referred to as ‘Robert’ as well as ‘Bob’ and by other words as well.

On the other hand, a symbol can have only one function definition attached to it at a time. Otherwise, the computer would be confused as to which definition to use. If this were the case among people, only one person in the world could be named ‘Bob’. However, the function definition to which the name refers can be changed readily. (See Install a Function Definition.)

Since Emacs Lisp is large, it is customary to name symbols in a way that identifies the part of Emacs to which the function belongs. Thus, all the names for functions that deal with Texinfo start with ‘texinfo-’ and those for functions that deal with reading mail start with ‘rmail-’.


1.5 The Lisp Interpreter

Based on what we have seen, we can now start to figure out what the Lisp interpreter does when we command it to evaluate a list. First, it looks to see whether there is a quote before the list; if there is, the interpreter just gives us the list. On the other hand, if there is no quote, the interpreter looks at the first element in the list and sees whether it has a function definition. If it does, the interpreter carries out the instructions in the function definition. Otherwise, the interpreter prints an error message.

This is how Lisp works. Simple. There are added complications which we will get to in a minute, but these are the fundamentals. Of course, to write Lisp programs, you need to know how to write function definitions and attach them to names, and how to do this without confusing either yourself or the computer.


Complications

Now, for the first complication. In addition to lists, the Lisp interpreter can evaluate a symbol that is not quoted and does not have parentheses around it. The Lisp interpreter will attempt to determine the symbol’s value as a variable. This situation is described in the section on variables. (See Variables.)

The second complication occurs because some functions are unusual and do not work in the usual manner. Those that don’t are called special forms. They are used for special jobs, like defining a function, and there are not many of them. In the next few chapters, you will be introduced to several of the more important special forms.

As well as special forms, there are also macros. A macro is a construct defined in Lisp, which differs from a function in that it translates a Lisp expression into another expression that is to be evaluated in place of the original expression. (See Lisp macro.)

For the purposes of this introduction, you do not need to worry too much about whether something is a special form, macro, or ordinary function. For example, if is a special form (see The if Special Form), but when is a macro (see Lisp macro). In earlier versions of Emacs, defun was a special form, but now it is a macro (see The defun Macro). It still behaves in the same way.

The final complication is this: if the function that the Lisp interpreter is looking at is not a special form, and if it is part of a list, the Lisp interpreter looks to see whether the list has a list inside of it. If there is an inner list, the Lisp interpreter first figures out what it should do with the inside list, and then it works on the outside list. If there is yet another list embedded inside the inner list, it works on that one first, and so on. It always works on the innermost list first. The interpreter works on the innermost list first, to evaluate the result of that list. The result may be used by the enclosing expression.

Otherwise, the interpreter works left to right, from one expression to the next.


1.5.1 Byte Compiling

One other aspect of interpreting: the Lisp interpreter is able to interpret two kinds of entity: humanly readable code, on which we will focus exclusively, and specially processed code, called byte compiled code, which is not humanly readable. Byte compiled code runs faster than humanly readable code.

You can transform humanly readable code into byte compiled code by running one of the compile commands such as byte-compile-file. Byte compiled code is usually stored in a file that ends with a .elc extension rather than a .el extension. You will see both kinds of file in the emacs/lisp directory; the files to read are those with .el extensions.

As a practical matter, for most things you might do to customize or extend Emacs, you do not need to byte compile; and I will not discuss the topic here. See Byte Compilation in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for a full description of byte compilation.


1.6 Evaluation

When the Lisp interpreter works on an expression, the term for the activity is called evaluation. We say that the interpreter “evaluates the expression”. I’ve used this term several times before. The word comes from its use in everyday language, “to ascertain the value or amount of; to appraise”, according to Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary.


How the Lisp Interpreter Acts

After evaluating an expression, the Lisp interpreter will most likely return the value that the computer produces by carrying out the instructions it found in the function definition, or perhaps it will give up on that function and produce an error message. (The interpreter may also find itself tossed, so to speak, to a different function or it may attempt to repeat continually what it is doing for ever and ever in an infinite loop. These actions are less common; and we can ignore them.) Most frequently, the interpreter returns a value.

At the same time the interpreter returns a value, it may do something else as well, such as move a cursor or copy a file; this other kind of action is called a side effect. Actions that we humans think are important, such as printing results, are often side effects to the Lisp interpreter. It is fairly easy to learn to use side effects.

In summary, evaluating a symbolic expression most commonly causes the Lisp interpreter to return a value and perhaps carry out a side effect; or else produce an error.


1.6.1 Evaluating Inner Lists

If evaluation applies to a list that is inside another list, the outer list may use the value returned by the first evaluation as information when the outer list is evaluated. This explains why inner expressions are evaluated first: the values they return are used by the outer expressions.

We can investigate this process by evaluating another addition example. Place your cursor after the following expression and type C-x C-e:

(+ 2 (+ 3 3))

The number 8 will appear in the echo area.

What happens is that the Lisp interpreter first evaluates the inner expression, (+ 3 3), for which the value 6 is returned; then it evaluates the outer expression as if it were written (+ 2 6), which returns the value 8. Since there are no more enclosing expressions to evaluate, the interpreter prints that value in the echo area.

Now it is easy to understand the name of the command invoked by the keystrokes C-x C-e: the name is eval-last-sexp. The letters sexp are an abbreviation for “symbolic expression”, and eval is an abbreviation for “evaluate”. The command evaluates the last symbolic expression.

As an experiment, you can try evaluating the expression by putting the cursor at the beginning of the next line immediately following the expression, or inside the expression.

Here is another copy of the expression:

(+ 2 (+ 3 3))

If you place the cursor at the beginning of the blank line that immediately follows the expression and type C-x C-e, you will still get the value 8 printed in the echo area. Now try putting the cursor inside the expression. If you put it right after the next to last parenthesis (so it appears to sit on top of the last parenthesis), you will get a 6 printed in the echo area! This is because the command evaluates the expression (+ 3 3).

Now put the cursor immediately after a number. Type C-x C-e and you will get the number itself. In Lisp, if you evaluate a number, you get the number itself—this is how numbers differ from symbols. If you evaluate a list starting with a symbol like +, you will get a value returned that is the result of the computer carrying out the instructions in the function definition attached to that name. If a symbol by itself is evaluated, something different happens, as we will see in the next section.


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1.7 Variables

In Emacs Lisp, a symbol can have a value attached to it just as it can have a function definition attached to it. The two are different. The function definition is a set of instructions that a computer will obey. A value, on the other hand, is something, such as number or a name, that can vary (which is why such a symbol is called a variable). The value of a symbol can be any expression in Lisp, such as a symbol, number, list, or string. A symbol that has a value is often called a variable.

A symbol can have both a function definition and a value attached to it at the same time. Or it can have just one or the other. The two are separate. This is somewhat similar to the way the name Cambridge can refer to the city in Massachusetts and have some information attached to the name as well, such as “great programming center”.

Another way to think about this is to imagine a symbol as being a chest of drawers. The function definition is put in one drawer, the value in another, and so on. What is put in the drawer holding the value can be changed without affecting the contents of the drawer holding the function definition, and vice versa.


fill-column, an Example Variable

The variable fill-column illustrates a symbol with a value attached to it: in every GNU Emacs buffer, this symbol is set to some value, usually 72 or 70, but sometimes to some other value. To find the value of this symbol, evaluate it by itself. If you are reading this in Info inside of GNU Emacs, you can do this by putting the cursor after the symbol and typing C-x C-e:

fill-column

After I typed C-x C-e, Emacs printed the number 72 in my echo area. This is the value for which fill-column is set for me as I write this. It may be different for you in your Info buffer. Notice that the value returned as a variable is printed in exactly the same way as the value returned by a function carrying out its instructions. From the point of view of the Lisp interpreter, a value returned is a value returned. What kind of expression it came from ceases to matter once the value is known.

A symbol can have any value attached to it or, to use the jargon, we can bind the variable to a value: to a number, such as 72; to a string, "such as this"; to a list, such as (spruce pine oak); we can even bind a variable to a function definition.

A symbol can be bound to a value in several ways. See Setting the Value of a Variable, for information about one way to do this.


1.7.1 Error Message for a Symbol Without a Function

When we evaluated fill-column to find its value as a variable, we did not place parentheses around the word. This is because we did not intend to use it as a function name.

If fill-column were the first or only element of a list, the Lisp interpreter would attempt to find the function definition attached to it. But fill-column has no function definition. Try evaluating this:

(fill-column)

You will create a *Backtrace* buffer that says:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function fill-column)
  (fill-column)
  eval((fill-column) nil)
  elisp--eval-last-sexp(nil)
  eval-last-sexp(nil)
  funcall-interactively(eval-last-sexp nil)
  call-interactively(eval-last-sexp nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-last-sexp)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

(Remember, to quit the debugger and make the debugger window go away, type q in the *Backtrace* buffer.)


1.7.2 Error Message for a Symbol Without a Value

If you attempt to evaluate a symbol that does not have a value bound to it, you will receive an error message. You can see this by experimenting with our 2 plus 2 addition. In the following expression, put your cursor right after the +, before the first number 2, type C-x C-e:

(+ 2 2)

In GNU Emacs 22, you will create a *Backtrace* buffer that says:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-variable +)
  eval(+)
  elisp--eval-last-sexp(nil)
  eval-last-sexp(nil)
  funcall-interactively(eval-last-sexp nil)
  call-interactively(eval-last-sexp nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-last-sexp)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

(Again, you can quit the debugger by typing q in the *Backtrace* buffer.)

This backtrace is different from the very first error message we saw, which said, ‘Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function this)’. In this case, the function does not have a value as a variable; while in the other error message, the function (the word ‘this’) did not have a definition.

In this experiment with the +, what we did was cause the Lisp interpreter to evaluate the + and look for the value of the variable instead of the function definition. We did this by placing the cursor right after the symbol rather than after the parenthesis of the enclosing list as we did before. As a consequence, the Lisp interpreter evaluated the preceding s-expression, which in this case was + by itself.

Since + does not have a value bound to it, just the function definition, the error message reported that the symbol’s value as a variable was void.


1.8 Arguments

To see how information is passed to functions, let’s look again at our old standby, the addition of two plus two. In Lisp, this is written as follows:

(+ 2 2)

If you evaluate this expression, the number 4 will appear in your echo area. What the Lisp interpreter does is add the numbers that follow the +.

The numbers added by + are called the arguments of the function +. These numbers are the information that is given to or passed to the function.

The word “argument” comes from the way it is used in mathematics and does not refer to a disputation between two people; instead it refers to the information presented to the function, in this case, to the +. In Lisp, the arguments to a function are the atoms or lists that follow the function. The values returned by the evaluation of these atoms or lists are passed to the function. Different functions require different numbers of arguments; some functions require none at all.3


1.8.1 Arguments’ Data Types

The type of data that should be passed to a function depends on what kind of information it uses. The arguments to a function such as + must have values that are numbers, since + adds numbers. Other functions use different kinds of data for their arguments.

For example, the concat function links together or unites two or more strings of text to produce a string. The arguments are strings. Concatenating the two character strings abc, def produces the single string abcdef. This can be seen by evaluating the following:

(concat "abc" "def")

The value produced by evaluating this expression is "abcdef".

A function such as substring uses both a string and numbers as arguments. The function returns a part of the string, a substring of the first argument. This function takes three arguments. Its first argument is the string of characters, the second and third arguments are numbers that indicate the beginning (inclusive) and end (exclusive) of the substring. The numbers are a count of the number of characters (including spaces and punctuation) from the beginning of the string. Note that the characters in a string are numbered from zero, not one.

For example, if you evaluate the following:

(substring "The quick brown fox jumped." 16 19)

you will see "fox" appear in the echo area. The arguments are the string and the two numbers.

Note that the string passed to substring is a single atom even though it is made up of several words separated by spaces. Lisp counts everything between the two quotation marks as part of the string, including the spaces. You can think of the substring function as a kind of atom smasher since it takes an otherwise indivisible atom and extracts a part. However, substring is only able to extract a substring from an argument that is a string, not from another type of atom such as a number or symbol.


1.8.2 An Argument as the Value of a Variable or List

An argument can be a symbol that returns a value when it is evaluated. For example, when the symbol fill-column by itself is evaluated, it returns a number. This number can be used in an addition.

Position the cursor after the following expression and type C-x C-e:

(+ 2 fill-column)

The value will be a number two more than what you get by evaluating fill-column alone. For me, this is 74, because my value of fill-column is 72.

As we have just seen, an argument can be a symbol that returns a value when evaluated. In addition, an argument can be a list that returns a value when it is evaluated. For example, in the following expression, the arguments to the function concat are the strings "The " and " red foxes." and the list (number-to-string (+ 2 fill-column)).

(concat "The " (number-to-string (+ 2 fill-column)) " red foxes.")

If you evaluate this expression—and if, as with my Emacs, fill-column evaluates to 72—"The 74 red foxes." will appear in the echo area. (Note that you must put spaces after the word ‘The’ and before the word ‘red’ so they will appear in the final string. The function number-to-string converts the integer that the addition function returns to a string. number-to-string is also known as int-to-string.)


1.8.3 Variable Number of Arguments

Some functions, such as concat, + or *, take any number of arguments. (The * is the symbol for multiplication.) This can be seen by evaluating each of the following expressions in the usual way. What you will see in the echo area is printed in this text after ‘’, which you may read as “evaluates to”.

In the first set, the functions have no arguments:

(+)       ⇒ 0

(*)       ⇒ 1

In this set, the functions have one argument each:

(+ 3)     ⇒ 3

(* 3)     ⇒ 3

In this set, the functions have three arguments each:

(+ 3 4 5) ⇒ 12

(* 3 4 5) ⇒ 60

1.8.4 Using the Wrong Type Object as an Argument

When a function is passed an argument of the wrong type, the Lisp interpreter produces an error message. For example, the + function expects the values of its arguments to be numbers. As an experiment we can pass it the quoted symbol hello instead of a number. Position the cursor after the following expression and type C-x C-e:

(+ 2 'hello)

When you do this you will generate an error message. What has happened is that + has tried to add the 2 to the value returned by 'hello, but the value returned by 'hello is the symbol hello, not a number. Only numbers can be added. So + could not carry out its addition.

You will create and enter a *Backtrace* buffer that says:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--Lisp error:
         (wrong-type-argument number-or-marker-p hello)
  +(2 hello)
  eval((+ 2 'hello) nil)
  elisp--eval-last-sexp(t)
  eval-last-sexp(nil)
  funcall-interactively(eval-print-last-sexp nil)
  call-interactively(eval-print-last-sexp nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-print-last-sexp)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

As usual, the error message tries to be helpful and makes sense after you learn how to read it.4

The first part of the error message is straightforward; it says ‘wrong type argument’. Next comes the mysterious jargon word ‘number-or-marker-p. This word is trying to tell you what kind of argument the + expected.

The symbol number-or-marker-p says that the Lisp interpreter is trying to determine whether the information presented it (the value of the argument) is a number or a marker (a special object representing a buffer position). What it does is test to see whether the + is being given numbers to add. It also tests to see whether the argument is something called a marker, which is a specific feature of Emacs Lisp. (In Emacs, locations in a buffer are recorded as markers. When the mark is set with the C-@ or C-SPC command, its position is kept as a marker. The mark can be considered a number—the number of characters the location is from the beginning of the buffer.) In Emacs Lisp, + can be used to add the numeric value of marker positions as numbers.

The ‘p’ of number-or-marker-p is the embodiment of a practice started in the early days of Lisp programming. The ‘p’ stands for predicate. In the jargon used by the early Lisp researchers, a predicate refers to a function to determine whether some property is true or false. So the ‘p’ tells us that number-or-marker-p is the name of a function that determines whether it is true or false that the argument supplied is a number or a marker. Other Lisp symbols that end in ‘p’ include zerop, a function that tests whether its argument has the value of zero, and listp, a function that tests whether its argument is a list.

Finally, the last part of the error message is the symbol hello. This is the value of the argument that was passed to +. If the addition had been passed the correct type of object, the value passed would have been a number, such as 37, rather than a symbol like hello. But then you would not have got the error message.


1.8.5 The message Function

Like +, the message function takes a variable number of arguments. It is used to send messages to the user and is so useful that we will describe it here.

A message is printed in the echo area. For example, you can print a message in your echo area by evaluating the following list:

(message "This message appears in the echo area!")

The whole string between double quotation marks is a single argument and is printed in toto. (Note that in this example, the message itself will appear in the echo area within double quotes; that is because you see the value returned by the message function. In most uses of message in programs that you write, the text will be printed in the echo area as a side-effect, without the quotes. See multiply-by-seven in detail, for an example of this.)

However, if there is a ‘%s’ in the quoted string of characters, the message function does not print the ‘%s’ as such, but looks to the argument that follows the string. It evaluates the second argument and prints the value at the location in the string where the ‘%s’ is.

You can see this by positioning the cursor after the following expression and typing C-x C-e:

(message "The name of this buffer is: %s." (buffer-name))

In Info, "The name of this buffer is: *info*." will appear in the echo area. The function buffer-name returns the name of the buffer as a string, which the message function inserts in place of %s.

To print a value as an integer, use ‘%d’ in the same way as ‘%s’. For example, to print a message in the echo area that states the value of the fill-column, evaluate the following:

(message "The value of fill-column is %d." fill-column)

On my system, when I evaluate this list, "The value of fill-column is 72." appears in my echo area5.

If there is more than one ‘%s’ in the quoted string, the value of the first argument following the quoted string is printed at the location of the first ‘%s’ and the value of the second argument is printed at the location of the second ‘%s’, and so on.

For example, if you evaluate the following,

(message "There are %d %s in the office!"
         (- fill-column 14) "pink elephants")

a rather whimsical message will appear in your echo area. On my system it says, "There are 58 pink elephants in the office!".

The expression (- fill-column 14) is evaluated and the resulting number is inserted in place of the ‘%d’; and the string in double quotes, "pink elephants", is treated as a single argument and inserted in place of the ‘%s’. (That is to say, a string between double quotes evaluates to itself, like a number.)

Finally, here is a somewhat complex example that not only illustrates the computation of a number, but also shows how you can use an expression within an expression to generate the text that is substituted for ‘%s’:

(message "He saw %d %s"
         (- fill-column 32)
         (concat "red "
                 (substring
                  "The quick brown foxes jumped." 16 21)
                 " leaping."))

In this example, message has three arguments: the string, "He saw %d %s", the expression, (- fill-column 32), and the expression beginning with the function concat. The value resulting from the evaluation of (- fill-column 32) is inserted in place of the ‘%d’; and the value returned by the expression beginning with concat is inserted in place of the ‘%s’.

When your fill column is 70 and you evaluate the expression, the message "He saw 38 red foxes leaping." appears in your echo area.


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1.9 Setting the Value of a Variable

There are several ways by which a variable can be given a value. One of the ways is to use the special form setq. Another way is to use let (see let). (The jargon for this process is to bind a variable to a value.)

The following sections not only describe how setq works but also illustrate how arguments are passed.


1.9.1 Using setq

To set the value of the symbol flowers to the list (rose violet daisy buttercup), evaluate the following expression by positioning the cursor after the expression and typing C-x C-e.

(setq flowers '(rose violet daisy buttercup))

The list (rose violet daisy buttercup) will appear in the echo area. This is what is returned by the setq special form. As a side effect, the symbol flowers is bound to the list; that is, the symbol flowers, which can be viewed as a variable, is given the list as its value. (This process, by the way, illustrates how a side effect to the Lisp interpreter, setting the value, can be the primary effect that we humans are interested in. This is because every Lisp function must return a value if it does not get an error, but it will only have a side effect if it is designed to have one.)

After evaluating the setq expression, you can evaluate the symbol flowers and it will return the value you just set. Here is the symbol. Place your cursor after it and type C-x C-e.

flowers

When you evaluate flowers, the list (rose violet daisy buttercup) appears in the echo area.

Incidentally, if you evaluate 'flowers, the variable with a quote in front of it, what you will see in the echo area is the symbol itself, flowers. Here is the quoted symbol, so you can try this:

'flowers

Also, as an added convenience, setq permits you to set several different variables to different values, all in one expression.

To set the value of the variable carnivores to the list '(lion tiger leopard) using setq, the following expression is used:

(setq carnivores '(lion tiger leopard))

Also, setq can be used to assign different values to different variables. The first argument is bound to the value of the second argument, the third argument is bound to the value of the fourth argument, and so on. For example, you could use the following to assign a list of trees to the symbol trees and a list of herbivores to the symbol herbivores:

(setq trees '(pine fir oak maple)
      herbivores '(gazelle antelope zebra))

(The expression could just as well have been on one line, but it might not have fit on a page; and humans find it easier to read nicely formatted lists.)

Although I have been using the term “assign”, there is another way of thinking about the workings of setq; and that is to say that setq makes the symbol point to the list. This latter way of thinking is very common and in forthcoming chapters we shall come upon at least one symbol that has “pointer” as part of its name. The name is chosen because the symbol has a value, specifically a list, attached to it; or, expressed another way, the symbol is set to point to the list.


1.9.2 Counting

Here is an example that shows how to use setq in a counter. You might use this to count how many times a part of your program repeats itself. First set a variable to zero; then add one to the number each time the program repeats itself. To do this, you need a variable that serves as a counter, and two expressions: an initial setq expression that sets the counter variable to zero; and a second setq expression that increments the counter each time it is evaluated.

(setq counter 0)                ; Let’s call this the initializer.

(setq counter (+ counter 1))    ; This is the incrementer.

counter                         ; This is the counter.

(The text following the ‘;’ are comments. See Change a Function Definition.)

If you evaluate the first of these expressions, the initializer, (setq counter 0), and then evaluate the third expression, counter, the number 0 will appear in the echo area. If you then evaluate the second expression, the incrementer, (setq counter (+ counter 1)), the counter will get the value 1. So if you again evaluate counter, the number 1 will appear in the echo area. Each time you evaluate the second expression, the value of the counter will be incremented.

When you evaluate the incrementer, (setq counter (+ counter 1)), the Lisp interpreter first evaluates the innermost list; this is the addition. In order to evaluate this list, it must evaluate the variable counter and the number 1. When it evaluates the variable counter, it receives its current value. It passes this value and the number 1 to the + which adds them together. The sum is then returned as the value of the inner list and passed to the setq which sets the variable counter to this new value. Thus, the value of the variable, counter, is changed.


1.10 Summary

Learning Lisp is like climbing a hill in which the first part is the steepest. You have now climbed the most difficult part; what remains becomes easier as you progress onwards.

In summary,

  • Lisp programs are made up of expressions, which are lists or single atoms.
  • Lists are made up of zero or more atoms or inner lists, separated by whitespace and surrounded by parentheses. A list can be empty.
  • Atoms are multi-character symbols, like forward-paragraph, single character symbols like +, strings of characters between double quotation marks, or numbers.
  • A number evaluates to itself.
  • A string between double quotes also evaluates to itself.
  • When you evaluate a symbol by itself, its value is returned.
  • When you evaluate a list, the Lisp interpreter looks at the first symbol in the list and then at the function definition bound to that symbol. Then the instructions in the function definition are carried out.
  • A single-quote ‘'’ tells the Lisp interpreter that it should return the following expression as written, and not evaluate it as it would if the quote were not there.
  • Arguments are the information passed to a function. The arguments to a function are computed by evaluating the rest of the elements of the list of which the function is the first element.
  • A function always returns a value when it is evaluated (unless it gets an error); in addition, it may also carry out some action that is a side effect. In many cases, a function’s primary purpose is to create a side effect.

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1.11 Exercises

A few simple exercises:

  • Generate an error message by evaluating an appropriate symbol that is not within parentheses.
  • Generate an error message by evaluating an appropriate symbol that is between parentheses.
  • Create a counter that increments by two rather than one.
  • Write an expression that prints a message in the echo area when evaluated.

2 Practicing Evaluation

Before learning how to write a function definition in Emacs Lisp, it is useful to spend a little time evaluating various expressions that have already been written. These expressions will be lists with the functions as their first (and often only) element. Since some of the functions associated with buffers are both simple and interesting, we will start with those. In this section, we will evaluate a few of these. In another section, we will study the code of several other buffer-related functions, to see how they were written.

How to Evaluate

Whenever you give an editing command to Emacs Lisp, such as the command to move the cursor or to scroll the screen, you are evaluating an expression, the first element of which is a function. This is how Emacs works.

When you type keys, you cause the Lisp interpreter to evaluate an expression and that is how you get your results. Even typing plain text involves evaluating an Emacs Lisp function, in this case, one that uses self-insert-command, which simply inserts the character you typed. The functions you evaluate by typing keystrokes are called interactive functions, or commands; how you make a function interactive will be illustrated in the chapter on how to write function definitions. See Making a Function Interactive.

In addition to typing keyboard commands, we have seen a second way to evaluate an expression: by positioning the cursor after a list and typing C-x C-e. This is what we will do in the rest of this section. There are other ways to evaluate an expression as well; these will be described as we come to them.

Besides being used for practicing evaluation, the functions shown in the next few sections are important in their own right. A study of these functions makes clear the distinction between buffers and files, how to switch to a buffer, and how to determine a location within it.

2.1 Buffer Names

The two functions, buffer-name and buffer-file-name, show the difference between a file and a buffer. When you evaluate the following expression, (buffer-name), the name of the buffer appears in the echo area. When you evaluate (buffer-file-name), the name of the file to which the buffer refers appears in the echo area. Usually, the name returned by (buffer-name) is the same as the name of the file to which it refers, and the name returned by (buffer-file-name) is the full path-name of the file.

A file and a buffer are two different entities. A file is information recorded permanently in the computer (unless you delete it). A buffer, on the other hand, is information inside of Emacs that will vanish at the end of the editing session (or when you kill the buffer). Usually, a buffer contains information that you have copied from a file; we say the buffer is visiting that file. This copy is what you work on and modify. Changes to the buffer do not change the file, until you save the buffer. When you save the buffer, the buffer is copied to the file and is thus saved permanently.

If you are reading this in Info inside of GNU Emacs, you can evaluate each of the following expressions by positioning the cursor after it and typing C-x C-e.

(buffer-name)

(buffer-file-name)

When I do this in Info, the value returned by evaluating (buffer-name) is "*info*", and the value returned by evaluating (buffer-file-name) is nil.

On the other hand, while I am writing this document, the value returned by evaluating (buffer-name) is "introduction.texinfo", and the value returned by evaluating (buffer-file-name) is "/gnu/work/intro/introduction.texinfo".

The former is the name of the buffer and the latter is the name of the file. In Info, the buffer name is "*info*". Info does not point to any file, so the result of evaluating (buffer-file-name) is nil. The symbol nil is from the Latin word for “nothing”; in this case, it means that the buffer is not associated with any file. (In Lisp, nil is also used to mean “false” and is a synonym for the empty list, ().)

When I am writing, the name of my buffer is "introduction.texinfo". The name of the file to which it points is "/gnu/work/intro/introduction.texinfo".

(In the expressions, the parentheses tell the Lisp interpreter to treat buffer-name and buffer-file-name as functions; without the parentheses, the interpreter would attempt to evaluate the symbols as variables. See Variables.)

In spite of the distinction between files and buffers, you will often find that people refer to a file when they mean a buffer and vice versa. Indeed, most people say, “I am editing a file,” rather than saying, “I am editing a buffer which I will soon save to a file.” It is almost always clear from context what people mean. When dealing with computer programs, however, it is important to keep the distinction in mind, since the computer is not as smart as a person.

The word “buffer”, by the way, comes from the meaning of the word as a cushion that deadens the force of a collision. In early computers, a buffer cushioned the interaction between files and the computer’s central processing unit. The drums or tapes that held a file and the central processing unit were pieces of equipment that were very different from each other, working at their own speeds, in spurts. The buffer made it possible for them to work together effectively. Eventually, the buffer grew from being an intermediary, a temporary holding place, to being the place where work is done. This transformation is rather like that of a small seaport that grew into a great city: once it was merely the place where cargo was warehoused temporarily before being loaded onto ships; then it became a business and cultural center in its own right.

Not all buffers are associated with files. For example, a *scratch* buffer does not visit any file. Similarly, a *Help* buffer is not associated with any file.

In the old days, when you lacked a ~/.emacs file and started an Emacs session by typing the command emacs alone, without naming any files, Emacs started with the *scratch* buffer visible. Nowadays, you will see a splash screen. You can follow one of the commands suggested on the splash screen, visit a file, or press q to quit the splash screen and reach the *scratch* buffer.

If you switch to the *scratch* buffer, type (buffer-name), position the cursor after it, and then type C-x C-e to evaluate the expression. The name "*scratch*" will be returned and will appear in the echo area. "*scratch*" is the name of the buffer. When you type (buffer-file-name) in the *scratch* buffer and evaluate that, nil will appear in the echo area, just as it does when you evaluate (buffer-file-name) in Info.

Incidentally, if you are in the *scratch* buffer and want the value returned by an expression to appear in the *scratch* buffer itself rather than in the echo area, type C-u C-x C-e instead of C-x C-e. This causes the value returned to appear after the expression. The buffer will look like this:

(buffer-name)"*scratch*"

You cannot do this in Info since Info is read-only and it will not allow you to change the contents of the buffer. But you can do this in any buffer you can edit; and when you write code or documentation (such as this book), this feature is very useful.

2.2 Getting Buffers

The buffer-name function returns the name of the buffer; to get the buffer itself, a different function is needed: the current-buffer function. If you use this function in code, what you get is the buffer itself.

A name and the object or entity to which the name refers are different from each other. You are not your name. You are a person to whom others refer by name. If you ask to speak to George and someone hands you a card with the letters ‘G’, ‘e’, ‘o’, ‘r’, ‘g’, and ‘e’ written on it, you might be amused, but you would not be satisfied. You do not want to speak to the name, but to the person to whom the name refers. A buffer is similar: the name of the scratch buffer is *scratch*, but the name is not the buffer. To get a buffer itself, you need to use a function such as current-buffer.

However, there is a slight complication: if you evaluate current-buffer in an expression on its own, as we will do here, what you see is a printed representation of the name of the buffer without the contents of the buffer. Emacs works this way for two reasons: the buffer may be thousands of lines long—too long to be conveniently displayed; and, another buffer may have the same contents but a different name, and it is important to distinguish between them.

Here is an expression containing the function:

(current-buffer)

If you evaluate this expression in Info in Emacs in the usual way, #<buffer *info*> will appear in the echo area. The special format indicates that the buffer itself is being returned, rather than just its name.

Incidentally, while you can type a number or symbol into a program, you cannot do that with the printed representation of a buffer: the only way to get a buffer itself is with a function such as current-buffer.

A related function is other-buffer. This returns the most recently selected buffer other than the one you are in currently, not a printed representation of its name. If you have recently switched back and forth from the *scratch* buffer, other-buffer will return that buffer.

You can see this by evaluating the expression:

(other-buffer)

You should see #<buffer *scratch*> appear in the echo area, or the name of whatever other buffer you switched back from most recently6.

2.3 Switching Buffers

The other-buffer function actually provides a buffer when it is used as an argument to a function that requires one. We can see this by using other-buffer and switch-to-buffer to switch to a different buffer.

But first, a brief introduction to the switch-to-buffer function. When you switched back and forth from Info to the *scratch* buffer to evaluate (buffer-name), you most likely typed C-x b and then typed *scratch*7 when prompted in the minibuffer for the name of the buffer to which you wanted to switch. The keystrokes, C-x b, cause the Lisp interpreter to evaluate the interactive function switch-to-buffer. As we said before, this is how Emacs works: different keystrokes call or run different functions. For example, C-f calls forward-char, M-e calls forward-sentence, and so on.

By writing switch-to-buffer in an expression, and giving it a buffer to switch to, we can switch buffers just the way C-x b does:

(switch-to-buffer (other-buffer))

The symbol switch-to-buffer is the first element of the list, so the Lisp interpreter will treat it as a function and carry out the instructions that are attached to it. But before doing that, the interpreter will note that other-buffer is inside parentheses and work on that symbol first. other-buffer is the first (and in this case, the only) element of this list, so the Lisp interpreter calls or runs the function. It returns another buffer. Next, the interpreter runs switch-to-buffer, passing to it, as an argument, the other buffer, which is what Emacs will switch to. If you are reading this in Info, try this now. Evaluate the expression. (To get back, type C-x b RET.)8

In the programming examples in later sections of this document, you will see the function set-buffer more often than switch-to-buffer. This is because of a difference between computer programs and humans: humans have eyes and expect to see the buffer on which they are working on their computer terminals. This is so obvious, it almost goes without saying. However, programs do not have eyes. When a computer program works on a buffer, that buffer does not need to be visible on the screen.

switch-to-buffer is designed for humans and does two different things: it switches the buffer to which Emacs’s attention is directed; and it switches the buffer displayed in the window to the new buffer. set-buffer, on the other hand, does only one thing: it switches the attention of the computer program to a different buffer. The buffer on the screen remains unchanged (of course, normally nothing happens there until the command finishes running).

Also, we have just introduced another jargon term, the word call. When you evaluate a list in which the first symbol is a function, you are calling that function. The use of the term comes from the notion of the function as an entity that can do something for you if you call it—just as a plumber is an entity who can fix a leak if you call him or her.

2.4 Buffer Size and the Location of Point

Finally, let’s look at several rather simple functions, buffer-size, point, point-min, and point-max. These give information about the size of a buffer and the location of point within it.

The function buffer-size tells you the size of the current buffer; that is, the function returns a count of the number of characters in the buffer.

(buffer-size)

You can evaluate this in the usual way, by positioning the cursor after the expression and typing C-x C-e.

In Emacs, the current position of the cursor is called point. The expression (point) returns a number that tells you where the cursor is located as a count of the number of characters from the beginning of the buffer up to point.

You can see the character count for point in this buffer by evaluating the following expression in the usual way:

(point)

As I write this, the value of point is 65724. The point function is frequently used in some of the examples later in this book.

The value of point depends, of course, on its location within the buffer. If you evaluate point in this spot, the number will be larger:

(point)

For me, the value of point in this location is 66043, which means that there are 319 characters (including spaces) between the two expressions. (Doubtless, you will see different numbers, since I will have edited this since I first evaluated point.)

The function point-min is somewhat similar to point, but it returns the value of the minimum permissible value of point in the current buffer. This is the number 1 unless narrowing is in effect. (Narrowing is a mechanism whereby you can restrict yourself, or a program, to operations on just a part of a buffer. See Narrowing and Widening.) Likewise, the function point-max returns the value of the maximum permissible value of point in the current buffer.

2.5 Exercise

Find a file with which you are working and move towards its middle. Find its buffer name, file name, length, and your position in the file.

3 How To Write Function Definitions

When the Lisp interpreter evaluates a list, it looks to see whether the first symbol on the list has a function definition attached to it; or, put another way, whether the symbol points to a function definition. If it does, the computer carries out the instructions in the definition. A symbol that has a function definition is called, simply, a function (although, properly speaking, the definition is the function and the symbol refers to it.)

An Aside about Primitive Functions

All functions are defined in terms of other functions, except for a few primitive functions that are written in the C programming language. When you write functions’ definitions, you will write them in Emacs Lisp and use other functions as your building blocks. Some of the functions you will use will themselves be written in Emacs Lisp (perhaps by you) and some will be primitives written in C. The primitive functions are used exactly like those written in Emacs Lisp and behave like them. They are written in C so we can easily run GNU Emacs on any computer that has sufficient power and can run C.

Let me re-emphasize this: when you write code in Emacs Lisp, you do not distinguish between the use of functions written in C and the use of functions written in Emacs Lisp. The difference is irrelevant. I mention the distinction only because it is interesting to know. Indeed, unless you investigate, you won’t know whether an already-written function is written in Emacs Lisp or C.

3.1 The defun Macro

In Lisp, a symbol such as mark-whole-buffer has code attached to it that tells the computer what to do when the function is called. This code is called the function definition and is created by evaluating a Lisp expression that starts with the symbol defun (which is an abbreviation for define function).

In subsequent sections, we will look at function definitions from the Emacs source code, such as mark-whole-buffer. In this section, we will describe a simple function definition so you can see how it looks. This function definition uses arithmetic because it makes for a simple example. Some people dislike examples using arithmetic; however, if you are such a person, do not despair. Hardly any of the code we will study in the remainder of this introduction involves arithmetic or mathematics. The examples mostly involve text in one way or another.

A function definition has up to five parts following the word defun:

  1. The name of the symbol to which the function definition should be attached.
  2. A list of the arguments that will be passed to the function. If no arguments will be passed to the function, this is an empty list, ().
  3. Documentation describing the function. (Technically optional, but strongly recommended.)
  4. Optionally, an expression to make the function interactive so you can use it by typing M-x and then the name of the function; or by typing an appropriate key or keychord.
  5. The code that instructs the computer what to do: the body of the function definition.

It is helpful to think of the five parts of a function definition as being organized in a template, with slots for each part:

(defun function-name (arguments…)
  "optional-documentation…"
  (interactive argument-passing-info)     ; optional
  body…)

As an example, here is the code for a function that multiplies its argument by 7. (This example is not interactive. See Making a Function Interactive, for that information.)

(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
  "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
  (* 7 number))

This definition begins with a parenthesis and the symbol defun, followed by the name of the function.

The name of the function is followed by a list that contains the arguments that will be passed to the function. This list is called the argument list. In this example, the list has only one element, the symbol, number. When the function is used, the symbol will be bound to the value that is used as the argument to the function.

Instead of choosing the word number for the name of the argument, I could have picked any other name. For example, I could have chosen the word multiplicand. I picked the word “number” because it tells what kind of value is intended for this slot; but I could just as well have chosen the word “multiplicand” to indicate the role that the value placed in this slot will play in the workings of the function. I could have called it foogle, but that would have been a bad choice because it would not tell humans what it means. The choice of name is up to the programmer and should be chosen to make the meaning of the function clear.

Indeed, you can choose any name you wish for a symbol in an argument list, even the name of a symbol used in some other function: the name you use in an argument list is private to that particular definition. In that definition, the name refers to a different entity than any use of the same name outside the function definition. Suppose you have a nick-name “Shorty” in your family; when your family members refer to “Shorty”, they mean you. But outside your family, in a movie, for example, the name “Shorty” refers to someone else. Because a name in an argument list is private to the function definition, you can change the value of such a symbol inside the body of a function without changing its value outside the function. The effect is similar to that produced by a let expression. (See let.)

The argument list is followed by the documentation string that describes the function. This is what you see when you type C-h f and the name of a function. Incidentally, when you write a documentation string like this, you should make the first line a complete sentence since some commands, such as apropos, print only the first line of a multi-line documentation string. Also, you should not indent the second line of a documentation string, if you have one, because that looks odd when you use C-h f (describe-function). The documentation string is optional, but it is so useful, it should be included in almost every function you write.

The third line of the example consists of the body of the function definition. (Most functions’ definitions, of course, are longer than this.) In this function, the body is the list, (* 7 number), which says to multiply the value of number by 7. (In Emacs Lisp, * is the function for multiplication, just as + is the function for addition.)

When you use the multiply-by-seven function, the argument number evaluates to the actual number you want used. Here is an example that shows how multiply-by-seven is used; but don’t try to evaluate this yet!

(multiply-by-seven 3)

The symbol number, specified in the function definition in the next section, is bound to the value 3 in the actual use of the function. Note that although number was inside parentheses in the function definition, the argument passed to the multiply-by-seven function is not in parentheses. The parentheses are written in the function definition so the computer can figure out where the argument list ends and the rest of the function definition begins.

If you evaluate this example, you are likely to get an error message. (Go ahead, try it!) This is because we have written the function definition, but not yet told the computer about the definition—we have not yet loaded the function definition in Emacs. Installing a function is the process that tells the Lisp interpreter the definition of the function. Installation is described in the next section.

3.2 Install a Function Definition

If you are reading this inside of Info in Emacs, you can try out the multiply-by-seven function by first evaluating the function definition and then evaluating (multiply-by-seven 3). A copy of the function definition follows. Place the cursor after the last parenthesis of the function definition and type C-x C-e. When you do this, multiply-by-seven will appear in the echo area. (What this means is that when a function definition is evaluated, the value it returns is the name of the defined function.) At the same time, this action installs the function definition.

(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
  "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
  (* 7 number))

By evaluating this defun, you have just installed multiply-by-seven in Emacs. The function is now just as much a part of Emacs as forward-word or any other editing function you use. (multiply-by-seven will stay installed until you quit Emacs. To reload code automatically whenever you start Emacs, see Installing Code Permanently.)

The effect of installation

You can see the effect of installing multiply-by-seven by evaluating the following sample. Place the cursor after the following expression and type C-x C-e. The number 21 will appear in the echo area.

(multiply-by-seven 3)

If you wish, you can read the documentation for the function by typing C-h f (describe-function) and then the name of the function, multiply-by-seven. When you do this, a *Help* window will appear on your screen that says:

multiply-by-seven is a Lisp function.

(multiply-by-seven NUMBER)

Multiply NUMBER by seven.

(To return to a single window on your screen, type C-x 1.)

3.2.1 Change a Function Definition

If you want to change the code in multiply-by-seven, just rewrite it. To install the new version in place of the old one, evaluate the function definition again. This is how you modify code in Emacs. It is very simple.

As an example, you can change the multiply-by-seven function to add the number to itself seven times instead of multiplying the number by seven. It produces the same answer, but by a different path. At the same time, we will add a comment to the code; a comment is text that the Lisp interpreter ignores, but that a human reader may find useful or enlightening. The comment is that this is the second version.

(defun multiply-by-seven (number)       ; Second version.
  "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
  (+ number number number number number number number))

The comment follows a semicolon, ‘;’. In Lisp, everything on a line that follows a semicolon is a comment. The end of the line is the end of the comment. To stretch a comment over two or more lines, begin each line with a semicolon.

See Beginning a .emacs File, and Comments in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more about comments.

You can install this version of the multiply-by-seven function by evaluating it in the same way you evaluated the first function: place the cursor after the last parenthesis and type C-x C-e.

In summary, this is how you write code in Emacs Lisp: you write a function; install it; test it; and then make fixes or enhancements and install it again.

3.3 Make a Function Interactive

You make a function interactive by placing a list that begins with the special form interactive immediately after the documentation. A user can invoke an interactive function by typing M-x and then the name of the function; or by typing the keys to which it is bound, for example, by typing C-n for next-line or C-x h for mark-whole-buffer.

Interestingly, when you call an interactive function interactively, the value returned is not automatically displayed in the echo area. This is because you often call an interactive function for its side effects, such as moving forward by a word or line, and not for the value returned. If the returned value were displayed in the echo area each time you typed a key, it would be very distracting.

An Interactive multiply-by-seven, An Overview

Both the use of the special form interactive and one way to display a value in the echo area can be illustrated by creating an interactive version of multiply-by-seven.

Here is the code:

(defun multiply-by-seven (number)       ; Interactive version.
  "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
  (interactive "p")
  (message "The result is %d" (* 7 number)))

You can install this code by placing your cursor after it and typing C-x C-e. The name of the function will appear in your echo area. Then, you can use this code by typing C-u and a number and then typing M-x multiply-by-seven and pressing RET. The phrase ‘The result is …’ followed by the product will appear in the echo area.

Speaking more generally, you invoke a function like this in either of two ways:

  1. By typing a prefix argument that contains the number to be passed, and then typing M-x and the name of the function, as with C-u 3 M-x forward-sentence; or,
  2. By typing whatever key or keychord the function is bound to, as with C-u 3 M-e.

Both the examples just mentioned work identically to move point forward three sentences. (Since multiply-by-seven is not bound to a key, it could not be used as an example of key binding.)

(See Some Key Bindings, to learn how to bind a command to a key.)

A prefix argument is passed to an interactive function by typing the META key followed by a number, for example, M-3 M-e, or by typing C-u and then a number, for example, C-u 3 M-e (if you type C-u without a number, it defaults to 4).

3.3.1 An Interactive multiply-by-seven

Let’s look at the use of the special form interactive and then at the function message in the interactive version of multiply-by-seven. You will recall that the function definition looks like this:

(defun multiply-by-seven (number)       ; Interactive version.
  "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
  (interactive "p")
  (message "The result is %d" (* 7 number)))

In this function, the expression, (interactive "p"), is a list of two elements. The "p" tells Emacs to pass the prefix argument to the function and use its value for the argument of the function.

The argument will be a number. This means that the symbol number will be bound to a number in the line:

(message "The result is %d" (* 7 number))

For example, if your prefix argument is 5, the Lisp interpreter will evaluate the line as if it were:

(message "The result is %d" (* 7 5))

(If you are reading this in GNU Emacs, you can evaluate this expression yourself.) First, the interpreter will evaluate the inner list, which is (* 7 5). This returns a value of 35. Next, it will evaluate the outer list, passing the values of the second and subsequent elements of the list to the function message.

As we have seen, message is an Emacs Lisp function especially designed for sending a one line message to a user. (See The message function.) In summary, the message function prints its first argument in the echo area as is, except for occurrences of ‘%d’ or ‘%s’ (and various other %-sequences which we have not mentioned). When it sees a control sequence, the function looks to the second or subsequent arguments and prints the value of the argument in the location in the string where the control sequence is located.

In the interactive multiply-by-seven function, the control string is ‘%d’, which requires a number, and the value returned by evaluating (* 7 5) is the number 35. Consequently, the number 35 is printed in place of the ‘%d’ and the message is ‘The result is 35’.

(Note that when you call the function multiply-by-seven, the message is printed without quotes, but when you call message, the text is printed in double quotes. This is because the value returned by message is what appears in the echo area when you evaluate an expression whose first element is message; but when embedded in a function, message prints the text as a side effect without quotes.)

3.4 Different Options for interactive

In the example, multiply-by-seven used "p" as the argument to interactive. This argument told Emacs to interpret your typing either C-u followed by a number or META followed by a number as a command to pass that number to the function as its argument. Emacs has more than twenty characters predefined for use with interactive. In almost every case, one of these options will enable you to pass the right information interactively to a function. (See Code Characters for interactive in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

Consider the function zap-to-char. Its interactive expression is

(interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")

The first part of the argument to interactive is ‘p’, with which you are already familiar. This argument tells Emacs to interpret a prefix, as a number to be passed to the function. You can specify a prefix either by typing C-u followed by a number or by typing META followed by a number. The prefix is the number of specified characters. Thus, if your prefix is three and the specified character is ‘x’, then you will delete all the text up to and including the third next ‘x’. If you do not set a prefix, then you delete all the text up to and including the specified character, but no more.

The ‘c’ tells the function the name of the character to which to delete.

More formally, a function with two or more arguments can have information passed to each argument by adding parts to the string that follows interactive. When you do this, the information is passed to each argument in the same order it is specified in the interactive list. In the string, each part is separated from the next part by a ‘\n’, which is a newline. For example, you can follow ‘p’ with a ‘\n’ and an ‘cZap to char: ’. This causes Emacs to pass the value of the prefix argument (if there is one) and the character.

In this case, the function definition looks like the following, where arg and char are the symbols to which interactive binds the prefix argument and the specified character:

(defun name-of-function (arg char)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")
  body-of-function…)

(The space after the colon in the prompt makes it look better when you are prompted. See The Definition of copy-to-buffer, for an example.)

When a function does not take arguments, interactive does not require any. Such a function contains the simple expression (interactive). The mark-whole-buffer function is like this.

Alternatively, if the special letter-codes are not right for your application, you can pass your own arguments to interactive as a list.

See The Definition of append-to-buffer, for an example. See Using Interactive in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for a more complete explanation about this technique.

3.5 Install Code Permanently

When you install a function definition by evaluating it, it will stay installed until you quit Emacs. The next time you start a new session of Emacs, the function will not be installed unless you evaluate the function definition again.

At some point, you may want to have code installed automatically whenever you start a new session of Emacs. There are several ways of doing this:

  • If you have code that is just for yourself, you can put the code for the function definition in your .emacs initialization file. When you start Emacs, your .emacs file is automatically evaluated and all the function definitions within it are installed. See Your .emacs File.
  • Alternatively, you can put the function definitions that you want installed in one or more files of their own and use the load function to cause Emacs to evaluate and thereby install each of the functions in the files. See Loading Files.
  • Thirdly, if you have code that your whole site will use, it is usual to put it in a file called site-init.el that is loaded when Emacs is built. This makes the code available to everyone who uses your machine. (See the INSTALL file that is part of the Emacs distribution.)

Finally, if you have code that everyone who uses Emacs may want, you can post it on a computer network or send a copy to the Free Software Foundation. (When you do this, please license the code and its documentation under a license that permits other people to run, copy, study, modify, and redistribute the code and which protects you from having your work taken from you.) If you send a copy of your code to the Free Software Foundation, and properly protect yourself and others, it may be included in the next release of Emacs. In large part, this is how Emacs has grown over the past years, by donations.

3.6 let

The let expression is a special form in Lisp that you will need to use in most function definitions.

let is used to attach or bind a symbol to a value in such a way that the Lisp interpreter will not confuse the variable with a variable of the same name that is not part of the function.

To understand why the let special form is necessary, consider the situation in which you own a home that you generally refer to as “the house”, as in the sentence, “The house needs painting.” If you are visiting a friend and your host refers to “the house”, he is likely to be referring to his house, not yours, that is, to a different house.

If your friend is referring to his house and you think he is referring to your house, you may be in for some confusion. The same thing could happen in Lisp if a variable that is used inside of one function has the same name as a variable that is used inside of another function, and the two are not intended to refer to the same value. The let special form prevents this kind of confusion.

let Prevents Confusion

The let special form prevents confusion. let creates a name for a local variable that overshadows any use of the same name outside the let expression (in computer science jargon, we call this binding the variable). This is like understanding that in your host’s home, whenever he refers to “the house”, he means his house, not yours. (The symbols used to name function arguments are bound as local variables in exactly the same way. See The defun Macro.)

Another way to think about let is that it defines a special region in your code: within the body of the let expression, the variables you’ve named have their own local meaning. Outside of the let body, they have other meanings (or they may not be defined at all). This means that inside the let body, calling setq for a variable named by the let expression will set the value of the local variable of that name. However, outside of the let body (such as when calling a function that was defined elsewhere), calling setq for a variable named by the let expression will not affect that local variable.9

let can create more than one variable at once. Also, let gives each variable it creates an initial value, either a value specified by you, or nil. (In the jargon, this is binding the variable to the value.) After let has created and bound the variables, it executes the code in the body of the let, and returns the value of the last expression in the body, as the value of the whole let expression. (“Execute” is a jargon term that means to evaluate a list; it comes from the use of the word meaning “to give practical effect to” (Oxford English Dictionary). Since you evaluate an expression to perform an action, “execute” has evolved as a synonym to “evaluate”.)

3.6.1 The Parts of a let Expression

A let expression is a list of three parts. The first part is the symbol let. The second part is a list, called a varlist, each element of which is either a symbol by itself or a two-element list, the first element of which is a symbol. The third part of the let expression is the body of the let. The body usually consists of one or more lists.

A template for a let expression looks like this:

(let varlist body…)

The symbols in the varlist are the variables that are given initial values by the let special form. Symbols by themselves are given the initial value of nil; and each symbol that is the first element of a two-element list is bound to the value that is returned when the Lisp interpreter evaluates the second element.

Thus, a varlist might look like this: (thread (needles 3)). In this case, in a let expression, Emacs binds the symbol thread to an initial value of nil, and binds the symbol needles to an initial value of 3.

When you write a let expression, what you do is put the appropriate expressions in the slots of the let expression template.

If the varlist is composed of two-element lists, as is often the case, the template for the let expression looks like this:

(let ((variable value)
      (variable value)
      …)
  body…)

3.6.2 Sample let Expression

The following expression creates and gives initial values to the two variables zebra and tiger. The body of the let expression is a list which calls the message function.

(let ((zebra "stripes")
      (tiger "fierce"))
  (message "One kind of animal has %s and another is %s."
           zebra tiger))

Here, the varlist is ((zebra "stripes") (tiger "fierce")).

The two variables are zebra and tiger. Each variable is the first element of a two-element list and each value is the second element of its two-element list. In the varlist, Emacs binds the variable zebra to the value "stripes"10, and binds the variable tiger to the value "fierce". In this example, both values are strings. The values could just as well have been another list or a symbol. The body of the let follows after the list holding the variables. In this example, the body is a list that uses the message function to print a string in the echo area.

You may evaluate the example in the usual fashion, by placing the cursor after the last parenthesis and typing C-x C-e. When you do this, the following will appear in the echo area:

"One kind of animal has stripes and another is fierce."

As we have seen before, the message function prints its first argument, except for ‘%s’. In this example, the value of the variable zebra is printed at the location of the first ‘%s’ and the value of the variable tiger is printed at the location of the second ‘%s’.

3.6.3 Uninitialized Variables in a let Statement

If you do not bind the variables in a let statement to specific initial values, they will automatically be bound to an initial value of nil, as in the following expression:

(let ((birch 3)
      pine
      fir
      (oak 'some))
  (message
   "Here are %d variables with %s, %s, and %s value."
   birch pine fir oak))

Here, the varlist is ((birch 3) pine fir (oak 'some)).

If you evaluate this expression in the usual way, the following will appear in your echo area:

"Here are 3 variables with nil, nil, and some value."

In this example, Emacs binds the symbol birch to the number 3, binds the symbols pine and fir to nil, and binds the symbol oak to the value some.

Note that in the first part of the let, the variables pine and fir stand alone as atoms that are not surrounded by parentheses; this is because they are being bound to nil, the empty list. But oak is bound to some and so is a part of the list (oak 'some). Similarly, birch is bound to the number 3 and so is in a list with that number. (Since a number evaluates to itself, the number does not need to be quoted. Also, the number is printed in the message using a ‘%d’ rather than a ‘%s’.) The four variables as a group are put into a list to delimit them from the body of the let.

3.6.4 How let Binds Variables

Emacs Lisp supports two different ways of binding variable names to their values. These ways affect the parts of your program where a particular binding is valid. For historical reasons, Emacs Lisp uses a form of variable binding called dynamic binding by default. However, in this manual we discuss the preferred form of binding, called lexical binding, unless otherwise noted (in the future, the Emacs maintainers plan to change the default to lexical binding). If you have programmed in other languages before, you’re likely already familiar with how lexical binding behaves.

In order to use lexical binding in a program, you should add this to the first line of your Emacs Lisp file:

;;; -*- lexical-binding: t -*-

For more information about this, see Variable Scoping in The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

Differences Between Lexical and Dynamic Binding

As we discussed before (see let Prevents Confusion), when you create local variables with let under lexical binding, those variables are valid only within the body of the let expression. In other parts of your code, they have other meanings, so if you call a function defined elsewhere within the let body, that function would be unable to “see” the local variables you’ve created. (On the other hand, if you call a function that was defined within a let body, that function would be able to see—and modify—the local variables from that let expression.)

Under dynamic binding, the rules are different: instead, when you use let, the local variables you’ve created are valid during execution of the let expression. This means that, if your let expression calls a function, that function can see these local variables, regardless of where the function is defined (including in another file entirely).

Another way to think about let when using dynamic binding is that every variable name has a global “stack” of bindings, and whenever you use that variable’s name, it refers to the binding on the top of the stack. (You can imagine this like a stack of papers on your desk with the values written on them.) When you bind a variable dynamically with let, it puts the new binding you’ve specified on the top of the stack, and then executes the let body. Once the let body finishes, it takes that binding off of the stack, revealing the one it had (if any) before the let expression.

Example of Lexical vs. Dynamic Binding

In some cases, both lexical and dynamic binding behave identically. However, in other cases, they can change the meaning of your program. For example, see what happens in this code under lexical binding:

;;; -*- lexical-binding: t -*-

(setq x 0)

(defun getx ()
  x)

(setq x 1)

(let ((x 2))
  (getx))
     ⇒ 1

Here, the result of (getx) is 1. Under lexical binding, getx doesn’t see the value from our let expression. That’s because the body of getx is outside of the body of our let expression. Since getx is defined at the top, global level of our code (i.e. not inside the body of any let expression), it looks for and finds x at the global level as well. When executing getx, the current global value of x is 1, so that’s what getx returns.

If we use dynamic binding instead, the behavior is different:

;;; -*- lexical-binding: nil -*-

(setq x 0)

(defun getx ()
  x)

(setq x 1)

(let ((x 2))
  (getx))
     ⇒ 2

Now, the result of (getx) is 2! That’s because under dynamic binding, when executing getx, the current binding for x at the top of our stack is the one from our let binding. This time, getx doesn’t see the global value for x, since its binding is below the one from our let expression in the stack of bindings.

(Some variables are also “special”, and they are always dynamically bound even when lexical-binding is t. See Initializing a Variable with defvar.)


3.7 The if Special Form

Another special form is the conditional if. This form is used to instruct the computer to make decisions. You can write function definitions without using if, but it is used often enough, and is important enough, to be included here. It is used, for example, in the code for the function beginning-of-buffer.

The basic idea behind an if, is that if a test is true, then an expression is evaluated. If the test is not true, the expression is not evaluated. For example, you might make a decision such as, “if it is warm and sunny, then go to the beach!”

if in more detail

An if expression written in Lisp does not use the word “then”; the test and the action are the second and third elements of the list whose first element is if. Nonetheless, the test part of an if expression is often called the if-part and the second argument is often called the then-part.

Also, when an if expression is written, the true-or-false-test is usually written on the same line as the symbol if, but the action to carry out if the test is true, the then-part, is written on the second and subsequent lines. This makes the if expression easier to read.

(if true-or-false-test
    action-to-carry-out-if-test-is-true)

The true-or-false-test will be an expression that is evaluated by the Lisp interpreter.

Here is an example that you can evaluate in the usual manner. The test is whether the number 5 is greater than the number 4. Since it is, the message ‘5 is greater than 4!’ will be printed.

(if (> 5 4)                             ; if-part
    (message "5 is greater than 4!"))   ; then-part

(The function > tests whether its first argument is greater than its second argument and returns true if it is.)

Of course, in actual use, the test in an if expression will not be fixed for all time as it is by the expression (> 5 4). Instead, at least one of the variables used in the test will be bound to a value that is not known ahead of time. (If the value were known ahead of time, we would not need to run the test!)

For example, the value may be bound to an argument of a function definition. In the following function definition, the character of the animal is a value that is passed to the function. If the value bound to characteristic is "fierce", then the message, ‘It is a tiger!’ will be printed; otherwise, nil will be returned.

(defun type-of-animal (characteristic)
  "Print message in echo area depending on CHARACTERISTIC.
If the CHARACTERISTIC is the string \"fierce\",
then warn of a tiger."
  (if (equal characteristic "fierce")
      (message "It is a tiger!")))

If you are reading this inside of GNU Emacs, you can evaluate the function definition in the usual way to install it in Emacs, and then you can evaluate the following two expressions to see the results:

(type-of-animal "fierce")

(type-of-animal "striped")

When you evaluate (type-of-animal "fierce"), you will see the following message printed in the echo area: "It is a tiger!"; and when you evaluate (type-of-animal "striped") you will see nil printed in the echo area.

3.7.1 The type-of-animal Function in Detail

Let’s look at the type-of-animal function in detail.

The function definition for type-of-animal was written by filling the slots of two templates, one for a function definition as a whole, and a second for an if expression.

The template for every function that is not interactive is:

(defun name-of-function (argument-list)
  "documentation…"
  body…)

The parts of the function that match this template look like this:

(defun type-of-animal (characteristic)
  "Print message in echo area depending on CHARACTERISTIC.
If the CHARACTERISTIC is the string \"fierce\",
then warn of a tiger."
  body: the if expression)

The name of function is type-of-animal; it is passed the value of one argument. The argument list is followed by a multi-line documentation string. The documentation string is included in the example because it is a good habit to write documentation string for every function definition. The body of the function definition consists of the if expression.

The template for an if expression looks like this:

(if true-or-false-test
    action-to-carry-out-if-the-test-returns-true)

In the type-of-animal function, the code for the if looks like this:

(if (equal characteristic "fierce")
    (message "It is a tiger!"))

Here, the true-or-false-test is the expression:

(equal characteristic "fierce")

In Lisp, equal is a function that determines whether its first argument is equal to its second argument. The second argument is the string "fierce" and the first argument is the value of the symbol characteristic—in other words, the argument passed to this function.

In the first exercise of type-of-animal, the argument "fierce" is passed to type-of-animal. Since "fierce" is equal to "fierce", the expression, (equal characteristic "fierce"), returns a value of true. When this happens, the if evaluates the second argument or then-part of the if: (message "It is a tiger!").

On the other hand, in the second exercise of type-of-animal, the argument "striped" is passed to type-of-animal. "striped" is not equal to "fierce", so the then-part is not evaluated and nil is returned by the if expression.

3.8 If–then–else Expressions

An if expression may have an optional third argument, called the else-part, for the case when the true-or-false-test returns false. When this happens, the second argument or then-part of the overall if expression is not evaluated, but the third or else-part is evaluated. You might think of this as the cloudy day alternative for the decision “if it is warm and sunny, then go to the beach, else read a book!”.

The word “else” is not written in the Lisp code; the else-part of an if expression comes after the then-part. In the written Lisp, the else-part is usually written to start on a line of its own and is indented less than the then-part:

(if true-or-false-test
    action-to-carry-out-if-the-test-returns-true
  action-to-carry-out-if-the-test-returns-false)

For example, the following if expression prints the message ‘4 is not greater than 5!’ when you evaluate it in the usual way:

(if (> 4 5)                               ; if-part
    (message "4 falsely greater than 5!") ; then-part
  (message "4 is not greater than 5!"))   ; else-part

Note that the different levels of indentation make it easy to distinguish the then-part from the else-part. (GNU Emacs has several commands that automatically indent if expressions correctly. See GNU Emacs Helps You Type Lists.)

We can extend the type-of-animal function to include an else-part by simply incorporating an additional part to the if expression.

You can see the consequences of doing this if you evaluate the following version of the type-of-animal function definition to install it and then evaluate the two subsequent expressions to pass different arguments to the function.

(defun type-of-animal (characteristic)  ; Second version.
  "Print message in echo area depending on CHARACTERISTIC.
If the CHARACTERISTIC is the string \"fierce\",
then warn of a tiger; else say it is not fierce."
  (if (equal characteristic "fierce")
      (message "It is a tiger!")
    (message "It is not fierce!")))

(type-of-animal "fierce")

(type-of-animal "striped")

When you evaluate (type-of-animal "fierce"), you will see the following message printed in the echo area: "It is a tiger!"; but when you evaluate (type-of-animal "striped"), you will see "It is not fierce!".

(Of course, if the characteristic were "ferocious", the message "It is not fierce!" would be printed; and it would be misleading! When you write code, you need to take into account the possibility that some such argument will be tested by the if and write your program accordingly.)

3.9 Truth and Falsehood in Emacs Lisp

There is an important aspect to the truth test in an if expression. So far, we have spoken of “true” and “false” as values of predicates as if they were new kinds of Emacs Lisp objects. In fact, “false” is just our old friend nil. Anything else—anything at all—is “true”.

The expression that tests for truth is interpreted as true if the result of evaluating it is a value that is not nil. In other words, the result of the test is considered true if the value returned is a number such as 47, a string such as "hello", or a symbol (other than nil) such as flowers, or a list (so long as it is not empty), or even a buffer!

An explanation of nil

Before illustrating a test for truth, we need an explanation of nil.

In Emacs Lisp, the symbol nil has two meanings. First, it means the empty list. Second, it means false and is the value returned when a true-or-false-test tests false. nil can be written as an empty list, (), or as nil. As far as the Lisp interpreter is concerned, () and nil are the same. Humans, however, tend to use nil for false and () for the empty list.

In Emacs Lisp, any value that is not nil—is not the empty list—is considered true. This means that if an evaluation returns something that is not an empty list, an if expression will test true. For example, if a number is put in the slot for the test, it will be evaluated and will return itself, since that is what numbers do when evaluated. In this conditional, the if expression will test true. The expression tests false only when nil, an empty list, is returned by evaluating the expression.

You can see this by evaluating the two expressions in the following examples.

In the first example, the number 4 is evaluated as the test in the if expression and returns itself; consequently, the then-part of the expression is evaluated and returned: ‘true’ appears in the echo area. In the second example, the nil indicates false; consequently, the else-part of the expression is evaluated and returned: ‘false’ appears in the echo area.

(if 4
    'true
  'false)

(if nil
    'true
  'false)

Incidentally, if some other useful value is not available for a test that returns true, then the Lisp interpreter will return the symbol t for true. For example, the expression (> 5 4) returns t when evaluated, as you can see by evaluating it in the usual way:

(> 5 4)

On the other hand, this function returns nil if the test is false.

(> 4 5)

3.10 save-excursion

The save-excursion function is the final special form that we will discuss in this chapter.

In Emacs Lisp programs used for editing, the save-excursion function is very common. It saves the location of point, executes the body of the function, and then restores point to its previous position if its location was changed. Its primary purpose is to keep the user from being surprised and disturbed by unexpected movement of point.

Point and Mark

Before discussing save-excursion, however, it may be useful first to review what point and mark are in GNU Emacs. Point is the current location of the cursor. Wherever the cursor is, that is point. More precisely, on terminals where the cursor appears to be on top of a character, point is immediately before the character. In Emacs Lisp, point is an integer. The first character in a buffer is number one, the second is number two, and so on. The function point returns the current position of the cursor as a number. Each buffer has its own value for point.

The mark is another position in the buffer; its value can be set with a command such as C-SPC (set-mark-command). If a mark has been set, you can use the command C-x C-x (exchange-point-and-mark) to cause the cursor to jump to the mark and set the mark to be the previous position of point. In addition, if you set another mark, the position of the previous mark is saved in the mark ring. Many mark positions can be saved this way. You can jump the cursor to a saved mark by typing C-u C-SPC one or more times.

The part of the buffer between point and mark is called the region. Numerous commands work on the region, including center-region, count-words-region, kill-region, and print-region.

The save-excursion special form saves the location of point and restores this position after the code within the body of the special form is evaluated by the Lisp interpreter. Thus, if point were in the beginning of a piece of text and some code moved point to the end of the buffer, the save-excursion would put point back to where it was before, after the expressions in the body of the function were evaluated.

In Emacs, a function frequently moves point as part of its internal workings even though a user would not expect this. For example, count-words-region moves point. To prevent the user from being bothered by jumps that are both unexpected and (from the user’s point of view) unnecessary, save-excursion is often used to keep point in the location expected by the user. The use of save-excursion is good housekeeping.

To make sure the house stays clean, save-excursion restores the value of point even if something goes wrong in the code inside of it (or, to be more precise and to use the proper jargon, “in case of abnormal exit”). This feature is very helpful.

In addition to recording the value of point, save-excursion keeps track of the current buffer, and restores it, too. This means you can write code that will change the buffer and have save-excursion switch you back to the original buffer. This is how save-excursion is used in append-to-buffer. (See The Definition of append-to-buffer.)

3.10.1 Template for a save-excursion Expression

The template for code using save-excursion is simple:

(save-excursion
  body…)

The body of the function is one or more expressions that will be evaluated in sequence by the Lisp interpreter. If there is more than one expression in the body, the value of the last one will be returned as the value of the save-excursion function. The other expressions in the body are evaluated only for their side effects; and save-excursion itself is used only for its side effect (which is restoring the position of point).

In more detail, the template for a save-excursion expression looks like this:

(save-excursion
  first-expression-in-body
  second-expression-in-body
  third-expression-in-bodylast-expression-in-body)

An expression, of course, may be a symbol on its own or a list.

In Emacs Lisp code, a save-excursion expression often occurs within the body of a let expression. It looks like this:

(let varlist
  (save-excursion
    body…))

3.11 Review

In the last few chapters we have introduced a macro and a fair number of functions and special forms. Here they are described in brief, along with a few similar functions that have not been mentioned yet.

eval-last-sexp

Evaluate the last symbolic expression before the current location of point. The value is printed in the echo area unless the function is invoked with an argument; in that case, the output is printed in the current buffer. This command is normally bound to C-x C-e.

defun

Define function. This macro has up to five parts: the name, a template for the arguments that will be passed to the function, documentation, an optional interactive declaration, and the body of the definition.

For example, in Emacs the function definition of dired-unmark-all-marks is as follows.

(defun dired-unmark-all-marks ()
  "Remove all marks from all files in the Dired buffer."
  (interactive)
  (dired-unmark-all-files ?\r))
interactive

Declare to the interpreter that the function can be used interactively. This special form may be followed by a string with one or more parts that pass the information to the arguments of the function, in sequence. These parts may also tell the interpreter to prompt for information. Parts of the string are separated by newlines, ‘\n’.

Common code characters are:

b

The name of an existing buffer.

f

The name of an existing file.

p

The numeric prefix argument. (Note that this p is lower case.)

r

Point and the mark, as two numeric arguments, smallest first. This is the only code letter that specifies two successive arguments rather than one.

See Code Characters for ‘interactive in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for a complete list of code characters.

let

Declare that a list of variables is for use within the body of the let and give them an initial value, either nil or a specified value; then evaluate the rest of the expressions in the body of the let and return the value of the last one. Inside the body of the let, the Lisp interpreter does not see the values of the variables of the same names that are bound outside of the let.

For example,

(let ((foo (buffer-name))
      (bar (buffer-size)))
  (message
   "This buffer is %s and has %d characters."
   foo bar))
save-excursion

Record the values of point and the current buffer before evaluating the body of this special form. Restore the value of point and buffer afterward.

For example,

(message "We are %d characters into this buffer."
         (- (point)
            (save-excursion
              (goto-char (point-min)) (point))))
if

Evaluate the first argument to the function; if it is true, evaluate the second argument; else evaluate the third argument, if there is one.

The if special form is called a conditional. There are other conditionals in Emacs Lisp, but if is perhaps the most commonly used.

For example,

(if (= 22 emacs-major-version)
    (message "This is version 22 Emacs")
  (message "This is not version 22 Emacs"))
<
>
<=
>=

The < function tests whether its first argument is smaller than its second argument. A corresponding function, >, tests whether the first argument is greater than the second. Likewise, <= tests whether the first argument is less than or equal to the second and >= tests whether the first argument is greater than or equal to the second. In all cases, both arguments must be numbers or markers (markers indicate positions in buffers).

=

The = function tests whether two arguments, both numbers or markers, are equal.

equal
eq

Test whether two objects are the same. equal uses one meaning of the word “same” and eq uses another: equal returns true if the two objects have a similar structure and contents, such as two copies of the same book. On the other hand, eq, returns true if both arguments are actually the same object.

string<
string-lessp
string=
string-equal

The string-lessp function tests whether its first argument is smaller than the second argument. A shorter, alternative name for the same function (a defalias) is string<.

The arguments to string-lessp must be strings or symbols; the ordering is lexicographic, so case is significant. The print names of symbols are used instead of the symbols themselves.

An empty string, ‘""’, a string with no characters in it, is smaller than any string of characters.

string-equal provides the corresponding test for equality. Its shorter, alternative name is string=. There are no string test functions that correspond to >, >=, or <=.

message

Print a message in the echo area. The first argument is a string that can contain ‘%s’, ‘%d’, or ‘%c’ to print the value of arguments that follow the string. The argument used by ‘%s’ must be a string or a symbol; the argument used by ‘%d’ must be a number. The argument used by ‘%c’ must be an ASCII code number; it will be printed as the character with that ASCII code. (Various other %-sequences have not been mentioned.)

setq
set

The setq special form sets the value of its first argument to the value of the second argument. The first argument is automatically quoted by setq. It does the same for succeeding pairs of arguments.

buffer-name

Without an argument, return the name of the buffer, as a string.

buffer-file-name

Without an argument, return the name of the file the buffer is visiting.

current-buffer

Return the buffer in which Emacs is active; it may not be the buffer that is visible on the screen.

other-buffer

Return the most recently selected buffer (other than the buffer passed to other-buffer as an argument and other than the current buffer).

switch-to-buffer

Select a buffer for Emacs to be active in and display it in the current window so users can look at it. Usually bound to C-x b.

set-buffer

Switch Emacs’s attention to a buffer on which programs will run. Don’t alter what the window is showing.

buffer-size

Return the number of characters in the current buffer.

point

Return the value of the current position of the cursor, as an integer counting the number of characters from the beginning of the buffer.

point-min

Return the minimum permissible value of point in the current buffer. This is 1, unless narrowing is in effect.

point-max

Return the value of the maximum permissible value of point in the current buffer. This is the end of the buffer, unless narrowing is in effect.

3.12 Exercises

  • Write a non-interactive function that doubles the value of its argument, a number. Make that function interactive.
  • Write a function that tests whether the current value of fill-column is greater than the argument passed to the function, and if so, prints an appropriate message.

4 A Few Buffer-Related Functions

In this chapter we study in detail several of the functions used in GNU Emacs. This is called a “walk-through”. These functions are used as examples of Lisp code, but are not imaginary examples; with the exception of the first, simplified function definition, these functions show the actual code used in GNU Emacs. You can learn a great deal from these definitions. The functions described here are all related to buffers. Later, we will study other functions.

4.1 Finding More Information

In this walk-through, I will describe each new function as we come to it, sometimes in detail and sometimes briefly. If you are interested, you can get the full documentation of any Emacs Lisp function at any time by typing C-h f and then the name of the function (and then RET). Similarly, you can get the full documentation for a variable by typing C-h v and then the name of the variable (and then RET).

Also, describe-function will tell you the location of the function definition.

Put point into the name of the file that contains the function and press the RET key. In this case, RET means push-button rather than “return” or “enter”. Emacs will take you directly to the function definition.

More generally, if you want to see a function in its original source file, you can use the xref-find-definitions function to jump to it. xref-find-definitions works with a wide variety of languages, not just Lisp, and C, and it works with non-programming text as well. For example, xref-find-definitions will jump to the various nodes in the Texinfo source file of this document (provided that you’ve run the etags utility to record all the nodes in the manuals that come with Emacs; see Create Tags Table in The GNU Emacs Manual).

To use the xref-find-definitions command, type M-. (i.e., press the period key while holding down the META key, or else type the ESC key and then type the period key), and then, at the prompt, type in the name of the function whose source code you want to see, such as mark-whole-buffer, and then type RET. (If the command doesn’t prompt, invoke it with an argument: C-u M-.; see Different Options for interactive.) Emacs will switch buffers and display the source code for the function on your screen11. To switch back to your current buffer, type M-, or C-x b RET. (On some keyboards, the META key is labeled ALT.)

Incidentally, the files that contain Lisp code are conventionally called libraries. The metaphor is derived from that of a specialized library, such as a law library or an engineering library, rather than a general library. Each library, or file, contains functions that relate to a particular topic or activity, such as abbrev.el for handling abbreviations and other typing shortcuts, and help.el for help. (Sometimes several libraries provide code for a single activity, as the various rmail… files provide code for reading electronic mail.) In The GNU Emacs Manual, you will see sentences such as “The C-h p command lets you search the standard Emacs Lisp libraries by topic keywords.”

4.2 A Simplified beginning-of-buffer Definition

The beginning-of-buffer command is a good function to start with since you are likely to be familiar with it and it is easy to understand. Used as an interactive command, beginning-of-buffer moves the cursor to the beginning of the buffer, leaving the mark at the previous position. It is generally bound to M-<.

In this section, we will discuss a shortened version of the function that shows how it is most frequently used. This shortened function works as written, but it does not contain the code for a complex option. In another section, we will describe the entire function. (See Complete Definition of beginning-of-buffer.)

Before looking at the code, let’s consider what the function definition has to contain: it must include an expression that makes the function interactive so it can be called by typing M-x beginning-of-buffer or by typing a keychord such as M-<; it must include code to leave a mark at the original position in the buffer; and it must include code to move the cursor to the beginning of the buffer.

Here is the complete text of the shortened version of the function:

(defun simplified-beginning-of-buffer ()
  "Move point to the beginning of the buffer;
leave mark at previous position."
  (interactive)
  (push-mark)
  (goto-char (point-min)))

Like all function definitions, this definition has five parts following the macro defun:

  1. The name: in this example, simplified-beginning-of-buffer.
  2. A list of the arguments: in this example, an empty list, (),
  3. The documentation string.
  4. The interactive expression.
  5. The body.

In this function definition, the argument list is empty; this means that this function does not require any arguments. (When we look at the definition for the complete function, we will see that it may be passed an optional argument.)

The interactive expression tells Emacs that the function is intended to be used interactively. In this example, interactive does not have an argument because simplified-beginning-of-buffer does not require one.

The body of the function consists of the two lines:

(push-mark)
(goto-char (point-min))

The first of these lines is the expression, (push-mark). When this expression is evaluated by the Lisp interpreter, it sets a mark at the current position of the cursor, wherever that may be. The position of this mark is saved in the mark ring.

The next line is (goto-char (point-min)). This expression jumps the cursor to the minimum point in the buffer, that is, to the beginning of the buffer (or to the beginning of the accessible portion of the buffer if it is narrowed. See Narrowing and Widening.)

The push-mark command sets a mark at the place where the cursor was located before it was moved to the beginning of the buffer by the (goto-char (point-min)) expression. Consequently, you can, if you wish, go back to where you were originally by typing C-x C-x.

That is all there is to the function definition!

When you are reading code such as this and come upon an unfamiliar function, such as goto-char, you can find out what it does by using the describe-function command. To use this command, type C-h f and then type in the name of the function and press RET. The describe-function command will print the function’s documentation string in a *Help* window. For example, the documentation for goto-char is:

Set point to POSITION, a number or marker.
Beginning of buffer is position (point-min), end is (point-max).

The function’s one argument is the desired position.

(The prompt for describe-function will offer you the symbol under or preceding the cursor, so you can save typing by positioning the cursor right over or after the function and then typing C-h f RET.)

The end-of-buffer function definition is written in the same way as the beginning-of-buffer definition except that the body of the function contains the expression (goto-char (point-max)) in place of (goto-char (point-min)).

4.3 The Definition of mark-whole-buffer

The mark-whole-buffer function is no harder to understand than the simplified-beginning-of-buffer function. In this case, however, we will look at the complete function, not a shortened version.

The mark-whole-buffer function is not as commonly used as the beginning-of-buffer function, but is useful nonetheless: it marks a whole buffer as a region by putting point at the beginning and a mark at the end of the buffer. It is generally bound to C-x h.

An overview of mark-whole-buffer

In GNU Emacs 22, the code for the complete function looks like this:

(defun mark-whole-buffer ()
  "Put point at beginning and mark at end of buffer.
You probably should not use this function in Lisp programs;
it is usually a mistake for a Lisp function to use any subroutine
that uses or sets the mark."
  (interactive)
  (push-mark (point))
  (push-mark (point-max) nil t)
  (goto-char (point-min)))

Like all other functions, the mark-whole-buffer function fits into the template for a function definition. The template looks like this:

(defun name-of-function (argument-list)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive-expression…)
  body…)

Here is how the function works: the name of the function is mark-whole-buffer; it is followed by an empty argument list, ‘()’, which means that the function does not require arguments. The documentation comes next.

The next line is an (interactive) expression that tells Emacs that the function will be used interactively. These details are similar to the simplified-beginning-of-buffer function described in the previous section.

4.3.1 Body of mark-whole-buffer

The body of the mark-whole-buffer function consists of three lines of code:

(push-mark (point))
(push-mark (point-max) nil t)
(goto-char (point-min))

The first of these lines is the expression, (push-mark (point)).

This line does exactly the same job as the first line of the body of the simplified-beginning-of-buffer function, which is written (push-mark). In both cases, the Lisp interpreter sets a mark at the current position of the cursor.

I don’t know why the expression in mark-whole-buffer is written (push-mark (point)) and the expression in beginning-of-buffer is written (push-mark). Perhaps whoever wrote the code did not know that the arguments for push-mark are optional and that if push-mark is not passed an argument, the function automatically sets mark at the location of point by default. Or perhaps the expression was written so as to parallel the structure of the next line. In any case, the line causes Emacs to determine the position of point and set a mark there.

In earlier versions of GNU Emacs, the next line of mark-whole-buffer was (push-mark (point-max)). This expression sets a mark at the point in the buffer that has the highest number. This will be the end of the buffer (or, if the buffer is narrowed, the end of the accessible portion of the buffer. See Narrowing and Widening, for more about narrowing.) After this mark has been set, the previous mark, the one set at point, is no longer set, but Emacs remembers its position, just as all other recent marks are always remembered. This means that you can, if you wish, go back to that position by typing C-u C-SPC twice.

In GNU Emacs 22, the (point-max) is slightly more complicated. The line reads

(push-mark (point-max) nil t)

The expression works nearly the same as before. It sets a mark at the highest numbered place in the buffer that it can. However, in this version, push-mark has two additional arguments. The second argument to push-mark is nil. This tells the function it should display a message that says “Mark set” when it pushes the mark. The third argument is t. This tells push-mark to activate the mark when Transient Mark mode is turned on. Transient Mark mode highlights the currently active region. It is often turned off.

Finally, the last line of the function is (goto-char (point-min))). This is written exactly the same way as it is written in beginning-of-buffer. The expression moves the cursor to the minimum point in the buffer, that is, to the beginning of the buffer (or to the beginning of the accessible portion of the buffer). As a result of this, point is placed at the beginning of the buffer and mark is set at the end of the buffer. The whole buffer is, therefore, the region.

4.4 The Definition of append-to-buffer

The append-to-buffer command is more complex than the mark-whole-buffer command. What it does is copy the region (that is, the part of the buffer between point and mark) from the current buffer to a specified buffer.

An Overview of append-to-buffer

The append-to-buffer command uses the insert-buffer-substring function to copy the region. insert-buffer-substring is described by its name: it takes a substring from a buffer, and inserts it into another buffer.

Most of append-to-buffer is concerned with setting up the conditions for insert-buffer-substring to work: the code must specify both the buffer to which the text will go, the window it comes from and goes to, and the region that will be copied.

Here is a possible implementation of the function:

(defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
  "Append to specified buffer the text of the region.
It is inserted into that buffer before its point.

When calling from a program, give three arguments:
BUFFER (or buffer name), START and END.
START and END specify the portion of the current buffer to be copied."
  (interactive
   (list (read-buffer "Append to buffer: " (other-buffer
                                            (current-buffer) t))
         (region-beginning) (region-end)))
  (let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
    (save-excursion
      (let* ((append-to (get-buffer-create buffer))
             (windows (get-buffer-window-list append-to t t))
             point)
        (set-buffer append-to)
        (setq point (point))
        (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
        (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
        (dolist (window windows)
          (when (= (window-point window) point)
            (set-window-point window (point))))))))

The function can be understood by looking at it as a series of filled-in templates.

The outermost template is for the function definition. In this function, it looks like this (with several slots filled in):

(defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive …)
  body…)

The first line of the function includes its name and three arguments. The arguments are the buffer to which the text will be copied, and the start and end of the region in the current buffer that will be copied.

The next part of the function is the documentation, which is clear and complete. As is conventional, the three arguments are written in upper case so you will notice them easily. Even better, they are described in the same order as in the argument list.

Note that the documentation distinguishes between a buffer and its name. (The function can handle either.)

4.4.1 The append-to-buffer Interactive Expression

Since the append-to-buffer function will be used interactively, the function must have an interactive expression. (For a review of interactive, see Making a Function Interactive.)

The expression reads as follows:

(interactive
 (list (read-buffer
        "Append to buffer: "
        (other-buffer (current-buffer) t))
       (region-beginning)
       (region-end)))

This expression is not one with letters standing for parts, as described earlier. Instead, it starts a list with these parts:

The first part of the list is an expression to read the name of a buffer and return it as a string. That is read-buffer. The function requires a prompt as its first argument, ‘"Append to buffer: "’. Its second argument tells the command what value to provide if you don’t specify anything.

In this case that second argument is an expression containing the function other-buffer, an exception, and a ‘t’, standing for true.

The first argument to other-buffer, the exception, is yet another function, current-buffer. That is not going to be returned. The second argument is the symbol for true, t. That tells other-buffer that it may show visible buffers (except in this case, it will not show the current buffer, which makes sense).

The expression looks like this:

(other-buffer (current-buffer) t)

The second and third arguments to the list expression are (region-beginning) and (region-end). These two functions specify the beginning and end of the text to be appended.

Originally, the command used the letters ‘B’ and ‘r’. The whole interactive expression looked like this:

(interactive "BAppend to buffer: \nr")

But when that was done, the default value of the buffer switched to was invisible. That was not wanted.

(The prompt was separated from the second argument with a newline, ‘\n’. It was followed by an ‘r’ that told Emacs to bind the two arguments that follow the symbol buffer in the function’s argument list (that is, start and end) to the values of point and mark. That argument worked fine.)

4.4.2 The Body of append-to-buffer

The body of the append-to-buffer function begins with let.

As we have seen before (see let), the purpose of a let expression is to create and give initial values to one or more variables that will only be used within the body of the let. This means that such a variable will not be confused with any variable of the same name outside the let expression.

We can see how the let expression fits into the function as a whole by showing a template for append-to-buffer with the let expression in outline:

(defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive …)
  (let ((variable value))
        body…))

The let expression has three elements:

  1. The symbol let;
  2. A varlist containing, in this case, a single two-element list, (variable value);
  3. The body of the let expression.

In the append-to-buffer function, the varlist looks like this:

(oldbuf (current-buffer))

In this part of the let expression, the one variable, oldbuf, is bound to the value returned by the (current-buffer) expression. The variable, oldbuf, is used to keep track of the buffer in which you are working and from which you will copy.

The element or elements of a varlist are surrounded by a set of parentheses so the Lisp interpreter can distinguish the varlist from the body of the let. As a consequence, the two-element list within the varlist is surrounded by a circumscribing set of parentheses. The line looks like this:

(let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
  … )

The two parentheses before oldbuf might surprise you if you did not realize that the first parenthesis before oldbuf marks the boundary of the varlist and the second parenthesis marks the beginning of the two-element list, (oldbuf (current-buffer)).

4.4.3 save-excursion in append-to-buffer

The body of the let expression in append-to-buffer consists of a save-excursion expression.

The save-excursion function saves the location of point, and restores it to that position after the expressions in the body of the save-excursion complete execution. In addition, save-excursion keeps track of the original buffer, and restores it. This is how save-excursion is used in append-to-buffer.

Incidentally, it is worth noting here that a Lisp function is normally formatted so that everything that is enclosed in a multi-line spread is indented more to the right than the first symbol. In this function definition, the let is indented more than the defun, and the save-excursion is indented more than the let, like this:

(defun …
  …
  …
  (let…
    (save-excursion
      …

This formatting convention makes it easy to see that the lines in the body of the save-excursion are enclosed by the parentheses associated with save-excursion, just as the save-excursion itself is enclosed by the parentheses associated with the let:

(let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
  (save-excursion
    …
    (set-buffer …)
    (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
    …))

The use of the save-excursion function can be viewed as a process of filling in the slots of a template:

(save-excursion
  first-expression-in-body
  second-expression-in-bodylast-expression-in-body)

In this function, the body of the save-excursion contains only one expression, the let* expression. You know about a let function. The let* function is different. It enables Emacs to set each variable in its varlist in sequence, one after another; such that variables in the latter part of the varlist can make use of the values to which Emacs set variables earlier in the varlist.

Looking at the let* expression in append-to-buffer:

(let* ((append-to (get-buffer-create buffer))
       (windows (get-buffer-window-list append-to t t))
       point)
  BODY...)

we see that append-to is bound to the value returned by the (get-buffer-create buffer). On the next line, append-to is used as an argument to get-buffer-window-list; this would not be possible with the let expression. Note that point is automatically bound to nil, the same way as it would be done in the let statement.

Now let’s focus on the functions set-buffer and insert-buffer-substring in the body of the let* expression.

In the old days, the set-buffer expression was simply

(set-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer))

but now it is

(set-buffer append-to)

This is because append-to was bound to (get-buffer-create buffer) earlier on in the let* expression.

The append-to-buffer function definition inserts text from the buffer in which you are currently to a named buffer. It happens that insert-buffer-substring does just the reverse—it copies text from another buffer to the current buffer—that is why the append-to-buffer definition starts out with a let that binds the local symbol oldbuf to the value returned by current-buffer.

The insert-buffer-substring expression looks like this:

(insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)

The insert-buffer-substring function copies a string from the buffer specified as its first argument and inserts the string into the present buffer. In this case, the argument to insert-buffer-substring is the value of the variable created and bound by the let, namely the value of oldbuf, which was the current buffer when you gave the append-to-buffer command.

After insert-buffer-substring has done its work, save-excursion will restore the action to the original buffer and append-to-buffer will have done its job.

Written in skeletal form, the workings of the body look like this:

(let (bind-oldbuf-to-value-of-current-buffer)
  (save-excursion                       ; Keep track of buffer.
    change-buffer
    insert-substring-from-oldbuf-into-buffer)

  change-back-to-original-buffer-when-finished
let-the-local-meaning-of-oldbuf-disappear-when-finished

In summary, append-to-buffer works as follows: it saves the value of the current buffer in the variable called oldbuf. It gets the new buffer (creating one if need be) and switches Emacs’s attention to it. Using the value of oldbuf, it inserts the region of text from the old buffer into the new buffer; and then using save-excursion, it brings you back to your original buffer.

In looking at append-to-buffer, you have explored a fairly complex function. It shows how to use let and save-excursion, and how to change to and come back from another buffer. Many function definitions use let, save-excursion, and set-buffer this way.

4.6 Exercises

  • Write your own simplified-end-of-buffer function definition; then test it to see whether it works.
  • Use if and get-buffer to write a function that prints a message telling you whether a buffer exists.
  • Using xref-find-definitions, find the source for the copy-to-buffer function.

5 A Few More Complex Functions

In this chapter, we build on what we have learned in previous chapters by looking at more complex functions. The copy-to-buffer function illustrates use of two save-excursion expressions in one definition, while the insert-buffer function illustrates use of an asterisk in an interactive expression, use of or, and the important distinction between a name and the object to which the name refers.

5.1 The Definition of copy-to-buffer

After understanding how append-to-buffer works, it is easy to understand copy-to-buffer. This function copies text into a buffer, but instead of adding to the second buffer, it replaces all the previous text in the second buffer.

The body of copy-to-buffer looks like this,

…
(interactive "BCopy to buffer: \nr")
(let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
  (with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer)
    (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
    (erase-buffer)
    (save-excursion
      (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)))))

The copy-to-buffer function has a simpler interactive expression than append-to-buffer.

The definition then says

(with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer) …

First, look at the earliest inner expression; that is evaluated first. That expression starts with get-buffer-create buffer. The function tells the computer to use the buffer with the name specified as the one to which you are copying, or if such a buffer does not exist, to create it. Then, the with-current-buffer function evaluates its body with that buffer temporarily current, after which it will switch back to the buffer we are at now12.

(This demonstrates another way to shift the computer’s attention but not the user’s. The append-to-buffer function showed how to do the same with save-excursion and set-buffer. with-current-buffer is a newer, and arguably easier, mechanism.)

The barf-if-buffer-read-only function sends you an error message saying the buffer is read-only if you cannot modify it.

The next line has the erase-buffer function as its sole contents. That function erases the buffer.

Finally, the last two lines contain the save-excursion expression with insert-buffer-substring as its body. The insert-buffer-substring expression copies the text from the buffer you are in (and you have not seen the computer shift its attention, so you don’t know that that buffer is now called oldbuf).

Incidentally, this is what is meant by “replacement”. To replace text, Emacs erases the previous text and then inserts new text.

In outline, the body of copy-to-buffer looks like this:

(let (bind-oldbuf-to-value-of-current-buffer)
    (with-the-buffer-you-are-copying-to
      (but-do-not-erase-or-copy-to-a-read-only-buffer)
      (erase-buffer)
      (save-excursion
        insert-substring-from-oldbuf-into-buffer)))

5.2 The Definition of insert-buffer

insert-buffer is yet another buffer-related function. This command copies another buffer into the current buffer. It is the reverse of append-to-buffer or copy-to-buffer, since they copy a region of text from the current buffer to another buffer.

Here is a discussion based on the original code. The code was simplified in 2003 and is harder to understand.

(See New Body for insert-buffer, to see a discussion of the new body.)

In addition, this code illustrates the use of interactive with a buffer that might be read-only and the important distinction between the name of an object and the object actually referred to.

The Code for insert-buffer

Here is the earlier code:

(defun insert-buffer (buffer)
  "Insert after point the contents of BUFFER.
Puts mark after the inserted text.
BUFFER may be a buffer or a buffer name."
  (interactive "*bInsert buffer: ")
  (or (bufferp buffer)
      (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)))
  (let (start end newmark)
    (save-excursion
      (save-excursion
        (set-buffer buffer)
        (setq start (point-min) end (point-max)))
      (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
      (setq newmark (point)))
    (push-mark newmark)))

As with other function definitions, you can use a template to see an outline of the function:

(defun insert-buffer (buffer)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive "*bInsert buffer: ")
  body…)

5.2.1 The Interactive Expression in insert-buffer

In insert-buffer, the argument to the interactive declaration has two parts, an asterisk, ‘*’, and ‘bInsert buffer: ’.

A Read-only Buffer

The asterisk is for the situation when the current buffer is a read-only buffer—a buffer that cannot be modified. If insert-buffer is called when the current buffer is read-only, a message to this effect is printed in the echo area and the terminal may beep or blink at you; you will not be permitted to insert anything into current buffer. The asterisk does not need to be followed by a newline to separate it from the next argument.

b’ in an Interactive Expression

The next argument in the interactive expression starts with a lower case ‘b’. (This is different from the code for append-to-buffer, which uses an upper-case ‘B’. See The Definition of append-to-buffer.) The lower-case ‘b’ tells the Lisp interpreter that the argument for insert-buffer should be an existing buffer or else its name. (The upper-case ‘B’ option provides for the possibility that the buffer does not exist.) Emacs will prompt you for the name of the buffer, offering you a default buffer, with name completion enabled. If the buffer does not exist, you receive a message that says “No match”; your terminal may beep at you as well.

The new and simplified code generates a list for interactive. It uses the barf-if-buffer-read-only and read-buffer functions with which we are already familiar and the progn special form with which we are not. (It will be described later.)

5.2.2 The Body of the insert-buffer Function

The body of the insert-buffer function has two major parts: an or expression and a let expression. The purpose of the or expression is to ensure that the argument buffer is bound to a buffer and not just the name of a buffer. The body of the let expression contains the code which copies the other buffer into the current buffer.

In outline, the two expressions fit into the insert-buffer function like this:

(defun insert-buffer (buffer)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive "*bInsert buffer: ")
  (or …
      …
  (let (varlist)
      body-of-let… )

To understand how the or expression ensures that the argument buffer is bound to a buffer and not to the name of a buffer, it is first necessary to understand the or function.

Before doing this, let me rewrite this part of the function using if so that you can see what is done in a manner that will be familiar.

5.2.3 insert-buffer With an if Instead of an or

The job to be done is to make sure the value of buffer is a buffer itself and not the name of a buffer. If the value is the name, then the buffer itself must be got.

You can imagine yourself at a conference where an usher is wandering around holding a list with your name on it and looking for you: the usher is bound to your name, not to you; but when the usher finds you and takes your arm, the usher becomes bound to you.

In Lisp, you might describe this situation like this:

(if (not (holding-on-to-guest))
    (find-and-take-arm-of-guest))

We want to do the same thing with a buffer—if we do not have the buffer itself, we want to get it.

Using a predicate called bufferp that tells us whether we have a buffer (rather than its name), we can write the code like this:

(if (not (bufferp buffer))              ; if-part
    (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)))  ; then-part

Here, the true-or-false-test of the if expression is (not (bufferp buffer)); and the then-part is the expression (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)).

In the test, the function bufferp returns true if its argument is a buffer—but false if its argument is the name of the buffer. (The last character of the function name bufferp is the character ‘p’; as we saw earlier, such use of ‘p’ is a convention that indicates that the function is a predicate, which is a term that means that the function will determine whether some property is true or false. See Using the Wrong Type Object as an Argument.)

The function not precedes the expression (bufferp buffer), so the true-or-false-test looks like this:

(not (bufferp buffer))

not is a function that returns true if its argument is false and false if its argument is true. So if (bufferp buffer) returns true, the not expression returns false and vice versa.

Using this test, the if expression works as follows: when the value of the variable buffer is actually a buffer rather than its name, the true-or-false-test returns false and the if expression does not evaluate the then-part. This is fine, since we do not need to do anything to the variable buffer if it really is a buffer.

On the other hand, when the value of buffer is not a buffer itself, but the name of a buffer, the true-or-false-test returns true and the then-part of the expression is evaluated. In this case, the then-part is (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)). This expression uses the get-buffer function to return an actual buffer itself, given its name. The setq then sets the variable buffer to the value of the buffer itself, replacing its previous value (which was the name of the buffer).

5.2.4 The or in the Body

The purpose of the or expression in the insert-buffer function is to ensure that the argument buffer is bound to a buffer and not just to the name of a buffer. The previous section shows how the job could have been done using an if expression. However, the insert-buffer function actually uses or. To understand this, it is necessary to understand how or works.

An or function can have any number of arguments. It evaluates each argument in turn and returns the value of the first of its arguments that is not nil. Also, and this is a crucial feature of or, it does not evaluate any subsequent arguments after returning the first non-nil value.

The or expression looks like this:

(or (bufferp buffer)
    (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)))

The first argument to or is the expression (bufferp buffer). This expression returns true (a non-nil value) if the buffer is actually a buffer, and not just the name of a buffer. In the or expression, if this is the case, the or expression returns this true value and does not evaluate the next expression—and this is fine with us, since we do not want to do anything to the value of buffer if it really is a buffer.

On the other hand, if the value of (bufferp buffer) is nil, which it will be if the value of buffer is the name of a buffer, the Lisp interpreter evaluates the next element of the or expression. This is the expression (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)). This expression returns a non-nil value, which is the value to which it sets the variable buffer—and this value is a buffer itself, not the name of a buffer.

The result of all this is that the symbol buffer is always bound to a buffer itself rather than to the name of a buffer. All this is necessary because the set-buffer function in a following line only works with a buffer itself, not with the name to a buffer.

Incidentally, using or, the situation with the usher would be written like this:

(or (holding-on-to-guest) (find-and-take-arm-of-guest))

5.2.5 The let Expression in insert-buffer

After ensuring that the variable buffer refers to a buffer itself and not just to the name of a buffer, the insert-buffer function continues with a let expression. This specifies three local variables, start, end, and newmark and binds them to the initial value nil. These variables are used inside the remainder of the let and temporarily hide any other occurrence of variables of the same name in Emacs until the end of the let.

The body of the let contains two save-excursion expressions. First, we will look at the inner save-excursion expression in detail. The expression looks like this:

(save-excursion
  (set-buffer buffer)
  (setq start (point-min) end (point-max)))

The expression (set-buffer buffer) changes Emacs’s attention from the current buffer to the one from which the text will copied. In that buffer, the variables start and end are set to the beginning and end of the buffer, using the commands point-min and point-max. Note that we have here an illustration of how setq is able to set two variables in the same expression. The first argument of setq is set to the value of its second, and its third argument is set to the value of its fourth.

After the body of the inner save-excursion is evaluated, the save-excursion restores the original buffer, but start and end remain set to the values of the beginning and end of the buffer from which the text will be copied.

The outer save-excursion expression looks like this:

(save-excursion
  (inner-save-excursion-expression
     (go-to-new-buffer-and-set-start-and-end)
  (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
  (setq newmark (point)))

The insert-buffer-substring function copies the text into the current buffer from the region indicated by start and end in buffer. Since the whole of the second buffer lies between start and end, the whole of the second buffer is copied into the buffer you are editing. Next, the value of point, which will be at the end of the inserted text, is recorded in the variable newmark.

After the body of the outer save-excursion is evaluated, point is relocated to its original place.

However, it is convenient to locate a mark at the end of the newly inserted text and locate point at its beginning. The newmark variable records the end of the inserted text. In the last line of the let expression, the (push-mark newmark) expression function sets a mark to this location. (The previous location of the mark is still accessible; it is recorded on the mark ring and you can go back to it with C-u C-SPC.) Meanwhile, point is located at the beginning of the inserted text, which is where it was before you called the insert function, the position of which was saved by the first save-excursion.

The whole let expression looks like this:

(let (start end newmark)
  (save-excursion
    (save-excursion
      (set-buffer buffer)
      (setq start (point-min) end (point-max)))
    (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
    (setq newmark (point)))
  (push-mark newmark))

Like the append-to-buffer function, the insert-buffer function uses let, save-excursion, and set-buffer. In addition, the function illustrates one way to use or. All these functions are building blocks that we will find and use again and again.

5.2.6 New Body for insert-buffer

The body in the GNU Emacs 22 version is more confusing than the original.

It consists of two expressions,

  (push-mark
   (save-excursion
     (insert-buffer-substring (get-buffer buffer))
     (point)))

   nil

except, and this is what confuses novices, very important work is done inside the push-mark expression.

The get-buffer function returns a buffer with the name provided. You will note that the function is not called get-buffer-create; it does not create a buffer if one does not already exist. The buffer returned by get-buffer, an existing buffer, is passed to insert-buffer-substring, which inserts the whole of the buffer (since you did not specify anything else).

The location into which the buffer is inserted is recorded by push-mark. Then the function returns nil, the value of its last command. Put another way, the insert-buffer function exists only to produce a side effect, inserting another buffer, not to return any value.

5.3 Complete Definition of beginning-of-buffer

The basic structure of the beginning-of-buffer function has already been discussed. (See A Simplified beginning-of-buffer Definition.) This section describes the complex part of the definition.

As previously described, when invoked without an argument, beginning-of-buffer moves the cursor to the beginning of the buffer (in truth, the beginning of the accessible portion of the buffer), leaving the mark at the previous position. However, when the command is invoked with a number between one and ten, the function considers that number to be a fraction of the length of the buffer, measured in tenths, and Emacs moves the cursor that fraction of the way from the beginning of the buffer. Thus, you can either call this function with the key command M-<, which will move the cursor to the beginning of the buffer, or with a key command such as C-u 7 M-< which will move the cursor to a point 70% of the way through the buffer. If a number bigger than ten is used for the argument, it moves to the end of the buffer.

The beginning-of-buffer function can be called with or without an argument. The use of the argument is optional.

5.3.1 Optional Arguments

Unless told otherwise, Lisp expects that a function with an argument in its function definition will be called with a value for that argument. If that does not happen, you get an error and a message that says ‘Wrong number of arguments’.

However, optional arguments are a feature of Lisp: a particular keyword is used to tell the Lisp interpreter that an argument is optional. The keyword is &optional. (The ‘&’ in front of ‘optional’ is part of the keyword.) In a function definition, if an argument follows the keyword &optional, no value need be passed to that argument when the function is called.

The first line of the function definition of beginning-of-buffer therefore looks like this:

(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)

In outline, the whole function looks like this:

(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive "P")
  (or (is-the-argument-a-cons-cell arg)
      (and are-both-transient-mark-mode-and-mark-active-true)
      (push-mark))
  (let (determine-size-and-set-it)
    (goto-char
      (if-there-is-an-argument
          figure-out-where-to-go
        else-go-to
        (point-min))))
  do-nicety

The function is similar to the simplified-beginning-of-buffer function except that the interactive expression has "P" as an argument and the goto-char function is followed by an if-then-else expression that figures out where to put the cursor if there is an argument that is not a cons cell.

(Since I do not explain a cons cell for many more chapters, please consider ignoring the function consp. See How Lists are Implemented, and Cons Cell and List Types in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

The "P" in the interactive expression tells Emacs to pass a prefix argument, if there is one, to the function in raw form. A prefix argument is made by typing the META key followed by a number, or by typing C-u and then a number. (If you don’t type a number, C-u defaults to a cons cell with a 4. A lowercase "p" in the interactive expression causes the function to convert a prefix arg to a number.)

The true-or-false-test of the if expression looks complex, but it is not: it checks whether arg has a value that is not nil and whether it is a cons cell. (That is what consp does; it checks whether its argument is a cons cell.) If arg has a value that is not nil (and is not a cons cell), which will be the case if beginning-of-buffer is called with a numeric argument, then this true-or-false-test will return true and the then-part of the if expression will be evaluated. On the other hand, if beginning-of-buffer is not called with an argument, the value of arg will be nil and the else-part of the if expression will be evaluated. The else-part is simply point-min, and when this is the outcome, the whole goto-char expression is (goto-char (point-min)), which is how we saw the beginning-of-buffer function in its simplified form.

5.3.2 beginning-of-buffer with an Argument

When beginning-of-buffer is called with an argument, an expression is evaluated which calculates what value to pass to goto-char. This expression is rather complicated at first sight. It includes an inner if expression and much arithmetic. It looks like this:

(if (> (buffer-size) 10000)
    ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes!
    (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
       (/ size 10))
  (/
   (+ 10
      (* size
         (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
   10))

Disentangle beginning-of-buffer

Like other complex-looking expressions, the conditional expression within beginning-of-buffer can be disentangled by looking at it as parts of a template, in this case, the template for an if-then-else expression. In skeletal form, the expression looks like this:

(if (buffer-is-large
    divide-buffer-size-by-10-and-multiply-by-arg
  else-use-alternate-calculation

The true-or-false-test of this inner if expression checks the size of the buffer. The reason for this is that the old version 18 Emacs used numbers that are no bigger than eight million or so and in the computation that followed, the programmer feared that Emacs might try to use over-large numbers if the buffer were large. The term “overflow”, mentioned in the comment, means numbers that are over large. More recent versions of Emacs use larger numbers, but this code has not been touched, if only because people now look at buffers that are far, far larger than ever before.

There are two cases: if the buffer is large and if it is not.

What happens in a large buffer

In beginning-of-buffer, the inner if expression tests whether the size of the buffer is greater than 10,000 characters. To do this, it uses the > function and the computation of size that comes from the let expression.

In the old days, the function buffer-size was used. Not only was that function called several times, it gave the size of the whole buffer, not the accessible part. The computation makes much more sense when it handles just the accessible part. (See Narrowing and Widening, for more information on focusing attention to an accessible part.)

The line looks like this:

(if (> size 10000)

When the buffer is large, the then-part of the if expression is evaluated. It reads like this (after formatting for easy reading):

(*
  (prefix-numeric-value arg)
  (/ size 10))

This expression is a multiplication, with two arguments to the function *.

The first argument is (prefix-numeric-value arg). When "P" is used as the argument for interactive, the value passed to the function as its argument is passed a raw prefix argument, and not a number. (It is a number in a list.) To perform the arithmetic, a conversion is necessary, and prefix-numeric-value does the job.

The second argument is (/ size 10). This expression divides the numeric value by ten—the numeric value of the size of the accessible portion of the buffer. This produces a number that tells how many characters make up one tenth of the buffer size. (In Lisp, / is used for division, just as * is used for multiplication.)

In the multiplication expression as a whole, this amount is multiplied by the value of the prefix argument—the multiplication looks like this:

(* numeric-value-of-prefix-arg
   number-of-characters-in-one-tenth-of-the-accessible-buffer)

If, for example, the prefix argument is ‘7’, the one-tenth value will be multiplied by 7 to give a position 70% of the way through.

The result of all this is that if the accessible portion of the buffer is large, the goto-char expression reads like this:

(goto-char (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
              (/ size 10)))

This puts the cursor where we want it.

What happens in a small buffer

If the buffer contains fewer than 10,000 characters, a slightly different computation is performed. You might think this is not necessary, since the first computation could do the job. However, in a small buffer, the first method may not put the cursor on exactly the desired line; the second method does a better job.

The code looks like this:

(/ (+ 10 (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg))) 10)

This is code in which you figure out what happens by discovering how the functions are embedded in parentheses. It is easier to read if you reformat it with each expression indented more deeply than its enclosing expression:

  (/
   (+ 10
      (*
       size
       (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
   10)

Looking at parentheses, we see that the innermost operation is (prefix-numeric-value arg), which converts the raw argument to a number. In the following expression, this number is multiplied by the size of the accessible portion of the buffer:

(* size (prefix-numeric-value arg))

This multiplication creates a number that may be larger than the size of the buffer—seven times larger if the argument is 7, for example. Ten is then added to this number and finally the large number is divided by ten to provide a value that is one character larger than the percentage position in the buffer.

The number that results from all this is passed to goto-char and the cursor is moved to that point.

5.3.3 The Complete beginning-of-buffer

Here is the complete text of the beginning-of-buffer function:


(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
  "Move point to the beginning of the buffer;
leave mark at previous position.
With \\[universal-argument] prefix,
do not set mark at previous position.
With numeric arg N,
put point N/10 of the way from the beginning.

If the buffer is narrowed,
this command uses the beginning and size
of the accessible part of the buffer.

Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
\(goto-char (point-min)) is faster
and avoids clobbering the mark."
  (interactive "P")
  (or (consp arg)
      (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)
      (push-mark))
  (let ((size (- (point-max) (point-min))))
    (goto-char (if (and arg (not (consp arg)))
                   (+ (point-min)
                      (if (> size 10000)
                          ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes!
                          (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
                             (/ size 10))
                        (/ (+ 10 (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
                           10)))
                 (point-min))))
  (if (and arg (not (consp arg))) (forward-line 1)))

Except for two small points, the previous discussion shows how this function works. The first point deals with a detail in the documentation string, and the second point concerns the last line of the function.

In the documentation string, there is reference to an expression:

\\[universal-argument]

A ‘\\’ is used before the first square bracket of this expression. This ‘\\’ tells the Lisp interpreter to substitute whatever key is currently bound to the ‘[…]’. In the case of universal-argument, that is usually C-u, but it might be different. (See Tips for Documentation Strings in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more information.)

Finally, the last line of the beginning-of-buffer command says to move point to the beginning of the next line if the command is invoked with an argument:

(if (and arg (not (consp arg))) (forward-line 1))

This puts the cursor at the beginning of the first line after the appropriate tenths position in the buffer. This is a flourish that means that the cursor is always located at least the requested tenths of the way through the buffer, which is a nicety that is, perhaps, not necessary, but which, if it did not occur, would be sure to draw complaints. (The (not (consp arg)) portion is so that if you specify the command with a C-u, but without a number, that is to say, if the raw prefix argument is simply a cons cell, the command does not put you at the beginning of the second line.)

5.5 optional Argument Exercise

Write an interactive function with an optional argument that tests whether its argument, a number, is greater than or equal to, or else, less than the value of fill-column, and tells you which, in a message. However, if you do not pass an argument to the function, use 56 as a default value.

6 Narrowing and Widening

Narrowing is a feature of Emacs that makes it possible for you to focus on a specific part of a buffer, and work without accidentally changing other parts. Narrowing is normally disabled since it can confuse novices.

The Advantages of Narrowing

With narrowing, the rest of a buffer is made invisible, as if it weren’t there. This is an advantage if, for example, you want to replace a word in one part of a buffer but not in another: you narrow to the part you want and the replacement is carried out only in that section, not in the rest of the buffer. Searches will only work within a narrowed region, not outside of one, so if you are fixing a part of a document, you can keep yourself from accidentally finding parts you do not need to fix by narrowing just to the region you want. (The key binding for narrow-to-region is C-x n n.)

However, narrowing does make the rest of the buffer invisible, which can scare people who inadvertently invoke narrowing and think they have deleted a part of their file. Moreover, the undo command (which is usually bound to C-x u) does not turn off narrowing (nor should it), so people can become quite desperate if they do not know that they can return the rest of a buffer to visibility with the widen command. (The key binding for widen is C-x n w.)

Narrowing is just as useful to the Lisp interpreter as to a human. Often, an Emacs Lisp function is designed to work on just part of a buffer; or conversely, an Emacs Lisp function needs to work on all of a buffer that has been narrowed. The what-line function, for example, removes the narrowing from a buffer, if it has any narrowing and when it has finished its job, restores the narrowing to what it was. On the other hand, the count-lines function uses narrowing to restrict itself to just that portion of the buffer in which it is interested and then restores the previous situation.

6.1 The save-restriction Special Form

In Emacs Lisp, you can use the save-restriction special form to keep track of whatever narrowing is in effect, if any. When the Lisp interpreter meets with save-restriction, it executes the code in the body of the save-restriction expression, and then undoes any changes to narrowing that the code caused. If, for example, the buffer is narrowed and the code that follows save-restriction gets rid of the narrowing, save-restriction returns the buffer to its narrowed region afterwards. In the what-line command, any narrowing the buffer may have is undone by the widen command that immediately follows the save-restriction command. Any original narrowing is restored just before the completion of the function.

The template for a save-restriction expression is simple:

(save-restriction
  body… )

The body of the save-restriction is one or more expressions that will be evaluated in sequence by the Lisp interpreter.

Finally, a point to note: when you use both save-excursion and save-restriction, one right after the other, you should use save-excursion outermost. If you write them in reverse order, you may fail to record narrowing in the buffer to which Emacs switches after calling save-excursion. Thus, when written together, save-excursion and save-restriction should be written like this:

(save-excursion
  (save-restriction
    body…))

In other circumstances, when not written together, the save-excursion and save-restriction special forms must be written in the order appropriate to the function.

For example,

  (save-restriction
    (widen)
    (save-excursion
    body…))

6.2 what-line

The what-line command tells you the number of the line in which the cursor is located. The function illustrates the use of the save-restriction and save-excursion commands. Here is the original text of the function:

(defun what-line ()
  "Print the current line number (in the buffer) of point."
  (interactive)
  (save-restriction
    (widen)
    (save-excursion
      (beginning-of-line)
      (message "Line %d"
               (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))))

(In modern versions of GNU Emacs, the what-line function has been expanded to tell you your line number in a narrowed buffer as well as your line number in a widened buffer. The modern version is more complex than the version shown here. If you feel adventurous, you might want to look at it after figuring out how this version works. You will probably need to use C-h f (describe-function). The newer version uses a conditional to determine whether the buffer has been narrowed.

Also, the modern version of what-line uses line-number-at-pos, which among other simple expressions, such as (goto-char (point-min)), moves point to the beginning of the current line with (forward-line 0) rather than beginning-of-line.)

The what-line function as shown here has a documentation line and is interactive, as you would expect. The next two lines use the functions save-restriction and widen.

The save-restriction special form notes whatever narrowing is in effect, if any, in the current buffer and restores that narrowing after the code in the body of the save-restriction has been evaluated.

The save-restriction special form is followed by widen. This function undoes any narrowing the current buffer may have had when what-line was called. (The narrowing that was there is the narrowing that save-restriction remembers.) This widening makes it possible for the line counting commands to count from the beginning of the buffer. Otherwise, they would have been limited to counting within the accessible region. Any original narrowing is restored just before the completion of the function by the save-restriction special form.

The call to widen is followed by save-excursion, which saves the location of the cursor (i.e., of point), and restores it after the code in the body of the save-excursion uses the beginning-of-line function to move point.

(Note that the (widen) expression comes between the save-restriction and save-excursion special forms. When you write the two save- … expressions in sequence, write save-excursion outermost.)

The last two lines of the what-line function are functions to count the number of lines in the buffer and then print the number in the echo area.

(message "Line %d"
         (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))))

The message function prints a one-line message at the bottom of the Emacs screen. The first argument is inside of quotation marks and is printed as a string of characters. However, it may contain a ‘%d’ expression to print a following argument. ‘%d’ prints the argument as a decimal, so the message will say something such as ‘Line 243’.

The number that is printed in place of the ‘%d’ is computed by the last line of the function:

(1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))

What this does is count the lines from the first position of the buffer, indicated by the 1, up to (point), and then add one to that number. (The 1+ function adds one to its argument.) We add one to it because line 2 has only one line before it, and count-lines counts only the lines before the current line.

After count-lines has done its job, and the message has been printed in the echo area, the save-excursion restores point to its original position; and save-restriction restores the original narrowing, if any.

6.3 Exercise with Narrowing

Write a function that will display the first 60 characters of the current buffer, even if you have narrowed the buffer to its latter half so that the first line is inaccessible. Restore point, mark, and narrowing. For this exercise, you need to use a whole potpourri of functions, including save-restriction, widen, goto-char, point-min, message, and buffer-substring.

(buffer-substring is a previously unmentioned function you will have to investigate yourself; or perhaps you will have to use buffer-substring-no-properties or filter-buffer-substring …, yet other functions. Text properties are a feature otherwise not discussed here. See Text Properties in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

Additionally, do you really need goto-char or point-min? Or can you write the function without them?

7 car, cdr, cons: Fundamental Functions

In Lisp, car, cdr, and cons are fundamental functions. The cons function is used to construct lists, and the car and cdr functions are used to take them apart.

In the walk through of the copy-region-as-kill function, we will see cons as well as two variants on cdr, namely, setcdr and nthcdr. (See copy-region-as-kill.)

Strange Names

The name of the cons function is not unreasonable: it is an abbreviation of the word “construct”. The origins of the names for car and cdr, on the other hand, are esoteric: car is an acronym from the phrase “Contents of the Address part of the Register”; and cdr (pronounced “could-er”) is an acronym from the phrase “Contents of the Decrement part of the Register”. These phrases refer to the IBM 704 computer on which the original Lisp was developed.

The IBM 704 is a footnote in history, but these names are now beloved traditions of Lisp.

7.1 car and cdr

The CAR of a list is, quite simply, the first item in the list. Thus the CAR of the list (rose violet daisy buttercup) is rose.

If you are reading this in Info in GNU Emacs, you can see this by evaluating the following:

(car '(rose violet daisy buttercup))

After evaluating the expression, rose will appear in the echo area.

car does not remove the first item from the list; it only reports what it is. After car has been applied to a list, the list is still the same as it was. In the jargon, car is “non-destructive”. This feature turns out to be important.

The CDR of a list is the rest of the list, that is, the cdr function returns the part of the list that follows the first item. Thus, while the CAR of the list '(rose violet daisy buttercup) is rose, the rest of the list, the value returned by the cdr function, is (violet daisy buttercup).

You can see this by evaluating the following in the usual way:

(cdr '(rose violet daisy buttercup))

When you evaluate this, (violet daisy buttercup) will appear in the echo area.

Like car, cdr does not remove any elements from the list—it just returns a report of what the second and subsequent elements are.

Incidentally, in the example, the list of flowers is quoted. If it were not, the Lisp interpreter would try to evaluate the list by calling rose as a function. In this example, we do not want to do that.

For operating on lists, the names first and rest would make more sense than the names car and cdr. Indeed, some programmers define first and rest as aliases for car and cdr, then write first and rest in their code.

However, lists in Lisp are built using a lower-level structure known as “cons cells” (see How Lists are Implemented), in which there is no such thing as “first” or “rest”, and the CAR and the CDR are symmetrical. Lisp does not try to hide the existence of cons cells, and programs do use them for things other than lists. For this reason, the names are helpful for reminding programmers that car and cdr are in fact symmetrical, despite the asymmetrical way they are used in lists.

When car and cdr are applied to a list made up of symbols, such as the list (pine fir oak maple), the element of the list returned by the function car is the symbol pine without any parentheses around it. pine is the first element in the list. However, the CDR of the list is a list itself, (fir oak maple), as you can see by evaluating the following expressions in the usual way:

(car '(pine fir oak maple))

(cdr '(pine fir oak maple))

On the other hand, in a list of lists, the first element is itself a list. car returns this first element as a list. For example, the following list contains three sub-lists, a list of carnivores, a list of herbivores and a list of sea mammals:

(car '((lion tiger cheetah)
       (gazelle antelope zebra)
       (whale dolphin seal)))

In this example, the first element or CAR of the list is the list of carnivores, (lion tiger cheetah), and the rest of the list is ((gazelle antelope zebra) (whale dolphin seal)).

(cdr '((lion tiger cheetah)
       (gazelle antelope zebra)
       (whale dolphin seal)))

It is worth saying again that car and cdr are non-destructive—that is, they do not modify or change lists to which they are applied. This is very important for how they are used.

Also, in the first chapter, in the discussion about atoms, I said that in Lisp, certain kinds of atom, such as an array, can be separated into parts; but the mechanism for doing this is different from the mechanism for splitting a list. As far as Lisp is concerned, the atoms of a list are unsplittable. (See Lisp Atoms.) The car and cdr functions are used for splitting lists and are considered fundamental to Lisp. Since they cannot split or gain access to the parts of an array, an array is considered an atom. Conversely, the other fundamental function, cons, can put together or construct a list, but not an array. (Arrays are handled by array-specific functions. See Arrays in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

7.2 cons

The cons function constructs lists; it is the inverse of car and cdr. For example, cons can be used to make a four element list from the three element list, (fir oak maple):

(cons 'pine '(fir oak maple))

After evaluating this list, you will see

(pine fir oak maple)

appear in the echo area. cons causes the creation of a new list in which the element is followed by the elements of the original list.

We often say that cons puts a new element at the beginning of a list, or that it attaches or pushes elements onto the list, but this phrasing can be misleading, since cons does not change an existing list, but creates a new one.

Like car and cdr, cons is non-destructive.

Build a list

cons must have a list to attach to.13 You cannot start from absolutely nothing. If you are building a list, you need to provide at least an empty list at the beginning. Here is a series of cons expressions that build up a list of flowers. If you are reading this in Info in GNU Emacs, you can evaluate each of the expressions in the usual way; the value is printed in this text after ‘’, which you may read as “evaluates to”.

(cons 'buttercup ())
     ⇒ (buttercup)

(cons 'daisy '(buttercup))
     ⇒ (daisy buttercup)

(cons 'violet '(daisy buttercup))
     ⇒ (violet daisy buttercup)

(cons 'rose '(violet daisy buttercup))
     ⇒ (rose violet daisy buttercup)

In the first example, the empty list is shown as () and a list made up of buttercup followed by the empty list is constructed. As you can see, the empty list is not shown in the list that was constructed. All that you see is (buttercup). The empty list is not counted as an element of a list because there is nothing in an empty list. Generally speaking, an empty list is invisible.

The second example, (cons 'daisy '(buttercup)) constructs a new, two element list by putting daisy in front of buttercup; and the third example constructs a three element list by putting violet in front of daisy and buttercup.

Previous: , Up: cons   [Contents][Index]

7.2.1 Find the Length of a List: length

You can find out how many elements there are in a list by using the Lisp function length, as in the following examples:

(length '(buttercup))
     ⇒ 1

(length '(daisy buttercup))
     ⇒ 2

(length (cons 'violet '(daisy buttercup)))
     ⇒ 3

In the third example, the cons function is used to construct a three element list which is then passed to the length function as its argument.

We can also use length to count the number of elements in an empty list:

(length ())
     ⇒ 0

As you would expect, the number of elements in an empty list is zero.

An interesting experiment is to find out what happens if you try to find the length of no list at all; that is, if you try to call length without giving it an argument, not even an empty list:

(length )

What you see, if you evaluate this, is the error message

Lisp error: (wrong-number-of-arguments length 0)

This means that the function receives the wrong number of arguments, zero, when it expects some other number of arguments. In this case, one argument is expected, the argument being a list whose length the function is measuring. (Note that one list is one argument, even if the list has many elements inside it.)

The part of the error message that says ‘length’ is the name of the function.

7.3 nthcdr

The nthcdr function is associated with the cdr function. What it does is take the CDR of a list repeatedly.

If you take the CDR of the list (pine fir oak maple), you will be returned the list (fir oak maple). If you repeat this on what was returned, you will be returned the list (oak maple). (Of course, repeated CDRing on the original list will just give you the original CDR since the function does not change the list. You need to evaluate the CDR of the CDR and so on.) If you continue this, eventually you will be returned an empty list, which in this case, instead of being shown as () is shown as nil.

For review, here is a series of repeated CDRs, the text following the ‘’ shows what is returned.

(cdr '(pine fir oak maple))
     ⇒ (fir oak maple)

(cdr '(fir oak maple))
     ⇒ (oak maple)

(cdr '(oak maple))
     ⇒ (maple)

(cdr '(maple))
     ⇒ nil

(cdr 'nil)
     ⇒ nil

(cdr ())
     ⇒ nil

You can also do several CDRs without printing the values in between, like this:

(cdr (cdr '(pine fir oak maple)))
     ⇒ (oak maple)

In this example, the Lisp interpreter evaluates the innermost list first. The innermost list is quoted, so it just passes the list as it is to the innermost cdr. This cdr passes a list made up of the second and subsequent elements of the list to the outermost cdr, which produces a list composed of the third and subsequent elements of the original list. In this example, the cdr function is repeated and returns a list that consists of the original list without its first two elements.

The nthcdr function does the same as repeating the call to cdr. In the following example, the argument 2 is passed to the function nthcdr, along with the list, and the value returned is the list without its first two items, which is exactly the same as repeating cdr twice on the list:

(nthcdr 2 '(pine fir oak maple))
     ⇒ (oak maple)

Using the original four element list, we can see what happens when various numeric arguments are passed to nthcdr, including 0, 1, and 5:

;; Leave the list as it was.
(nthcdr 0 '(pine fir oak maple))
     ⇒ (pine fir oak maple)

;; Return a copy without the first element.
(nthcdr 1 '(pine fir oak maple))
     ⇒ (fir oak maple)

;; Return a copy of the list without three elements.
(nthcdr 3 '(pine fir oak maple))
     ⇒ (maple)

;; Return a copy lacking all four elements.
(nthcdr 4 '(pine fir oak maple))
     ⇒ nil

;; Return a copy lacking all elements.
(nthcdr 5 '(pine fir oak maple))
     ⇒ nil

7.4 nth

The nthcdr function takes the CDR of a list repeatedly. The nth function takes the CAR of the result returned by nthcdr. It returns the Nth element of the list.

Thus, if it were not defined in C for speed, the definition of nth would be:

(defun nth (n list)
  "Returns the Nth element of LIST.
N counts from zero.  If LIST is not that long, nil is returned."
  (car (nthcdr n list)))

(Originally, nth was defined in Emacs Lisp in subr.el, but its definition was redone in C in the 1980s.)

The nth function returns a single element of a list. This can be very convenient.

Note that the elements are numbered from zero, not one. That is to say, the first element of a list, its CAR is the zeroth element. This zero-based counting often bothers people who are accustomed to the first element in a list being number one, which is one-based.

For example:

(nth 0 '("one" "two" "three"))
    ⇒ "one"

(nth 1 '("one" "two" "three"))
    ⇒ "two"

It is worth mentioning that nth, like nthcdr and cdr, does not change the original list—the function is non-destructive. This is in sharp contrast to the setcar and setcdr functions.

7.5 setcar

As you might guess from their names, the setcar and setcdr functions set the CAR or the CDR of a list to a new value. They actually change the original list, unlike car and cdr which leave the original list as it was. One way to find out how this works is to experiment. We will start with the setcar function.

First, we can make a list and then set the value of a variable to the list, using the setq special form. Because we intend to use setcar to change the list, this setq should not use the quoted form '(antelope giraffe lion tiger), as that would yield a list that is part of the program and bad things could happen if we tried to change part of the program while running it. Generally speaking an Emacs Lisp program’s components should be constant (or unchanged) while the program is running. So we instead construct an animal list by using the list function, as follows:

(setq animals (list 'antelope 'giraffe 'lion 'tiger))

If you are reading this in Info inside of GNU Emacs, you can evaluate this expression in the usual fashion, by positioning the cursor after the expression and typing C-x C-e. (I’m doing this right here as I write this. This is one of the advantages of having the interpreter built into the computing environment. Incidentally, when there is nothing on the line after the final parentheses, such as a comment, point can be on the next line. Thus, if your cursor is in the first column of the next line, you do not need to move it. Indeed, Emacs permits any amount of white space after the final parenthesis.)

When we evaluate the variable animals, we see that it is bound to the list (antelope giraffe lion tiger):

animals
     ⇒ (antelope giraffe lion tiger)

Put another way, the variable animals points to the list (antelope giraffe lion tiger).

Next, evaluate the function setcar while passing it two arguments, the variable animals and the quoted symbol hippopotamus; this is done by writing the three element list (setcar animals 'hippopotamus) and then evaluating it in the usual fashion:

(setcar animals 'hippopotamus)

After evaluating this expression, evaluate the variable animals again. You will see that the list of animals has changed:

animals
     ⇒ (hippopotamus giraffe lion tiger)

The first element on the list, antelope is replaced by hippopotamus.

So we can see that setcar did not add a new element to the list as cons would have; it replaced antelope with hippopotamus; it changed the list.

7.6 setcdr

The setcdr function is similar to the setcar function, except that the function replaces the second and subsequent elements of a list rather than the first element.

(To see how to change the last element of a list, look ahead to The kill-new function, which uses the nthcdr and setcdr functions.)

To see how this works, set the value of the variable to a list of domesticated animals by evaluating the following expression:

(setq domesticated-animals (list 'horse 'cow 'sheep 'goat))

If you now evaluate the list, you will be returned the list (horse cow sheep goat):

domesticated-animals
     ⇒ (horse cow sheep goat)

Next, evaluate setcdr with two arguments, the name of the variable which has a list as its value, and the list to which the CDR of the first list will be set;

(setcdr domesticated-animals '(cat dog))

If you evaluate this expression, the list (cat dog) will appear in the echo area. This is the value returned by the function. The result we are interested in is the side effect, which we can see by evaluating the variable domesticated-animals:

domesticated-animals
     ⇒ (horse cat dog)

Indeed, the list is changed from (horse cow sheep goat) to (horse cat dog). The CDR of the list is changed from (cow sheep goat) to (cat dog).

7.7 Exercise

Construct a list of four birds by evaluating several expressions with cons. Find out what happens when you cons a list onto itself. Replace the first element of the list of four birds with a fish. Replace the rest of that list with a list of other fish.

8 Cutting and Storing Text

Whenever you cut or clip text out of a buffer with a kill command in GNU Emacs, it is stored in a list and you can bring it back with a yank command.

(The use of the word “kill” in Emacs for processes which specifically do not destroy the values of the entities is an unfortunate historical accident. A much more appropriate word would be “clip” since that is what the kill commands do; they clip text out of a buffer and put it into storage from which it can be brought back. I have often been tempted to replace globally all occurrences of “kill” in the Emacs sources with “clip” and all occurrences of “killed” with “clipped”.)

Storing Text in a List

When text is cut out of a buffer, it is stored on a list. Successive pieces of text are stored on the list successively, so the list might look like this:

("a piece of text" "previous piece")

The function cons can be used to create a new list from a piece of text (an “atom”, to use the jargon) and an existing list, like this:

(cons "another piece"
      '("a piece of text" "previous piece"))

If you evaluate this expression, a list of three elements will appear in the echo area:

("another piece" "a piece of text" "previous piece")

With the car and nthcdr functions, you can retrieve whichever piece of text you want. For example, in the following code, nthcdr 1 … returns the list with the first item removed; and the car returns the first element of that remainder—the second element of the original list:

(car (nthcdr 1 '("another piece"
                 "a piece of text"
                 "previous piece")))
     ⇒ "a piece of text"

The actual functions in Emacs are more complex than this, of course. The code for cutting and retrieving text has to be written so that Emacs can figure out which element in the list you want—the first, second, third, or whatever. In addition, when you get to the end of the list, Emacs should give you the first element of the list, rather than nothing at all.

The list that holds the pieces of text is called the kill ring. This chapter leads up to a description of the kill ring and how it is used by first tracing how the zap-to-char function works. This function calls a function that invokes a function that manipulates the kill ring. Thus, before reaching the mountains, we climb the foothills.

A subsequent chapter describes how text that is cut from the buffer is retrieved. See Yanking Text Back.

8.1 zap-to-char

Let us look at the interactive zap-to-char function.

The Complete zap-to-char Implementation

The zap-to-char function removes the text in the region between the location of the cursor (i.e., of point) up to and including the next occurrence of a specified character. The text that zap-to-char removes is put in the kill ring; and it can be retrieved from the kill ring by typing C-y (yank). If the command is given an argument, it removes text through that number of occurrences. Thus, if the cursor were at the beginning of this sentence and the character were ‘s’, ‘Thus’ would be removed. If the argument were two, ‘Thus, if the curs’ would be removed, up to and including the ‘s’ in ‘cursor’.

If the specified character is not found, zap-to-char will say “Search failed”, tell you the character you typed, and not remove any text.

In order to determine how much text to remove, zap-to-char uses a search function. Searches are used extensively in code that manipulates text, and we will focus attention on them as well as on the deletion command.

Here is the complete text of the version 22 implementation of the function:

(defun zap-to-char (arg char)
  "Kill up to and including ARG'th occurrence of CHAR.
Case is ignored if `case-fold-search' is non-nil in the current buffer.
Goes backward if ARG is negative; error if CHAR not found."
  (interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")
  (if (char-table-p translation-table-for-input)
      (setq char (or (aref translation-table-for-input char) char)))
  (kill-region (point) (progn
                         (search-forward (char-to-string char)
                                         nil nil arg)
                         (point))))

The documentation is thorough. You do need to know the jargon meaning of the word “kill”.

The version 22 documentation string for zap-to-char uses ASCII grave accent and apostrophe to quote a symbol, so it appears as `case-fold-search'. This quoting style was inspired by 1970s-era displays in which grave accent and apostrophe were often mirror images suitable for use as quotes. On most modern displays this is no longer true, and when these two ASCII characters appear in documentation strings or diagnostic message formats, Emacs typically transliterates them to curved quotes (left and right single quotation marks), so that the abovequoted symbol appears as ‘case-fold-search’. Source-code strings can also simply use curved quotes directly.

8.1.1 The interactive Expression

The interactive expression in the zap-to-char command looks like this:

(interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")

The part within quotation marks, "p\ncZap to char: ", specifies two different things. First, and most simply, is the ‘p’. This part is separated from the next part by a newline, ‘\n’. The ‘p’ means that the first argument to the function will be passed the value of a processed prefix. The prefix argument is passed by typing C-u and a number, or M- and a number. If the function is called interactively without a prefix, 1 is passed to this argument.

The second part of "p\ncZap to char: " is ‘cZap to char: ’. In this part, the lower case ‘c’ indicates that interactive expects a prompt and that the argument will be a character. The prompt follows the ‘c’ and is the string ‘Zap to char: ’ (with a space after the colon to make it look good).

What all this does is prepare the arguments to zap-to-char so they are of the right type, and give the user a prompt.

In a read-only buffer, the zap-to-char function copies the text to the kill ring, but does not remove it. The echo area displays a message saying that the buffer is read-only. Also, the terminal may beep or blink at you.

8.1.2 The Body of zap-to-char

The body of the zap-to-char function contains the code that kills (that is, removes) the text in the region from the current position of the cursor up to and including the specified character.

The first part of the code looks like this:

(if (char-table-p translation-table-for-input)
    (setq char (or (aref translation-table-for-input char) char)))
(kill-region (point) (progn
                       (search-forward (char-to-string char) nil nil arg)
                       (point)))

char-table-p is a hitherto unseen function. It determines whether its argument is a character table. When it is, it sets the character passed to zap-to-char to one of them, if that character exists, or to the character itself. (This becomes important for certain characters in non-European languages. The aref function extracts an element from an array. It is an array-specific function that is not described in this document. See Arrays in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

(point) is the current position of the cursor.

The next part of the code is an expression using progn. The body of the progn consists of calls to search-forward and point.

It is easier to understand how progn works after learning about search-forward, so we will look at search-forward and then at progn.

8.1.3 The search-forward Function

The search-forward function is used to locate the zapped-for-character in zap-to-char. If the search is successful, search-forward leaves point immediately after the last character in the target string. (In zap-to-char, the target string is just one character long. zap-to-char uses the function char-to-string to ensure that the computer treats that character as a string.) If the search is backwards, search-forward leaves point just before the first character in the target. Also, search-forward returns t for true. (Moving point is therefore a side effect.)

In zap-to-char, the search-forward function looks like this:

(search-forward (char-to-string char) nil nil arg)

The search-forward function takes four arguments:

  1. The first argument is the target, what is searched for. This must be a string, such as ‘"z"’.

    As it happens, the argument passed to zap-to-char is a single character. Because of the way computers are built, the Lisp interpreter may treat a single character as being different from a string of characters. Inside the computer, a single character has a different electronic format than a string of one character. (A single character can often be recorded in the computer using exactly one byte; but a string may be longer, and the computer needs to be ready for this.) Since the search-forward function searches for a string, the character that the zap-to-char function receives as its argument must be converted inside the computer from one format to the other; otherwise the search-forward function will fail. The char-to-string function is used to make this conversion.

  2. The second argument bounds the search; it is specified as a position in the buffer. In this case, the search can go to the end of the buffer, so no bound is set and the second argument is nil.
  3. The third argument tells the function what it should do if the search fails—it can signal an error (and print a message) or it can return nil. A nil as the third argument causes the function to signal an error when the search fails.
  4. The fourth argument to search-forward is the repeat count—how many occurrences of the string to look for. This argument is optional and if the function is called without a repeat count, this argument is passed the value 1. If this argument is negative, the search goes backwards.

In template form, a search-forward expression looks like this:

(search-forward "target-string"
                limit-of-search
                what-to-do-if-search-fails
                repeat-count)

We will look at progn next.

8.1.4 The progn Special Form

progn is a special form that causes each of its arguments to be evaluated in sequence and then returns the value of the last one. The preceding expressions are evaluated only for the side effects they perform. The values produced by them are discarded.

The template for a progn expression is very simple:

(progn
  body…)

In zap-to-char, the progn expression has to do two things: put point in exactly the right position; and return the location of point so that kill-region will know how far to kill to.

The first argument to the progn is search-forward. When search-forward finds the string, the function leaves point immediately after the last character in the target string. (In this case the target string is just one character long.) If the search is backwards, search-forward leaves point just before the first character in the target. The movement of point is a side effect.

The second and last argument to progn is the expression (point). This expression returns the value of point, which in this case will be the location to which it has been moved by search-forward. (In the source, a line that tells the function to go to the previous character, if it is going forward, was commented out in 1999; I don’t remember whether that feature or mis-feature was ever a part of the distributed source.) The value of point is returned by the progn expression and is passed to kill-region as kill-region’s second argument.

8.1.5 Summing up zap-to-char

Now that we have seen how search-forward and progn work, we can see how the zap-to-char function works as a whole.

The first argument to kill-region is the position of the cursor when the zap-to-char command is given—the value of point at that time. Within the progn, the search function then moves point to just after the zapped-to-character and point returns the value of this location. The kill-region function puts together these two values of point, the first one as the beginning of the region and the second one as the end of the region, and removes the region.

The progn special form is necessary because the kill-region command takes two arguments; and it would fail if search-forward and point expressions were written in sequence as two additional arguments. The progn expression is a single argument to kill-region and returns the one value that kill-region needs for its second argument.

8.2 kill-region

The zap-to-char function uses the kill-region function. This function clips text from a region and copies that text to the kill ring, from which it may be retrieved.

The Emacs 22 version of that function uses condition-case and copy-region-as-kill, both of which we will explain. condition-case is an important special form.

In essence, the kill-region function calls condition-case, which takes three arguments. In this function, the first argument does nothing. The second argument contains the code that does the work when all goes well. The third argument contains the code that is called in the event of an error.

The Complete kill-region Definition

We will go through the condition-case code in a moment. First, let us look at the definition of kill-region, with comments added:

(defun kill-region (beg end)
  "Kill (\"cut\") text between point and mark.
This deletes the text from the buffer and saves it in the kill ring.
The command \\[yank] can retrieve it from there. … "

  ;; • Since order matters, pass point first.
  (interactive (list (point) (mark)))
  ;; • And tell us if we cannot cut the text.
  ;; 'unless' is an 'if' without a then-part.
  (unless (and beg end)
    (error "The mark is not set now, so there is no region"))

  ;; • 'condition-case' takes three arguments.
  ;;    If the first argument is nil, as it is here,
  ;;    information about the error signal is not
  ;;    stored for use by another function.
  (condition-case nil

      ;; • The second argument to 'condition-case' tells the
      ;;    Lisp interpreter what to do when all goes well.

      ;;    It starts with a 'let' function that extracts the string
      ;;    and tests whether it exists.  If so (that is what the
      ;;    'when' checks), it calls an 'if' function that determines
      ;;    whether the previous command was another call to
      ;;    'kill-region'; if it was, then the new text is appended to
      ;;    the previous text; if not, then a different function,
      ;;    'kill-new', is called.

      ;;    The 'kill-append' function concatenates the new string and
      ;;    the old.  The 'kill-new' function inserts text into a new
      ;;    item in the kill ring.

      ;;    'when' is an 'if' without an else-part.  The second 'when'
      ;;    again checks whether the current string exists; in
      ;;    addition, it checks whether the previous command was
      ;;    another call to 'kill-region'.  If one or the other
      ;;    condition is true, then it sets the current command to
      ;;    be 'kill-region'.
      (let ((string (filter-buffer-substring beg end t)))
        (when string                    ;STRING is nil if BEG = END
          ;; Add that string to the kill ring, one way or another.
          (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
              ;;    - 'yank-handler' is an optional argument to
              ;;    'kill-region' that tells the 'kill-append' and
              ;;    'kill-new' functions how deal with properties
              ;;    added to the text, such as 'bold' or 'italics'.
              (kill-append string (< end beg) yank-handler)
            (kill-new string nil yank-handler)))
        (when (or string (eq last-command 'kill-region))
          (setq this-command 'kill-region))
        nil)

    ;;  • The third argument to 'condition-case' tells the interpreter
    ;;    what to do with an error.
    ;;    The third argument has a conditions part and a body part.
    ;;    If the conditions are met (in this case,
    ;;             if text or buffer are read-only)
    ;;    then the body is executed.
    ;;    The first part of the third argument is the following:
    ((buffer-read-only text-read-only) ;; the if-part
     ;; …  the then-part
     (copy-region-as-kill beg end)
     ;;    Next, also as part of the then-part, set this-command, so
     ;;    it will be set in an error
     (setq this-command 'kill-region)
     ;;    Finally, in the then-part, send a message if you may copy
     ;;    the text to the kill ring without signaling an error, but
     ;;    don't if you may not.
     (if kill-read-only-ok
         (progn (message "Read only text copied to kill ring") nil)
       (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
       ;; If the buffer isn't read-only, the text is.
       (signal 'text-read-only (list (current-buffer)))))))

8.2.1 condition-case

As we have seen earlier (see Generate an Error Message), when the Emacs Lisp interpreter has trouble evaluating an expression, it provides you with help; in the jargon, this is called “signaling an error”. Usually, the computer stops the program and shows you a message.

However, some programs undertake complicated actions. They should not simply stop on an error. In the kill-region function, the most likely error is that you will try to kill text that is read-only and cannot be removed. So the kill-region function contains code to handle this circumstance. This code, which makes up the body of the kill-region function, is inside of a condition-case special form.

The template for condition-case looks like this:

(condition-case
  var
  bodyform
  error-handler…)

The second argument, bodyform, is straightforward. The condition-case special form causes the Lisp interpreter to evaluate the code in bodyform. If no error occurs, the special form returns the code’s value and produces the side-effects, if any.

In short, the bodyform part of a condition-case expression determines what should happen when everything works correctly.

However, if an error occurs, among its other actions, the function generating the error signal will define one or more error condition names.

An error handler is the third argument to condition-case. An error handler has two parts, a condition-name and a body. If the condition-name part of an error handler matches a condition name generated by an error, then the body part of the error handler is run.

As you will expect, the condition-name part of an error handler may be either a single condition name or a list of condition names.

Also, a complete condition-case expression may contain more than one error handler. When an error occurs, the first applicable handler is run.

Lastly, the first argument to the condition-case expression, the var argument, is sometimes bound to a variable that contains information about the error. However, if that argument is nil, as is the case in kill-region, that information is discarded.

In brief, in the kill-region function, the code condition-case works like this:

If no errors, run only this code
    but, if errors, run this other code.

Previous: , Up: kill-region   [Contents][Index]

8.2.2 Lisp macro

The part of the condition-case expression that is evaluated in the expectation that all goes well has a when. The code uses when to determine whether the string variable points to text that exists.

A when expression is simply a programmers’ convenience. It is like an if without the possibility of an else clause. In your mind, you can replace when with if and understand what goes on. That is what the Lisp interpreter does.

Technically speaking, when is a Lisp macro. A Lisp macro enables you to define new control constructs and other language features. It tells the interpreter how to compute another Lisp expression which will in turn compute the value. In this case, the other expression is an if expression.

The kill-region function definition also has an unless macro; it is the opposite of when. The unless macro is like an if except that it has no then-clause, and it supplies an implicit nil for that.

For more about Lisp macros, see Macros in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. The C programming language also provides macros. These are different, but also useful.

Regarding the when macro, in the condition-case expression, when the string has content, then another conditional expression is executed. This is an if with both a then-part and an else-part.

(if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
    (kill-append string (< end beg) yank-handler)
  (kill-new string nil yank-handler))

The then-part is evaluated if the previous command was another call to kill-region; if not, the else-part is evaluated.

yank-handler is an optional argument to kill-region that tells the kill-append and kill-new functions how deal with properties added to the text, such as bold or italics.

last-command is a variable that comes with Emacs that we have not seen before. Normally, whenever a function is executed, Emacs sets the value of last-command to the previous command.

In this segment of the definition, the if expression checks whether the previous command was kill-region. If it was,

(kill-append string (< end beg) yank-handler)

concatenates a copy of the newly clipped text to the just previously clipped text in the kill ring.

8.3 copy-region-as-kill

The copy-region-as-kill function copies a region of text from a buffer and (via either kill-append or kill-new) saves it in the kill-ring.

If you call copy-region-as-kill immediately after a kill-region command, Emacs appends the newly copied text to the previously copied text. This means that if you yank back the text, you get it all, from both this and the previous operation. On the other hand, if some other command precedes the copy-region-as-kill, the function copies the text into a separate entry in the kill ring.

The complete copy-region-as-kill function definition

Here is the complete text of the version 22 copy-region-as-kill function:

(defun copy-region-as-kill (beg end)
  "Save the region as if killed, but don't kill it.
In Transient Mark mode, deactivate the mark.
If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, also save the text for a window
system cut and paste."
  (interactive "r")
  (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
      (kill-append (filter-buffer-substring beg end) (< end beg))
    (kill-new (filter-buffer-substring beg end)))
  (if transient-mark-mode
      (setq deactivate-mark t))
  nil)

As usual, this function can be divided into its component parts:

(defun copy-region-as-kill (argument-list)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive "r")
  body…)

The arguments are beg and end and the function is interactive with "r", so the two arguments must refer to the beginning and end of the region. If you have been reading through this document from the beginning, understanding these parts of a function is almost becoming routine.

The documentation is somewhat confusing unless you remember that the word “kill” has a meaning different from usual. The Transient Mark and interprogram-cut-function comments explain certain side-effects.

After you once set a mark, a buffer always contains a region. If you wish, you can use Transient Mark mode to highlight the region temporarily. (No one wants to highlight the region all the time, so Transient Mark mode highlights it only at appropriate times. Many people turn off Transient Mark mode, so the region is never highlighted.)

Also, a windowing system allows you to copy, cut, and paste among different programs. In the X windowing system, for example, the interprogram-cut-function function is x-select-text, which works with the windowing system’s equivalent of the Emacs kill ring.

The body of the copy-region-as-kill function starts with an if clause. What this clause does is distinguish between two different situations: whether or not this command is executed immediately after a previous kill-region command. In the first case, the new region is appended to the previously copied text. Otherwise, it is inserted into the beginning of the kill ring as a separate piece of text from the previous piece.

The last two lines of the function prevent the region from lighting up if Transient Mark mode is turned on.

The body of copy-region-as-kill merits discussion in detail.

8.3.1 The Body of copy-region-as-kill

The copy-region-as-kill function works in much the same way as the kill-region function. Both are written so that two or more kills in a row combine their text into a single entry. If you yank back the text from the kill ring, you get it all in one piece. Moreover, kills that kill forward from the current position of the cursor are added to the end of the previously copied text and commands that copy text backwards add it to the beginning of the previously copied text. This way, the words in the text stay in the proper order.

Like kill-region, the copy-region-as-kill function makes use of the last-command variable that keeps track of the previous Emacs command.

last-command and this-command

Normally, whenever a function is executed, Emacs sets the value of this-command to the function being executed (which in this case would be copy-region-as-kill). At the same time, Emacs sets the value of last-command to the previous value of this-command.

In the first part of the body of the copy-region-as-kill function, an if expression determines whether the value of last-command is kill-region. If so, the then-part of the if expression is evaluated; it uses the kill-append function to concatenate the text copied at this call to the function with the text already in the first element (the CAR) of the kill ring. On the other hand, if the value of last-command is not kill-region, then the copy-region-as-kill function attaches a new element to the kill ring using the kill-new function.

The if expression reads as follows; it uses eq:

  (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
      ;; then-part
      (kill-append  (filter-buffer-substring beg end) (< end beg))
    ;; else-part
    (kill-new  (filter-buffer-substring beg end)))

(The filter-buffer-substring function returns a filtered substring of the buffer, if any. Optionally—the arguments are not here, so neither is done—the function may delete the initial text or return the text without its properties; this function is a replacement for the older buffer-substring function, which came before text properties were implemented.)

The eq function tests whether its first argument is the same Lisp object as its second argument. The eq function is similar to the equal function in that it is used to test for equality, but differs in that it determines whether two representations are actually the same object inside the computer, but with different names. equal determines whether the structure and contents of two expressions are the same.

If the previous command was kill-region, then the Emacs Lisp interpreter calls the kill-append function

The kill-append function

The kill-append function looks like this:

(defun kill-append (string before-p &optional yank-handler)
  "Append STRING to the end of the latest kill in the kill ring.
If BEFORE-P is non-nil, prepend STRING to the kill.
… "
  (let* ((cur (car kill-ring)))
    (kill-new (if before-p (concat string cur) (concat cur string))
              (or (= (length cur) 0)
                  (equal yank-handler
                         (get-text-property 0 'yank-handler cur)))
              yank-handler)))

The kill-append function is fairly straightforward. It uses the kill-new function, which we will discuss in more detail in a moment.

(Also, the function provides an optional argument called yank-handler; when invoked, this argument tells the function how to deal with properties added to the text, such as bold or italics.)

It has a let* function to set the value of the first element of the kill ring to cur. (I do not know why the function does not use let instead; only one value is set in the expression. Perhaps this is a bug that produces no problems?)

Consider the conditional that is one of the two arguments to kill-new. It uses concat to concatenate the new text to the CAR of the kill ring. Whether it prepends or appends the text depends on the results of an if expression:

(if before-p                            ; if-part
    (concat string cur)                 ; then-part
  (concat cur string))                  ; else-part

If the region being killed is before the region that was killed in the last command, then it should be prepended before the material that was saved in the previous kill; and conversely, if the killed text follows what was just killed, it should be appended after the previous text. The if expression depends on the predicate before-p to decide whether the newly saved text should be put before or after the previously saved text.

The symbol before-p is the name of one of the arguments to kill-append. When the kill-append function is evaluated, it is bound to the value returned by evaluating the actual argument. In this case, this is the expression (< end beg). This expression does not directly determine whether the killed text in this command is located before or after the kill text of the last command; what it does is determine whether the value of the variable end is less than the value of the variable beg. If it is, it means that the user is most likely heading towards the beginning of the buffer. Also, the result of evaluating the predicate expression, (< end beg), will be true and the text will be prepended before the previous text. On the other hand, if the value of the variable end is greater than the value of the variable beg, the text will be appended after the previous text.

When the newly saved text will be prepended, then the string with the new text will be concatenated before the old text:

(concat string cur)

But if the text will be appended, it will be concatenated after the old text:

(concat cur string))

To understand how this works, we first need to review the concat function. The concat function links together or unites two strings of text. The result is a string. For example:

(concat "abc" "def")
     ⇒ "abcdef"

(concat "new "
        (car '("first element" "second element")))
     ⇒ "new first element"

(concat (car
        '("first element" "second element")) " modified")
     ⇒ "first element modified"

We can now make sense of kill-append: it modifies the contents of the kill ring. The kill ring is a list, each element of which is saved text. The kill-append function uses the kill-new function which in turn uses the setcar function.

The kill-new function

In version 22 the kill-new function looks like this:

(defun kill-new (string &optional replace yank-handler)
  "Make STRING the latest kill in the kill ring.
Set `kill-ring-yank-pointer' to point to it.

If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, apply it to STRING.
Optional second argument REPLACE non-nil means that STRING will replace
the front of the kill ring, rather than being added to the list.
…"
  (if (> (length string) 0)
      (if yank-handler
          (put-text-property 0 (length string)
                             'yank-handler yank-handler string))
    (if yank-handler
        (signal 'args-out-of-range
                (list string "yank-handler specified for empty string"))))
  (if (fboundp 'menu-bar-update-yank-menu)
      (menu-bar-update-yank-menu string (and replace (car kill-ring))))
  (if (and replace kill-ring)
      (setcar kill-ring string)
    (push string kill-ring)
    (if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
        (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil)))
  (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
  (if interprogram-cut-function
      (funcall interprogram-cut-function string (not replace))))

(Notice that the function is not interactive.)

As usual, we can look at this function in parts.

The function definition has an optional yank-handler argument, which when invoked tells the function how to deal with properties added to the text, such as bold or italics. We will skip that.

The first line of the documentation makes sense:

Make STRING the latest kill in the kill ring.

Let’s skip over the rest of the documentation for the moment.

Also, let’s skip over the initial if expression and those lines of code involving menu-bar-update-yank-menu. We will explain them below.

The critical lines are these:

  (if (and replace kill-ring)
      ;; then
      (setcar kill-ring string)
    ;; else
    (push string kill-ring)
    (if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
        ;; avoid overly long kill ring
        (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil)))
  (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
  (if interprogram-cut-function
      (funcall interprogram-cut-function string (not replace))))

The conditional test is (and replace kill-ring). This will be true when two conditions are met: the kill ring has something in it, and the replace variable is true.

When the kill-append function sets replace to be true and when the kill ring has at least one item in it, the setcar expression is executed:

(setcar kill-ring string)

The setcar function actually changes the first element of the kill-ring list to the value of string. It replaces the first element.

On the other hand, if the kill ring is empty, or replace is false, the else-part of the condition is executed:

(push string kill-ring)

push puts its first argument onto the second. It is similar to the older

(setq kill-ring (cons string kill-ring))

or the newer

(add-to-list kill-ring string)

When it is false, the expression first constructs a new version of the kill ring by prepending string to the existing kill ring as a new element (that is what the push does). Then it executes a second if clause. This second if clause keeps the kill ring from growing too long.

Let’s look at these two expressions in order.

The push line of the else-part sets the new value of the kill ring to what results from adding the string being killed to the old kill ring.

We can see how this works with an example.

First,

(setq example-list '("here is a clause" "another clause"))

After evaluating this expression with C-x C-e, you can evaluate example-list and see what it returns:

example-list
     ⇒ ("here is a clause" "another clause")

Now, we can add a new element on to this list by evaluating the following expression:

(push "a third clause" example-list)

When we evaluate example-list, we find its value is:

example-list
     ⇒ ("a third clause" "here is a clause" "another clause")

Thus, the third clause is added to the list by push.

Now for the second part of the if clause. This expression keeps the kill ring from growing too long. It looks like this:

(if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
    (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil))

The code checks whether the length of the kill ring is greater than the maximum permitted length. This is the value of kill-ring-max (which is 120, by default). If the length of the kill ring is too long, then this code sets the last element of the kill ring to nil. It does this by using two functions, nthcdr and setcdr.

We looked at setcdr earlier (see setcdr). It sets the CDR of a list, just as setcar sets the CAR of a list. In this case, however, setcdr will not be setting the CDR of the whole kill ring; the nthcdr function is used to cause it to set the CDR of the next to last element of the kill ring—this means that since the CDR of the next to last element is the last element of the kill ring, it will set the last element of the kill ring.

The nthcdr function works by repeatedly taking the CDR of a list—it takes the CDR of the CDR of the CDR … It does this N times and returns the results. (See nthcdr.)

Thus, if we had a four element list that was supposed to be three elements long, we could set the CDR of the next to last element to nil, and thereby shorten the list. (If you set the last element to some other value than nil, which you could do, then you would not have shortened the list. See setcdr.)

You can see shortening by evaluating the following three expressions in turn. First set the value of trees to (maple oak pine birch), then set the CDR of its second CDR to nil and then find the value of trees:

(setq trees (list 'maple 'oak 'pine 'birch))
     ⇒ (maple oak pine birch)

(setcdr (nthcdr 2 trees) nil)
     ⇒ nil

trees
     ⇒ (maple oak pine)

(The value returned by the setcdr expression is nil since that is what the CDR is set to.)

To repeat, in kill-new, the nthcdr function takes the CDR a number of times that is one less than the maximum permitted size of the kill ring and setcdr sets the CDR of that element (which will be the rest of the elements in the kill ring) to nil. This prevents the kill ring from growing too long.

The next to last expression in the kill-new function is

(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)

The kill-ring-yank-pointer is a global variable that is set to be the kill-ring.

Even though the kill-ring-yank-pointer is called a ‘pointer’, it is a variable just like the kill ring. However, the name has been chosen to help humans understand how the variable is used.

Now, to return to an early expression in the body of the function:

  (if (fboundp 'menu-bar-update-yank-menu)
       (menu-bar-update-yank-menu string (and replace (car kill-ring))))

It starts with an if expression

In this case, the expression tests first to see whether menu-bar-update-yank-menu exists as a function, and if so, calls it. The fboundp function returns true if the symbol it is testing has a function definition that is not void. If the symbol’s function definition were void, we would receive an error message, as we did when we created errors intentionally (see Generate an Error Message).

The then-part contains an expression whose first element is the function and.

The and special form evaluates each of its arguments until one of the arguments returns a value of nil, in which case the and expression returns nil; however, if none of the arguments returns a value of nil, the value resulting from evaluating the last argument is returned. (Since such a value is not nil, it is considered true in Emacs Lisp.) In other words, an and expression returns a true value only if all its arguments are true. (See Review.)

The expression determines whether the second argument to menu-bar-update-yank-menu is true or not.

menu-bar-update-yank-menu is one of the functions that make it possible to use the “Select and Paste” menu in the Edit item of a menu bar; using a mouse, you can look at the various pieces of text you have saved and select one piece to paste.

The last expression in the kill-new function adds the newly copied string to whatever facility exists for copying and pasting among different programs running in a windowing system. In the X Windowing system, for example, the x-select-text function takes the string and stores it in memory operated by X. You can paste the string in another program, such as an Xterm.

The expression looks like this:

  (if interprogram-cut-function
      (funcall interprogram-cut-function string (not replace))))

If an interprogram-cut-function exists, then Emacs executes funcall, which in turn calls its first argument as a function and passes the remaining arguments to it. (Incidentally, as far as I can see, this if expression could be replaced by an and expression similar to the one in the first part of the function.)

We are not going to discuss windowing systems and other programs further, but merely note that this is a mechanism that enables GNU Emacs to work easily and well with other programs.

This code for placing text in the kill ring, either concatenated with an existing element or as a new element, leads us to the code for bringing back text that has been cut out of the buffer—the yank commands. However, before discussing the yank commands, it is better to learn how lists are implemented in a computer. This will make clear such mysteries as the use of the term “pointer”. But before that, we will digress into C.


8.4 Digression into C

The copy-region-as-kill function (see copy-region-as-kill) uses the filter-buffer-substring function, which in turn uses the delete-and-extract-region function. It removes the contents of a region and you cannot get them back.

Unlike the other code discussed here, the delete-and-extract-region function is not written in Emacs Lisp; it is written in C and is one of the primitives of the GNU Emacs system. Since it is very simple, I will digress briefly from Lisp and describe it here.

Like many of the other Emacs primitives, delete-and-extract-region is written as an instance of a C macro, a macro being a template for code. The complete macro looks like this:

DEFUN ("delete-and-extract-region", Fdelete_and_extract_region,
       Sdelete_and_extract_region, 2, 2, 0,
       doc: /* Delete the text between START and END and return it.  */)
  (Lisp_Object start, Lisp_Object end)
{
  validate_region (&start, &end);
  if (XFIXNUM (start) == XFIXNUM (end))
    return empty_unibyte_string;
  return del_range_1 (XFIXNUM (start), XFIXNUM (end), 1, 1);
}

Without going into the details of the macro writing process, let me point out that this macro starts with the word DEFUN. The word DEFUN was chosen since the code serves the same purpose as defun does in Lisp. (The DEFUN C macro is defined in emacs/src/lisp.h.)

The word DEFUN is followed by seven parts inside of parentheses:

  • The first part is the name given to the function in Lisp, delete-and-extract-region.
  • The second part is the name of the function in C, Fdelete_and_extract_region. By convention, it starts with ‘F’. Since C does not use hyphens in names, underscores are used instead.
  • The third part is the name for the C constant structure that records information on this function for internal use. It is the name of the function in C but begins with an ‘S’ instead of an ‘F’.
  • The fourth and fifth parts specify the minimum and maximum number of arguments the function can have. This function demands exactly 2 arguments.
  • The sixth part is nearly like the argument that follows the interactive declaration in a function written in Lisp: a letter followed, perhaps, by a prompt. The only difference from Lisp is when the macro is called with no arguments. Then you write a 0 (which is a null string), as in this macro.

    If you were to specify arguments, you would place them between quotation marks. The C macro for goto-char includes "NGoto char: " in this position to indicate that the function expects a raw prefix, in this case, a numerical location in a buffer, and provides a prompt.

  • The seventh part is a documentation string, just like the one for a function written in Emacs Lisp. This is written as a C comment. (When you build Emacs, the program lib-src/make-docfile extracts these comments and uses them to make the documentation.)

In a C macro, the formal parameters come next, with a statement of what kind of object they are, followed by the body of the macro. For delete-and-extract-region the body consists of the following four lines:

validate_region (&start, &end);
if (XFIXNUM (start) == XFIXNUM (end))
  return empty_unibyte_string;
return del_range_1 (XFIXNUM (start), XFIXNUM (end), 1, 1);

The validate_region function checks whether the values passed as the beginning and end of the region are the proper type and are within range. If the beginning and end positions are the same, then return an empty string.

The del_range_1 function actually deletes the text. It is a complex function we will not look into. It updates the buffer and does other things. However, it is worth looking at the two arguments passed to del_range_1. These are XFIXNUM (start) and XFIXNUM (end).

As far as the C language is concerned, start and end are two opaque values that mark the beginning and end of the region to be deleted. More precisely, and requiring more expert knowledge to understand, the two values are of type Lisp_Object, which might be a C pointer, a C integer, or a C struct; C code ordinarily should not care how Lisp_Object is implemented.

Lisp_Object widths depend on the machine, and are typically 32 or 64 bits. A few of the bits are used to specify the type of information; the remaining bits are used as content.

XFIXNUM’ is a C macro that extracts the relevant integer from the longer collection of bits; the type bits are discarded.

The command in delete-and-extract-region looks like this:

del_range_1 (XFIXNUM (start), XFIXNUM (end), 1, 1);

It deletes the region between the beginning position, start, and the ending position, end.

From the point of view of the person writing Lisp, Emacs is all very simple; but hidden underneath is a great deal of complexity to make it all work.

8.5 Initializing a Variable with defvar

The copy-region-as-kill function is written in Emacs Lisp. Two functions within it, kill-append and kill-new, copy a region in a buffer and save it in a variable called the kill-ring. This section describes how the kill-ring variable is created and initialized using the defvar special form.

(Again we note that the term kill-ring is a misnomer. The text that is clipped out of the buffer can be brought back; it is not a ring of corpses, but a ring of resurrectable text.)

In Emacs Lisp, a variable such as the kill-ring is created and given an initial value by using the defvar special form. The name comes from “define variable”.

The defvar special form is similar to setq in that it sets the value of a variable. It is unlike setq in three ways: first, it marks the variable as “special” so that it is always dynamically bound, even when lexical-binding is t (see How let Binds Variables). Second, it only sets the value of the variable if the variable does not already have a value. If the variable already has a value, defvar does not override the existing value. Third, defvar has a documentation string.

(There is a related macro, defcustom, designed for variables that people customize. It has more features than defvar. (See Setting Variables with defcustom.)

Seeing the Current Value of a Variable

You can see the current value of a variable, any variable, by using the describe-variable function, which is usually invoked by typing C-h v. If you type C-h v and then kill-ring (followed by RET) when prompted, you will see what is in your current kill ring—this may be quite a lot! Conversely, if you have been doing nothing this Emacs session except read this document, you may have nothing in it. Also, you will see the documentation for kill-ring:

Documentation:
List of killed text sequences.
Since the kill ring is supposed to interact nicely with cut-and-paste
facilities offered by window systems, use of this variable should
interact nicely with `interprogram-cut-function' and
`interprogram-paste-function'.  The functions `kill-new',
`kill-append', and `current-kill' are supposed to implement this
interaction; you may want to use them instead of manipulating the kill
ring directly.

The kill ring is defined by a defvar in the following way:

(defvar kill-ring nil
  "List of killed text sequences.
…")

In this variable definition, the variable is given an initial value of nil, which makes sense, since if you have saved nothing, you want nothing back if you give a yank command. The documentation string is written just like the documentation string of a defun. As with the documentation string of the defun, the first line of the documentation should be a complete sentence, since some commands, like apropos, print only the first line of documentation. Succeeding lines should not be indented; otherwise they look odd when you use C-h v (describe-variable).

8.5.1 defvar and an asterisk

In the past, Emacs used the defvar special form both for internal variables that you would not expect a user to change and for variables that you do expect a user to change. Although you can still use defvar for user customizable variables, please use defcustom instead, since it provides a path into the Customization commands. (See Specifying Variables using defcustom.)

When you specified a variable using the defvar special form, you could distinguish a variable that a user might want to change from others by typing an asterisk, ‘*’, in the first column of its documentation string. For example:

(defvar shell-command-default-error-buffer nil
  "*Buffer name for `shell-command' … error output.
… ")

You could (and still can) use the set-variable command to change the value of shell-command-default-error-buffer temporarily. However, options set using set-variable are set only for the duration of your editing session. The new values are not saved between sessions. Each time Emacs starts, it reads the original value, unless you change the value within your .emacs file, either by setting it manually or by using customize. See Your .emacs File.

For me, the major use of the set-variable command is to suggest variables that I might want to set in my .emacs file. There are now more than 700 such variables, far too many to remember readily. Fortunately, you can press TAB after calling the M-x set-variable command to see the list of variables. (See Examining and Setting Variables in The GNU Emacs Manual.)

8.6 Review

Here is a brief summary of some recently introduced functions.

car
cdr

car returns the first element of a list; cdr returns the second and subsequent elements of a list.

For example:

(car '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7))
     ⇒ 1
(cdr '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7))
     ⇒ (2 3 4 5 6 7)
cons

cons constructs a list by prepending its first argument to its second argument.

For example:

(cons 1 '(2 3 4))
     ⇒ (1 2 3 4)
funcall

funcall evaluates its first argument as a function. It passes its remaining arguments to its first argument.

nthcdr

Return the result of taking CDR n times on a list. The “rest of the rest”, as it were.

For example:

(nthcdr 3 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7))
     ⇒ (4 5 6 7)
setcar
setcdr

setcar changes the first element of a list; setcdr changes the second and subsequent elements of a list.

For example:

(setq triple (list 1 2 3))

(setcar triple '37)

triple
     ⇒ (37 2 3)

(setcdr triple '("foo" "bar"))

triple
     ⇒ (37 "foo" "bar")
progn

Evaluate each argument in sequence and then return the value of the last.

For example:

(progn 1 2 3 4)
     ⇒ 4
save-restriction

Record whatever narrowing is in effect in the current buffer, if any, and restore that narrowing after evaluating the arguments.

search-forward

Search for a string, and if the string is found, move point. With a regular expression, use the similar re-search-forward. (See Regular Expression Searches, for an explanation of regular expression patterns and searches.)

search-forward and re-search-forward take four arguments:

  1. The string or regular expression to search for.
  2. Optionally, the limit of the search.
  3. Optionally, what to do if the search fails, return nil or an error message.
  4. Optionally, how many times to repeat the search; if negative, the search goes backwards.
kill-region
delete-and-extract-region
copy-region-as-kill

kill-region cuts the text between point and mark from the buffer and stores that text in the kill ring, so you can get it back by yanking.

copy-region-as-kill copies the text between point and mark into the kill ring, from which you can get it by yanking. The function does not cut or remove the text from the buffer.

delete-and-extract-region removes the text between point and mark from the buffer and throws it away. You cannot get it back. (This is not an interactive command.)

8.7 Searching Exercises

  • Write an interactive function that searches for a string. If the search finds the string, leave point after it and display a message that says “Found!”. (Do not use search-forward for the name of this function; if you do, you will overwrite the existing version of search-forward that comes with Emacs. Use a name such as test-search instead.)
  • Write a function that prints the third element of the kill ring in the echo area, if any; if the kill ring does not contain a third element, print an appropriate message.

9 How Lists are Implemented

In Lisp, atoms are recorded in a straightforward fashion; if the implementation is not straightforward in practice, it is, nonetheless, straightforward in theory. The atom ‘rose’, for example, is recorded as the four contiguous letters ‘r’, ‘o’, ‘s’, ‘e’. A list, on the other hand, is kept differently. The mechanism is equally simple, but it takes a moment to get used to the idea. A list is kept using a series of pairs of pointers. In the series, the first pointer in each pair points to an atom or to another list, and the second pointer in each pair points to the next pair, or to the symbol nil, which marks the end of the list.

A pointer itself is quite simply the electronic address of what is pointed to. Hence, a list is kept as a series of electronic addresses.

Lists diagrammed

For example, the list (rose violet buttercup) has three elements, ‘rose’, ‘violet’, and ‘buttercup’. In the computer, the electronic address of ‘rose’ is recorded in a segment of computer memory called a cons cell (because it’s what the function cons actually creates). That cons cell also holds the address of a second cons cell, whose CAR is the atom ‘violet’; and that address (the one that tells where to find ‘violet’) is kept along with the address of a third cons cell which holds the address for the atom ‘buttercup’.

This sounds more complicated than it is and is easier seen in a diagram:

    ___ ___      ___ ___      ___ ___
   |___|___|--> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
     |            |            |
     |            |            |
      --> rose     --> violet   --> buttercup


In the diagram, each box represents a word of computer memory that holds a Lisp object, usually in the form of a memory address. The boxes, i.e., the addresses, are in pairs. Each arrow points to what the address is the address of, either an atom or another pair of addresses. The first box is the electronic address of ‘rose’ and the arrow points to ‘rose’; the second box is the address of the next pair of boxes, the first part of which is the address of ‘violet’ and the second part of which is the address of the next pair. The very last box points to the symbol nil, which marks the end of the list.

When a variable is set to a list with an operation such as setq, it stores the address of the first box in the variable. Thus, evaluation of the expression

(setq bouquet '(rose violet buttercup))

creates a situation like this:

bouquet
     |
     |     ___ ___      ___ ___      ___ ___
      --> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
            |            |            |
            |            |            |
             --> rose     --> violet   --> buttercup


In this example, the symbol bouquet holds the address of the first pair of boxes.

This same list can be illustrated in a different sort of box notation like this:

bouquet
 |
 |    --------------       ---------------       ----------------
 |   | car   | cdr  |     | car    | cdr  |     | car     | cdr  |
  -->| rose  |   o------->| violet |   o------->| butter- |  nil |
     |       |      |     |        |      |     | cup     |      |
      --------------       ---------------       ----------------


(Symbols consist of more than pairs of addresses, but the structure of a symbol is made up of addresses. Indeed, the symbol bouquet consists of a group of address-boxes, one of which is the address of the printed word ‘bouquet’, a second of which is the address of a function definition attached to the symbol, if any, a third of which is the address of the first pair of address-boxes for the list (rose violet buttercup), and so on. Here we are showing that the symbol’s third address-box points to the first pair of address-boxes for the list.)

If a symbol is set to the CDR of a list, the list itself is not changed; the symbol simply has an address further down the list. (In the jargon, CAR and CDR are “non-destructive”.) Thus, evaluation of the following expression

(setq flowers (cdr bouquet))

produces this:


bouquet        flowers
  |              |
  |     ___ ___  |     ___ ___      ___ ___
   --> |   |   |  --> |   |   |    |   |   |
       |___|___|----> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
         |              |            |
         |              |            |
          --> rose       --> violet   --> buttercup



The value of flowers is (violet buttercup), which is to say, the symbol flowers holds the address of the pair of address-boxes, the first of which holds the address of violet, and the second of which holds the address of buttercup.

A pair of address-boxes is called a cons cell or dotted pair. See Cons Cell and List Types in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, and Dotted Pair Notation in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more information about cons cells and dotted pairs.

The function cons adds a new pair of addresses to the front of a series of addresses like that shown above. For example, evaluating the expression

(setq bouquet (cons 'lily bouquet))

produces:


bouquet                       flowers
  |                             |
  |     ___ ___        ___ ___  |     ___ ___       ___ ___
   --> |   |   |      |   |   |  --> |   |   |     |   |   |
       |___|___|----> |___|___|----> |___|___|---->|___|___|--> nil
         |              |              |             |
         |              |              |             |
          --> lily      --> rose       --> violet    --> buttercup



However, this does not change the value of the symbol flowers, as you can see by evaluating the following,

(eq (cdr (cdr bouquet)) flowers)

which returns t for true.

Until it is reset, flowers still has the value (violet buttercup); that is, it has the address of the cons cell whose first address is of violet. Also, this does not alter any of the pre-existing cons cells; they are all still there.

Thus, in Lisp, to get the CDR of a list, you just get the address of the next cons cell in the series; to get the CAR of a list, you get the address of the first element of the list; to cons a new element on a list, you add a new cons cell to the front of the list. That is all there is to it! The underlying structure of Lisp is brilliantly simple!

And what does the last address in a series of cons cells refer to? It is the address of the empty list, of nil.

In summary, when a Lisp variable is set to a value, it is provided with the address of the list to which the variable refers.

9.1 Symbols as a Chest of Drawers

In an earlier section, I suggested that you might imagine a symbol as being a chest of drawers. The function definition is put in one drawer, the value in another, and so on. What is put in the drawer holding the value can be changed without affecting the contents of the drawer holding the function definition, and vice versa.

Actually, what is put in each drawer is the address of the value or function definition. It is as if you found an old chest in the attic, and in one of its drawers you found a map giving you directions to where the buried treasure lies.

(In addition to its name, symbol definition, and variable value, a symbol has a drawer for a property list which can be used to record other information. Property lists are not discussed here; see Property Lists in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

Here is a fanciful representation:


            Chest of Drawers            Contents of Drawers

            __   o0O0o   __
          /                 \
         ---------------------
        |    directions to    |            [map to]
        |     symbol name     |             bouquet
        |                     |
        +---------------------+
        |    directions to    |
        |  symbol definition  |             [none]
        |                     |
        +---------------------+
        |    directions to    |            [map to]
        |    variable value   |             (rose violet buttercup)
        |                     |
        +---------------------+
        |    directions to    |
        |    property list    |             [not described here]
        |                     |
        +---------------------+
        |/                   \|



9.2 Exercise

Set flowers to violet and buttercup. Cons two more flowers on to this list and set this new list to more-flowers. Set the CAR of flowers to a fish. What does the more-flowers list now contain?

10 Yanking Text Back

Whenever you cut text out of a buffer with a kill command in GNU Emacs, you can bring it back with a yank command. The text that is cut out of the buffer is put in the kill ring and the yank commands insert the appropriate contents of the kill ring back into a buffer (not necessarily the original buffer).

A simple C-y (yank) command inserts the first item from the kill ring into the current buffer. If the C-y command is followed immediately by M-y, the first element is replaced by the second element. Successive M-y commands replace the second element with the third, fourth, or fifth element, and so on. When the last element in the kill ring is reached, it is replaced by the first element and the cycle is repeated. (Thus the kill ring is called a “ring” rather than just a “list”. However, the actual data structure that holds the text is a list. See Handling the Kill Ring, for the details of how the list is handled as a ring.)

10.1 Kill Ring Overview

The kill ring is a list of textual strings. This is what it looks like:

("some text" "a different piece of text" "yet more text")

If this were the contents of my kill ring and I pressed C-y, the string of characters saying ‘some text’ would be inserted in this buffer where my cursor is located.

The yank command is also used for duplicating text by copying it. The copied text is not cut from the buffer, but a copy of it is put on the kill ring and is inserted by yanking it back.

Three functions are used for bringing text back from the kill ring: yank, which is usually bound to C-y; yank-pop, which is usually bound to M-y; and rotate-yank-pointer, which is used by the two other functions.

These functions refer to the kill ring through a variable called the kill-ring-yank-pointer. Indeed, the insertion code for both the yank and yank-pop functions is:

(insert (car kill-ring-yank-pointer))

(Well, no more. In GNU Emacs 22, the function has been replaced by insert-for-yank which calls insert-for-yank-1 repetitively for each yank-handler segment. In turn, insert-for-yank-1 strips text properties from the inserted text according to yank-excluded-properties. Otherwise, it is just like insert. We will stick with plain insert since it is easier to understand.)

To begin to understand how yank and yank-pop work, it is first necessary to look at the kill-ring-yank-pointer variable.

10.2 The kill-ring-yank-pointer Variable

kill-ring-yank-pointer is a variable, just as kill-ring is a variable. It points to something by being bound to the value of what it points to, like any other Lisp variable.

Thus, if the value of the kill ring is:

("some text" "a different piece of text" "yet more text")

and the kill-ring-yank-pointer points to the second clause, the value of kill-ring-yank-pointer is:

("a different piece of text" "yet more text")

As explained in the previous chapter (see How Lists are Implemented), the computer does not keep two different copies of the text being pointed to by both the kill-ring and the kill-ring-yank-pointer. The words “a different piece of text” and “yet more text” are not duplicated. Instead, the two Lisp variables point to the same pieces of text. Here is a diagram:

kill-ring     kill-ring-yank-pointer
    |               |
    |      ___ ___  |     ___ ___      ___ ___
     ---> |   |   |  --> |   |   |    |   |   |
          |___|___|----> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
            |              |            |
            |              |            |
            |              |             --> "yet more text"
            |              |
            |               --> "a different piece of text"
            |
             --> "some text"



Both the variable kill-ring and the variable kill-ring-yank-pointer are pointers. But the kill ring itself is usually described as if it were actually what it is composed of. The kill-ring is spoken of as if it were the list rather than that it points to the list. Conversely, the kill-ring-yank-pointer is spoken of as pointing to a list.

These two ways of talking about the same thing sound confusing at first but make sense on reflection. The kill ring is generally thought of as the complete structure of data that holds the information of what has recently been cut out of the Emacs buffers. The kill-ring-yank-pointer on the other hand, serves to indicate—that is, to point to—that part of the kill ring of which the first element (the CAR) will be inserted.

10.3 Exercises with yank and nthcdr

  • Using C-h v (describe-variable), look at the value of your kill ring. Add several items to your kill ring; look at its value again. Using M-y (yank-pop), move all the way around the kill ring. How many items were in your kill ring? Find the value of kill-ring-max. Was your kill ring full, or could you have kept more blocks of text within it?
  • Using nthcdr and car, construct a series of expressions to return the first, second, third, and fourth elements of a list.

11 Loops and Recursion

Emacs Lisp has two primary ways to cause an expression, or a series of expressions, to be evaluated repeatedly: one uses a while loop, and the other uses recursion.

Repetition can be very valuable. For example, to move forward four sentences, you need only write a program that will move forward one sentence and then repeat the process four times. Since a computer does not get bored or tired, such repetitive action does not have the deleterious effects that excessive or the wrong kinds of repetition can have on humans.

People mostly write Emacs Lisp functions using while loops and their kin; but you can use recursion, which provides a very powerful way to think about and then to solve problems14.

11.1 while

The while special form tests whether the value returned by evaluating its first argument is true or false. This is similar to what the Lisp interpreter does with an if; what the interpreter does next, however, is different.

In a while expression, if the value returned by evaluating the first argument is false, the Lisp interpreter skips the rest of the expression (the body of the expression) and does not evaluate it. However, if the value is true, the Lisp interpreter evaluates the body of the expression and then again tests whether the first argument to while is true or false. If the value returned by evaluating the first argument is again true, the Lisp interpreter again evaluates the body of the expression.

The template for a while expression looks like this:

(while true-or-false-test
  body…)

Looping with while

So long as the true-or-false-test of the while expression returns a true value when it is evaluated, the body is repeatedly evaluated. This process is called a loop since the Lisp interpreter repeats the same thing again and again, like an airplane doing a loop. When the result of evaluating the true-or-false-test is false, the Lisp interpreter does not evaluate the rest of the while expression and exits the loop.

Clearly, if the value returned by evaluating the first argument to while is always true, the body following will be evaluated again and again … and again … forever. Conversely, if the value returned is never true, the expressions in the body will never be evaluated. The craft of writing a while loop consists of choosing a mechanism such that the true-or-false-test returns true just the number of times that you want the subsequent expressions to be evaluated, and then have the test return false.

The value returned by evaluating a while is the value of the true-or-false-test. An interesting consequence of this is that a while loop that evaluates without error will return nil or false regardless of whether it has looped 1 or 100 times or none at all. A while expression that evaluates successfully never returns a true value! What this means is that while is always evaluated for its side effects, which is to say, the consequences of evaluating the expressions within the body of the while loop. This makes sense. It is not the mere act of looping that is desired, but the consequences of what happens when the expressions in the loop are repeatedly evaluated.

11.1.1 A while Loop and a List

A common way to control a while loop is to test whether a list has any elements. If it does, the loop is repeated; but if it does not, the repetition is ended. Since this is an important technique, we will create a short example to illustrate it.

A simple way to test whether a list has elements is to evaluate the list: if it has no elements, it is an empty list and will return the empty list, (), which is a synonym for nil or false. On the other hand, a list with elements will return those elements when it is evaluated. Since Emacs Lisp considers as true any value that is not nil, a list that returns elements will test true in a while loop.

For example, you can set the variable empty-list to nil by evaluating the following setq expression:

(setq empty-list ())

After evaluating the setq expression, you can evaluate the variable empty-list in the usual way, by placing the cursor after the symbol and typing C-x C-e; nil will appear in your echo area:

empty-list

On the other hand, if you set a variable to be a list with elements, the list will appear when you evaluate the variable, as you can see by evaluating the following two expressions:

(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))

animals

Thus, to create a while loop that tests whether there are any items in the list animals, the first part of the loop will be written like this:

(while animals
       …

When the while tests its first argument, the variable animals is evaluated. It returns a list. So long as the list has elements, the while considers the results of the test to be true; but when the list is empty, it considers the results of the test to be false.

To prevent the while loop from running forever, some mechanism needs to be provided to empty the list eventually. An oft-used technique is to have one of the subsequent forms in the while expression set the value of the list to be the CDR of the list. Each time the cdr function is evaluated, the list will be made shorter, until eventually only the empty list will be left. At this point, the test of the while loop will return false, and the arguments to the while will no longer be evaluated.

For example, the list of animals bound to the variable animals can be set to be the CDR of the original list with the following expression:

(setq animals (cdr animals))

If you have evaluated the previous expressions and then evaluate this expression, you will see (giraffe lion tiger) appear in the echo area. If you evaluate the expression again, (lion tiger) will appear in the echo area. If you evaluate it again and yet again, (tiger) appears and then the empty list, shown by nil.

A template for a while loop that uses the cdr function repeatedly to cause the true-or-false-test eventually to test false looks like this:

(while test-whether-list-is-empty
  bodyset-list-to-cdr-of-list)

This test and use of cdr can be put together in a function that goes through a list and prints each element of the list on a line of its own.

11.1.3 A Loop with an Incrementing Counter

A loop is not useful unless it stops when it ought. Besides controlling a loop with a list, a common way of stopping a loop is to write the first argument as a test that returns false when the correct number of repetitions are complete. This means that the loop must have a counter—an expression that counts how many times the loop repeats itself.

Details of an Incrementing Loop

The test for a loop with an incrementing counter can be an expression such as (< count desired-number) which returns t for true if the value of count is less than the desired-number of repetitions and nil for false if the value of count is equal to or is greater than the desired-number. The expression that increments the count can be a simple setq such as (setq count (1+ count)), where 1+ is a built-in function in Emacs Lisp that adds 1 to its argument. (The expression (1+ count) has the same result as (+ count 1), but is easier for a human to read.)

The template for a while loop controlled by an incrementing counter looks like this:

set-count-to-initial-value
(while (< count desired-number)         ; true-or-false-test
  body…
  (setq count (1+ count)))              ; incrementer

Note that you need to set the initial value of count; usually it is set to 1.

Example with incrementing counter

Suppose you are playing on the beach and decide to make a triangle of pebbles, putting one pebble in the first row, two in the second row, three in the third row and so on, like this:


               *
              * *
             * * *
            * * * *

(About 2500 years ago, Pythagoras and others developed the beginnings of number theory by considering questions such as this.)

Suppose you want to know how many pebbles you will need to make a triangle with 7 rows?

Clearly, what you need to do is add up the numbers from 1 to 7. There are two ways to do this; start with the smallest number, one, and add up the list in sequence, 1, 2, 3, 4 and so on; or start with the largest number and add the list going down: 7, 6, 5, 4 and so on. Because both mechanisms illustrate common ways of writing while loops, we will create two examples, one counting up and the other counting down. In this first example, we will start with 1 and add 2, 3, 4 and so on.

If you are just adding up a short list of numbers, the easiest way to do it is to add up all the numbers at once. However, if you do not know ahead of time how many numbers your list will have, or if you want to be prepared for a very long list, then you need to design your addition so that what you do is repeat a simple process many times instead of doing a more complex process once.

For example, instead of adding up all the pebbles all at once, what you can do is add the number of pebbles in the first row, 1, to the number in the second row, 2, and then add the total of those two rows to the third row, 3. Then you can add the number in the fourth row, 4, to the total of the first three rows; and so on.

The critical characteristic of the process is that each repetitive action is simple. In this case, at each step we add only two numbers, the number of pebbles in the row and the total already found. This process of adding two numbers is repeated again and again until the last row has been added to the total of all the preceding rows. In a more complex loop the repetitive action might not be so simple, but it will be simpler than doing everything all at once.

The parts of the function definition

The preceding analysis gives us the bones of our function definition: first, we will need a variable that we can call total that will be the total number of pebbles. This will be the value returned by the function.

Second, we know that the function will require an argument: this argument will be the total number of rows in the triangle. It can be called number-of-rows.

Finally, we need a variable to use as a counter. We could call this variable counter, but a better name is row-number. That is because what the counter does in this function is count rows, and a program should be written to be as understandable as possible.

When the Lisp interpreter first starts evaluating the expressions in the function, the value of total should be set to zero, since we have not added anything to it. Then the function should add the number of pebbles in the first row to the total, and then add the number of pebbles in the second to the total, and then add the number of pebbles in the third row to the total, and so on, until there are no more rows left to add.

Both total and row-number are used only inside the function, so they can be declared as local variables with let and given initial values. Clearly, the initial value for total should be 0. The initial value of row-number should be 1, since we start with the first row. This means that the let statement will look like this:

  (let ((total 0)
        (row-number 1))
    body…)

After the internal variables are declared and bound to their initial values, we can begin the while loop. The expression that serves as the test should return a value of t for true so long as the row-number is less than or equal to the number-of-rows. (If the expression tests true only so long as the row number is less than the number of rows in the triangle, the last row will never be added to the total; hence the row number has to be either less than or equal to the number of rows.)

Lisp provides the <= function that returns true if the value of its first argument is less than or equal to the value of its second argument and false otherwise. So the expression that the while will evaluate as its test should look like this:

(<= row-number number-of-rows)

The total number of pebbles can be found by repeatedly adding the number of pebbles in a row to the total already found. Since the number of pebbles in the row is equal to the row number, the total can be found by adding the row number to the total. (Clearly, in a more complex situation, the number of pebbles in the row might be related to the row number in a more complicated way; if this were the case, the row number would be replaced by the appropriate expression.)

(setq total (+ total row-number))

What this does is set the new value of total to be equal to the sum of adding the number of pebbles in the row to the previous total.

After setting the value of total, the conditions need to be established for the next repetition of the loop, if there is one. This is done by incrementing the value of the row-number variable, which serves as a counter. After the row-number variable has been incremented, the true-or-false-test at the beginning of the while loop tests whether its value is still less than or equal to the value of the number-of-rows and if it is, adds the new value of the row-number variable to the total of the previous repetition of the loop.

The built-in Emacs Lisp function 1+ adds 1 to a number, so the row-number variable can be incremented with this expression:

(setq row-number (1+ row-number))

Putting the function definition together

We have created the parts for the function definition; now we need to put them together.

First, the contents of the while expression:

(while (<= row-number number-of-rows)   ; true-or-false-test
  (setq total (+ total row-number))
  (setq row-number (1+ row-number)))    ; incrementer

Along with the let expression varlist, this very nearly completes the body of the function definition. However, it requires one final element, the need for which is somewhat subtle.

The final touch is to place the variable total on a line by itself after the while expression. Otherwise, the value returned by the whole function is the value of the last expression that is evaluated in the body of the let, and this is the value returned by the while, which is always nil.

This may not be evident at first sight. It almost looks as if the incrementing expression is the last expression of the whole function. But that expression is part of the body of the while; it is the last element of the list that starts with the symbol while. Moreover, the whole of the while loop is a list within the body of the let.

In outline, the function will look like this:

(defun name-of-function (argument-list)
  "documentation…"
  (let (varlist)
    (while (true-or-false-test)
      body-of-while… )
    … ))                    ; Need final expression here.

The result of evaluating the let is what is going to be returned by the defun since the let is not embedded within any containing list, except for the defun as a whole. However, if the while is the last element of the let expression, the function will always return nil. This is not what we want! Instead, what we want is the value of the variable total. This is returned by simply placing the symbol as the last element of the list starting with let. It gets evaluated after the preceding elements of the list are evaluated, which means it gets evaluated after it has been assigned the correct value for the total.

It may be easier to see this by printing the list starting with let all on one line. This format makes it evident that the varlist and while expressions are the second and third elements of the list starting with let, and the total is the last element:

(let (varlist) (while (true-or-false-test) body-of-while… ) total)

Putting everything together, the triangle function definition looks like this:

(defun triangle (number-of-rows)    ; Version with
                                    ;   incrementing counter.
  "Add up the number of pebbles in a triangle.
The first row has one pebble, the second row two pebbles,
the third row three pebbles, and so on.
The argument is NUMBER-OF-ROWS."
  (let ((total 0)
        (row-number 1))
    (while (<= row-number number-of-rows)
      (setq total (+ total row-number))
      (setq row-number (1+ row-number)))
    total))

After you have installed triangle by evaluating the function, you can try it out. Here are two examples:

(triangle 4)

(triangle 7)

The sum of the first four numbers is 10 and the sum of the first seven numbers is 28.

11.1.4 Loop with a Decrementing Counter

Another common way to write a while loop is to write the test so that it determines whether a counter is greater than zero. So long as the counter is greater than zero, the loop is repeated. But when the counter is equal to or less than zero, the loop is stopped. For this to work, the counter has to start out greater than zero and then be made smaller and smaller by a form that is evaluated repeatedly.

The test will be an expression such as (> counter 0) which returns t for true if the value of counter is greater than zero, and nil for false if the value of counter is equal to or less than zero. The expression that makes the number smaller and smaller can be a simple setq such as (setq counter (1- counter)), where 1- is a built-in function in Emacs Lisp that subtracts 1 from its argument.

The template for a decrementing while loop looks like this:

(while (> counter 0)                    ; true-or-false-test
  body…
  (setq counter (1- counter)))          ; decrementer

Example with decrementing counter

To illustrate a loop with a decrementing counter, we will rewrite the triangle function so the counter decreases to zero.

This is the reverse of the earlier version of the function. In this case, to find out how many pebbles are needed to make a triangle with 3 rows, add the number of pebbles in the third row, 3, to the number in the preceding row, 2, and then add the total of those two rows to the row that precedes them, which is 1.

Likewise, to find the number of pebbles in a triangle with 7 rows, add the number of pebbles in the seventh row, 7, to the number in the preceding row, which is 6, and then add the total of those two rows to the row that precedes them, which is 5, and so on. As in the previous example, each addition only involves adding two numbers, the total of the rows already added up and the number of pebbles in the row that is being added to the total. This process of adding two numbers is repeated again and again until there are no more pebbles to add.

We know how many pebbles to start with: the number of pebbles in the last row is equal to the number of rows. If the triangle has seven rows, the number of pebbles in the last row is 7. Likewise, we know how many pebbles are in the preceding row: it is one less than the number in the row.

The parts of the function definition

We start with three variables: the total number of rows in the triangle; the number of pebbles in a row; and the total number of pebbles, which is what we want to calculate. These variables can be named number-of-rows, number-of-pebbles-in-row, and total, respectively.

Both total and number-of-pebbles-in-row are used only inside the function and are declared with let. The initial value of total should, of course, be zero. However, the initial value of number-of-pebbles-in-row should be equal to the number of rows in the triangle, since the addition will start with the longest row.

This means that the beginning of the let expression will look like this:

(let ((total 0)
      (number-of-pebbles-in-row number-of-rows))
  body…)

The total number of pebbles can be found by repeatedly adding the number of pebbles in a row to the total already found, that is, by repeatedly evaluating the following expression:

(setq total (+ total number-of-pebbles-in-row))

After the number-of-pebbles-in-row is added to the total, the number-of-pebbles-in-row should be decremented by one, since the next time the loop repeats, the preceding row will be added to the total.

The number of pebbles in a preceding row is one less than the number of pebbles in a row, so the built-in Emacs Lisp function 1- can be used to compute the number of pebbles in the preceding row. This can be done with the following expression:

(setq number-of-pebbles-in-row
      (1- number-of-pebbles-in-row))

Finally, we know that the while loop should stop making repeated additions when there are no pebbles in a row. So the test for the while loop is simply:

(while (> number-of-pebbles-in-row 0)

Putting the function definition together

We can put these expressions together to create a function definition that works. However, on examination, we find that one of the local variables is unneeded!

The function definition looks like this:

;;; First subtractive version.
(defun triangle (number-of-rows)
  "Add up the number of pebbles in a triangle."
  (let ((total 0)
        (number-of-pebbles-in-row number-of-rows))
    (while (> number-of-pebbles-in-row 0)
      (setq total (+ total number-of-pebbles-in-row))
      (setq number-of-pebbles-in-row
            (1- number-of-pebbles-in-row)))
    total))

As written, this function works.

However, we do not need number-of-pebbles-in-row.

When the triangle function is evaluated, the symbol number-of-rows will be bound to a number, giving it an initial value. That number can be changed in the body of the function as if it were a local variable, without any fear that such a change will effect the value of the variable outside of the function. This is a very useful characteristic of Lisp; it means that the variable number-of-rows can be used anywhere in the function where number-of-pebbles-in-row is used.

Here is a second version of the function written a bit more cleanly:

(defun triangle (number)                ; Second version.
  "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive."
  (let ((total 0))
    (while (> number 0)
      (setq total (+ total number))
      (setq number (1- number)))
    total))

In brief, a properly written while loop will consist of three parts:

  1. A test that will return false after the loop has repeated itself the correct number of times.
  2. An expression the evaluation of which will return the value desired after being repeatedly evaluated.
  3. An expression to change the value passed to the true-or-false-test so that the test returns false after the loop has repeated itself the right number of times.

Next: , Previous: , Up: Loops and Recursion   [Contents][Index]

11.2 Save your time: dolist and dotimes

In addition to while, both dolist and dotimes provide for looping. Sometimes these are quicker to write than the equivalent while loop. Both are Lisp macros. (See Macros in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. )

dolist works like a while loop that CDRs down a list: dolist automatically shortens the list each time it loops—takes the CDR of the list—and binds the CAR of each shorter version of the list to the first of its arguments.

dotimes loops a specific number of times: you specify the number.

The dolist Macro

Suppose, for example, you want to reverse a list, so that “first” “second” “third” becomes “third” “second” “first”.

In practice, you would use the reverse function, like this:

(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))

(reverse animals)

Here is how you could reverse the list using a while loop:

(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))

(defun reverse-list-with-while (list)
  "Using while, reverse the order of LIST."
  (let (value)  ; make sure list starts empty
    (while list
      (setq value (cons (car list) value))
      (setq list (cdr list)))
    value))

(reverse-list-with-while animals)

And here is how you could use the dolist macro:

(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))

(defun reverse-list-with-dolist (list)
  "Using dolist, reverse the order of LIST."
  (let (value)  ; make sure list starts empty
    (dolist (element list value)
      (setq value (cons element value)))))

(reverse-list-with-dolist animals)

In Info, you can place your cursor after the closing parenthesis of each expression and type C-x C-e; in each case, you should see

(tiger lion giraffe gazelle)

in the echo area.

For this example, the existing reverse function is obviously best. The while loop is just like our first example (see A while Loop and a List). The while first checks whether the list has elements; if so, it constructs a new list by adding the first element of the list to the existing list (which in the first iteration of the loop is nil). Since the second element is prepended in front of the first element, and the third element is prepended in front of the second element, the list is reversed.

In the expression using a while loop, the (setq list (cdr list)) expression shortens the list, so the while loop eventually stops. In addition, it provides the cons expression with a new first element by creating a new and shorter list at each repetition of the loop.

The dolist expression does very much the same as the while expression, except that the dolist macro does some of the work you have to do when writing a while expression.

Like a while loop, a dolist loops. What is different is that it automatically shortens the list each time it loops—it CDRs down the list on its own—and it automatically binds the CAR of each shorter version of the list to the first of its arguments.

In the example, the CAR of each shorter version of the list is referred to using the symbol ‘element’, the list itself is called ‘list’, and the value returned is called ‘value’. The remainder of the dolist expression is the body.

The dolist expression binds the CAR of each shorter version of the list to element and then evaluates the body of the expression; and repeats the loop. The result is returned in value.

The dotimes Macro

The dotimes macro is similar to dolist, except that it loops a specific number of times.

The first argument to dotimes is assigned the numbers 0, 1, 2 and so forth each time around the loop. You need to provide the value of the second argument, which is how many times the macro loops.

For example, the following binds the numbers from 0 up to, but not including, the number 3 to the first argument, number, and then constructs a list of the three numbers. (The first number is 0, the second number is 1, and the third number is 2; this makes a total of three numbers in all, starting with zero as the first number.)

(let (value)      ; otherwise a value is a void variable
  (dotimes (number 3)
    (setq value (cons number value)))
  value)

⇒ (2 1 0)

The way to use dotimes is to operate on some expression number number of times and then return the result, either as a list or an atom.

Here is an example of a defun that uses dotimes to add up the number of pebbles in a triangle.

(defun triangle-using-dotimes (number-of-rows)
  "Using `dotimes', add up the number of pebbles in a triangle."
(let ((total 0))  ; otherwise a total is a void variable
  (dotimes (number number-of-rows)
    (setq total (+ total (1+ number))))
  total))

(triangle-using-dotimes 4)

11.3 Recursion

A recursive function contains code that tells the Lisp interpreter to call a program that runs exactly like itself, but with slightly different arguments. The code runs exactly the same because it has the same name. However, even though the program has the same name, it is not the same entity. It is different. In the jargon, it is a different “instance”.

Eventually, if the program is written correctly, the slightly different arguments will become sufficiently different from the first arguments that the final instance will stop.

11.3.1 Building Robots: Extending the Metaphor

It is sometimes helpful to think of a running program as a robot that does a job. In doing its job, a recursive function calls on a second robot to help it. The second robot is identical to the first in every way, except that the second robot helps the first and has been passed different arguments than the first.

In a recursive function, the second robot may call a third; and the third may call a fourth, and so on. Each of these is a different entity; but all are clones.

Since each robot has slightly different instructions—the arguments will differ from one robot to the next—the last robot should know when to stop.

Let’s expand on the metaphor in which a computer program is a robot.

A function definition provides the blueprints for a robot. When you install a function definition, that is, when you evaluate a defun macro, you install the necessary equipment to build robots. It is as if you were in a factory, setting up an assembly line. Robots with the same name are built according to the same blueprints. So they have the same model number, but a different serial number.

We often say that a recursive function “calls itself”. What we mean is that the instructions in a recursive function cause the Lisp interpreter to run a different function that has the same name and does the same job as the first, but with different arguments.

It is important that the arguments differ from one instance to the next; otherwise, the process will never stop.

11.3.2 The Parts of a Recursive Definition

A recursive function typically contains a conditional expression which has three parts:

  1. A true-or-false-test that determines whether the function is called again, here called the do-again-test.
  2. The name of the function. When this name is called, a new instance of the function—a new robot, as it were—is created and told what to do.
  3. An expression that returns a different value each time the function is called, here called the next-step-expression. Consequently, the argument (or arguments) passed to the new instance of the function will be different from that passed to the previous instance. This causes the conditional expression, the do-again-test, to test false after the correct number of repetitions.

Recursive functions can be much simpler than any other kind of function. Indeed, when people first start to use them, they often look so mysteriously simple as to be incomprehensible. Like riding a bicycle, reading a recursive function definition takes a certain knack which is hard at first but then seems simple.

There are several different common recursive patterns. A very simple pattern looks like this:

(defun name-of-recursive-function (argument-list)
  "documentation…"
  (if do-again-test
    body…
    (name-of-recursive-function
         next-step-expression)))

Each time a recursive function is evaluated, a new instance of it is created and told what to do. The arguments tell the instance what to do.

An argument is bound to the value of the next-step-expression. Each instance runs with a different value of the next-step-expression.

The value in the next-step-expression is used in the do-again-test.

The value returned by the next-step-expression is passed to the new instance of the function, which evaluates it (or some transmogrification of it) to determine whether to continue or stop. The next-step-expression is designed so that the do-again-test returns false when the function should no longer be repeated.

The do-again-test is sometimes called the stop condition, since it stops the repetitions when it tests false.

11.3.3 Recursion with a List

The example of a while loop that printed the elements of a list of numbers can be written recursively. Here is the code, including an expression to set the value of the variable animals to a list.

If you are reading this in Info in Emacs, you can evaluate this expression directly in Info. Otherwise, you must copy the example to the *scratch* buffer and evaluate each expression there. Use C-u C-x C-e to evaluate the (print-elements-recursively animals) expression so that the results are printed in the buffer; otherwise the Lisp interpreter will try to squeeze the results into the one line of the echo area.

Also, place your cursor immediately after the last closing parenthesis of the print-elements-recursively function, before the comment. Otherwise, the Lisp interpreter will try to evaluate the comment.

(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))

(defun print-elements-recursively (list)
  "Print each element of LIST on a line of its own.
Uses recursion."
  (when list                            ; do-again-test
        (print (car list))              ; body
        (print-elements-recursively     ; recursive call
         (cdr list))))                  ; next-step-expression

(print-elements-recursively animals)

The print-elements-recursively function first tests whether there is any content in the list; if there is, the function prints the first element of the list, the CAR of the list. Then the function invokes itself, but gives itself as its argument, not the whole list, but the second and subsequent elements of the list, the CDR of the list.

Put another way, if the list is not empty, the function invokes another instance of code that is similar to the initial code, but is a different thread of execution, with different arguments than the first instance.

Put in yet another way, if the list is not empty, the first robot assembles a second robot and tells it what to do; the second robot is a different individual from the first, but is the same model.

When the second evaluation occurs, the when expression is evaluated and if true, prints the first element of the list it receives as its argument (which is the second element of the original list). Then the function calls itself with the CDR of the list it is invoked with, which (the second time around) is the CDR of the CDR of the original list.

Note that although we say that the function “calls itself”, what we mean is that the Lisp interpreter assembles and instructs a new instance of the program. The new instance is a clone of the first, but is a separate individual.

Each time the function invokes itself, it does so on a shorter version of the original list. It creates a new instance that works on a shorter list.

Eventually, the function invokes itself on an empty list. It creates a new instance whose argument is nil. The conditional expression tests the value of list. Since the value of list is nil, the when expression tests false so the then-part is not evaluated. The function as a whole then returns nil.

When you evaluate the expression (print-elements-recursively animals) in the *scratch* buffer, you see this result:

gazelle

giraffe

lion

tiger
nil

11.3.4 Recursion in Place of a Counter

The triangle function described in a previous section can also be written recursively. It looks like this:

(defun triangle-recursively (number)
  "Return the sum of the numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
Uses recursion."
  (if (= number 1)                    ; do-again-test
      1                               ; then-part
    (+ number                         ; else-part
       (triangle-recursively          ; recursive call
        (1- number)))))               ; next-step-expression

(triangle-recursively 7)

You can install this function by evaluating it and then try it by evaluating (triangle-recursively 7). (Remember to put your cursor immediately after the last parenthesis of the function definition, before the comment.) The function evaluates to 28.

To understand how this function works, let’s consider what happens in the various cases when the function is passed 1, 2, 3, or 4 as the value of its argument.

An argument of 1 or 2

First, what happens if the value of the argument is 1?

The function has an if expression after the documentation string. It tests whether the value of number is equal to 1; if so, Emacs evaluates the then-part of the if expression, which returns the number 1 as the value of the function. (A triangle with one row has one pebble in it.)

Suppose, however, that the value of the argument is 2. In this case, Emacs evaluates the else-part of the if expression.

The else-part consists of an addition, the recursive call to triangle-recursively and a decrementing action; and it looks like this:

(+ number (triangle-recursively (1- number)))

When Emacs evaluates this expression, the innermost expression is evaluated first; then the other parts in sequence. Here are the steps in detail:

Step 1    Evaluate the innermost expression.

The innermost expression is (1- number) so Emacs decrements the value of number from 2 to 1.

Step 2    Evaluate the triangle-recursively function.

The Lisp interpreter creates an individual instance of triangle-recursively. It does not matter that this function is contained within itself. Emacs passes the result Step 1 as the argument used by this instance of the triangle-recursively function

In this case, Emacs evaluates triangle-recursively with an argument of 1. This means that this evaluation of triangle-recursively returns 1.

Step 3    Evaluate the value of number.

The variable number is the second element of the list that starts with +; its value is 2.

Step 4    Evaluate the + expression.

The + expression receives two arguments, the first from the evaluation of number (Step 3) and the second from the evaluation of triangle-recursively (Step 2).

The result of the addition is the sum of 2 plus 1, and the number 3 is returned, which is correct. A triangle with two rows has three pebbles in it.

An argument of 3 or 4

Suppose that triangle-recursively is called with an argument of 3.

Step 1    Evaluate the do-again-test.

The if expression is evaluated first. This is the do-again test and returns false, so the else-part of the if expression is evaluated. (Note that in this example, the do-again-test causes the function to call itself when it tests false, not when it tests true.)

Step 2    Evaluate the innermost expression of the else-part.

The innermost expression of the else-part is evaluated, which decrements 3 to 2. This is the next-step-expression.

Step 3    Evaluate the triangle-recursively function.

The number 2 is passed to the triangle-recursively function.

We already know what happens when Emacs evaluates triangle-recursively with an argument of 2. After going through the sequence of actions described earlier, it returns a value of 3. So that is what will happen here.

Step 4    Evaluate the addition.

3 will be passed as an argument to the addition and will be added to the number with which the function was called, which is 3.

The value returned by the function as a whole will be 6.

Now that we know what will happen when triangle-recursively is called with an argument of 3, it is evident what will happen if it is called with an argument of 4:

In the recursive call, the evaluation of

(triangle-recursively (1- 4))

will return the value of evaluating

(triangle-recursively 3)

which is 6 and this value will be added to 4 by the addition in the third line.

The value returned by the function as a whole will be 10.

Each time triangle-recursively is evaluated, it evaluates a version of itself—a different instance of itself—with a smaller argument, until the argument is small enough so that it does not evaluate itself.

Note that this particular design for a recursive function requires that operations be deferred.

Before (triangle-recursively 7) can calculate its answer, it must call (triangle-recursively 6); and before (triangle-recursively 6) can calculate its answer, it must call (triangle-recursively 5); and so on. That is to say, the calculation that (triangle-recursively 7) makes must be deferred until (triangle-recursively 6) makes its calculation; and (triangle-recursively 6) must defer until (triangle-recursively 5) completes; and so on.

If each of these instances of triangle-recursively are thought of as different robots, the first robot must wait for the second to complete its job, which must wait until the third completes, and so on.

There is a way around this kind of waiting, which we will discuss in Recursion without Deferments.

11.3.5 Recursion Example Using cond

The version of triangle-recursively described earlier is written with the if special form. It can also be written using another special form called cond. The name of the special form cond is an abbreviation of the word ‘conditional’.

Although the cond special form is not used as often in the Emacs Lisp sources as if, it is used often enough to justify explaining it.

The template for a cond expression looks like this:

(cond
 body…)

where the body is a series of lists.

Written out more fully, the template looks like this:

(cond
 (first-true-or-false-test first-consequent)
 (second-true-or-false-test second-consequent)
 (third-true-or-false-test third-consequent)
  …)

When the Lisp interpreter evaluates the cond expression, it evaluates the first element (the CAR or true-or-false-test) of the first expression in a series of expressions within the body of the cond.

If the true-or-false-test returns nil the rest of that expression, the consequent, is skipped and the true-or-false-test of the next expression is evaluated. When an expression is found whose true-or-false-test returns a value that is not nil, the consequent of that expression is evaluated. The consequent can be one or more expressions. If the consequent consists of more than one expression, the expressions are evaluated in sequence and the value of the last one is returned. If the expression does not have a consequent, the value of the true-or-false-test is returned.

If none of the true-or-false-tests test true, the cond expression returns nil.

Written using cond, the triangle function looks like this:

(defun triangle-using-cond (number)
  (cond ((<= number 0) 0)
        ((= number 1) 1)
        ((> number 1)
         (+ number (triangle-using-cond (1- number))))))

In this example, the cond returns 0 if the number is less than or equal to 0, it returns 1 if the number is 1 and it evaluates (+ number (triangle-using-cond (1- number))) if the number is greater than 1.

11.3.6 Recursive Patterns

Here are three common recursive patterns. Each involves a list. Recursion does not need to involve lists, but Lisp is designed for lists and this provides a sense of its primal capabilities.

Recursive Pattern: every

In the every recursive pattern, an action is performed on every element of a list.

The basic pattern is:

  • If a list be empty, return nil.
  • Else, act on the beginning of the list (the CAR of the list)
    • - through a recursive call by the function on the rest (the CDR) of the list,
    • - and, optionally, combine the acted-on element, using cons, with the results of acting on the rest.

Here is an example:

(defun square-each (numbers-list)
  "Square each of a NUMBERS LIST, recursively."
  (if (not numbers-list)                ; do-again-test
      nil
    (cons
     (* (car numbers-list) (car numbers-list))
     (square-each (cdr numbers-list))))) ; next-step-expression

(square-each '(1 2 3))
    ⇒ (1 4 9)

If numbers-list is empty, do nothing. But if it has content, construct a list combining the square of the first number in the list with the result of the recursive call.

(The example follows the pattern exactly: nil is returned if the numbers’ list is empty. In practice, you would write the conditional so it carries out the action when the numbers’ list is not empty.)

The print-elements-recursively function (see Recursion with a List) is another example of an every pattern, except in this case, rather than bring the results together using cons, we print each element of output.

The print-elements-recursively function looks like this:

(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))

(defun print-elements-recursively (list)
  "Print each element of LIST on a line of its own.
Uses recursion."
  (when list                            ; do-again-test
        (print (car list))              ; body
        (print-elements-recursively     ; recursive call
         (cdr list))))                  ; next-step-expression

(print-elements-recursively animals)

The pattern for print-elements-recursively is:

  • When the list is empty, do nothing.
  • But when the list has at least one element,
    • - act on the beginning of the list (the CAR of the list),
    • - and make a recursive call on the rest (the CDR) of the list.

Recursive Pattern: accumulate

Another recursive pattern is called the accumulate pattern. In the accumulate recursive pattern, an action is performed on every element of a list and the result of that action is accumulated with the results of performing the action on the other elements.

This is very like the every pattern using cons, except that cons is not used, but some other combiner.

The pattern is:

  • If a list be empty, return zero or some other constant.
  • Else, act on the beginning of the list (the CAR of the list),
    • - and combine that acted-on element, using + or some other combining function, with
    • - a recursive call by the function on the rest (the CDR) of the list.

Here is an example:

(defun add-elements (numbers-list)
  "Add the elements of NUMBERS-LIST together."
  (if (not numbers-list)
      0
    (+ (car numbers-list) (add-elements (cdr numbers-list)))))

(add-elements '(1 2 3 4))
    ⇒ 10

See Making a List of Files, for an example of the accumulate pattern.

Recursive Pattern: keep

A third recursive pattern is called the keep pattern. In the keep recursive pattern, each element of a list is tested; the element is acted on and the results are kept only if the element meets a criterion.

Again, this is very like the every pattern, except the element is skipped unless it meets a criterion.

The pattern has three parts:

  • If a list be empty, return nil.
  • Else, if the beginning of the list (the CAR of the list) passes a test
    • - act on that element and combine it, using cons with
    • - a recursive call by the function on the rest (the CDR) of the list.
  • Otherwise, if the beginning of the list (the CAR of the list) fails the test
    • - skip on that element,
    • - and, recursively call the function on the rest (the CDR) of the list.

Here is an example that uses cond:

(defun keep-three-letter-words (word-list)
  "Keep three letter words in WORD-LIST."
  (cond
   ;; First do-again-test: stop-condition
   ((not word-list) nil)

   ;; Second do-again-test: when to act
   ((eq 3 (length (symbol-name (car word-list))))
    ;; combine acted-on element with recursive call on shorter list
    (cons (car word-list) (keep-three-letter-words (cdr word-list))))

   ;; Third do-again-test: when to skip element;
   ;;   recursively call shorter list with next-step expression
   (t (keep-three-letter-words (cdr word-list)))))

(keep-three-letter-words '(one two three four five six))
    ⇒ (one two six)

It goes without saying that you need not use nil as the test for when to stop; and you can, of course, combine these patterns.

11.3.7 Recursion without Deferments

Let’s consider again what happens with the triangle-recursively function. We will find that the intermediate calculations are deferred until all can be done.

Here is the function definition:

(defun triangle-recursively (number)
  "Return the sum of the numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
Uses recursion."
  (if (= number 1)                    ; do-again-test
      1                               ; then-part
    (+ number                         ; else-part
       (triangle-recursively          ; recursive call
        (1- number)))))               ; next-step-expression

What happens when we call this function with an argument of 7?

The first instance of the triangle-recursively function adds the number 7 to the value returned by a second instance of triangle-recursively, an instance that has been passed an argument of 6. That is to say, the first calculation is:

(+ 7 (triangle-recursively 6))

The first instance of triangle-recursively—you may want to think of it as a little robot—cannot complete its job. It must hand off the calculation for (triangle-recursively 6) to a second instance of the program, to a second robot. This second individual is completely different from the first one; it is, in the jargon, a “different instantiation”. Or, put another way, it is a different robot. It is the same model as the first; it calculates triangle numbers recursively; but it has a different serial number.

And what does (triangle-recursively 6) return? It returns the number 6 added to the value returned by evaluating triangle-recursively with an argument of 5. Using the robot metaphor, it asks yet another robot to help it.

Now the total is:

(+ 7 6 (triangle-recursively 5))

And what happens next?

(+ 7 6 5 (triangle-recursively 4))

Each time triangle-recursively is called, except for the last time, it creates another instance of the program—another robot—and asks it to make a calculation.

Eventually, the full addition is set up and performed:

(+ 7 6 5 4 3 2 1)

This design for the function defers the calculation of the first step until the second can be done, and defers that until the third can be done, and so on. Each deferment means the computer must remember what is being waited on. This is not a problem when there are only a few steps, as in this example. But it can be a problem when there are more steps.

11.3.8 No Deferment Solution

The solution to the problem of deferred operations is to write in a manner that does not defer operations15. This requires writing to a different pattern, often one that involves writing two function definitions, an initialization function and a helper function.

The initialization function sets up the job; the helper function does the work.

Here are the two function definitions for adding up numbers. They are so simple, I find them hard to understand.

(defun triangle-initialization (number)
  "Return the sum of the numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
This is the initialization component of a two function
duo that uses recursion."
  (triangle-recursive-helper 0 0 number))
(defun triangle-recursive-helper (sum counter number)
  "Return SUM, using COUNTER, through NUMBER inclusive.
This is the helper component of a two function duo
that uses recursion."
  (if (> counter number)
      sum
    (triangle-recursive-helper (+ sum counter)  ; sum
                               (1+ counter)     ; counter
                               number)))        ; number

Install both function definitions by evaluating them, then call triangle-initialization with 2 rows:

(triangle-initialization 2)
    ⇒ 3

The initialization function calls the first instance of the helper function with three arguments: zero, zero, and a number which is the number of rows in the triangle.

The first two arguments passed to the helper function are initialization values. These values are changed when triangle-recursive-helper invokes new instances.16

Let’s see what happens when we have a triangle that has one row. (This triangle will have one pebble in it!)

triangle-initialization will call its helper with the arguments 0 0 1. That function will run the conditional test whether (> counter number):

(> 0 1)

and find that the result is false, so it will invoke the else-part of the if clause:

    (triangle-recursive-helper
     (+ sum counter)  ; sum plus countersum
     (1+ counter)     ; increment countercounter
     number)          ; number stays the same

which will first compute:

(triangle-recursive-helper (+ 0 0)  ; sum
                           (1+ 0)   ; counter
                           1)       ; number
which is:

(triangle-recursive-helper 0 1 1)

Again, (> counter number) will be false, so again, the Lisp interpreter will evaluate triangle-recursive-helper, creating a new instance with new arguments.

This new instance will be;

    (triangle-recursive-helper
     (+ sum counter)  ; sum plus countersum
     (1+ counter)     ; increment countercounter
     number)          ; number stays the same

which is:

(triangle-recursive-helper 1 2 1)

In this case, the (> counter number) test will be true! So the instance will return the value of the sum, which will be 1, as expected.

Now, let’s pass triangle-initialization an argument of 2, to find out how many pebbles there are in a triangle with two rows.

That function calls (triangle-recursive-helper 0 0 2).

In stages, the instances called will be:

                          sum counter number
(triangle-recursive-helper 0    1       2)

(triangle-recursive-helper 1    2       2)

(triangle-recursive-helper 3    3       2)

When the last instance is called, the (> counter number) test will be true, so the instance will return the value of sum, which will be 3.

This kind of pattern helps when you are writing functions that can use many resources in a computer.

11.4 Looping Exercise

  • Write a function similar to triangle in which each row has a value which is the square of the row number. Use a while loop.
  • Write a function similar to triangle that multiplies instead of adds the values.
  • Rewrite these two functions recursively. Rewrite these functions using cond.
  • Write a function for Texinfo mode that creates an index entry at the beginning of a paragraph for every ‘@dfn’ within the paragraph. (In a Texinfo file, ‘@dfn’ marks a definition. This book is written in Texinfo.)

    Many of the functions you will need are described in two of the previous chapters, Cutting and Storing Text, and Yanking Text Back. If you use forward-paragraph to put the index entry at the beginning of the paragraph, you will have to use C-h f (describe-function) to find out how to make the command go backwards.

    For more information, see Indicating in Texinfo Manual, which goes to a Texinfo manual in the current directory. Or, if you are on the Internet, see https://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/manual/texinfo/

13 Counting via Repetition and Regexps

Repetition and regular expression searches are powerful tools that you often use when you write code in Emacs Lisp. This chapter illustrates the use of regular expression searches through the construction of word count commands using while loops and recursion.

Counting words

The standard Emacs distribution contains functions for counting the number of lines and words within a region.

Certain types of writing ask you to count words. Thus, if you write an essay, you may be limited to 800 words; if you write a novel, you may discipline yourself to write 1000 words a day. It seems odd, but for a long time, Emacs lacked a word count command. Perhaps people used Emacs mostly for code or types of documentation that did not require word counts; or perhaps they restricted themselves to the operating system word count command, wc. Alternatively, people may have followed the publishers’ convention and computed a word count by dividing the number of characters in a document by five.

There are many ways to implement a command to count words. Here are some examples, which you may wish to compare with the standard Emacs command, count-words-region.

13.1 The count-words-example Function

A word count command could count words in a line, paragraph, region, or buffer. What should the command cover? You could design the command to count the number of words in a complete buffer. However, the Emacs tradition encourages flexibility—you may want to count words in just a section, rather than all of a buffer. So it makes more sense to design the command to count the number of words in a region. Once you have a command to count words in a region, you can, if you wish, count words in a whole buffer by marking it with C-x h (mark-whole-buffer).

Clearly, counting words is a repetitive act: starting from the beginning of the region, you count the first word, then the second word, then the third word, and so on, until you reach the end of the region. This means that word counting is ideally suited to recursion or to a while loop.

Designing count-words-example

First, we will implement the word count command with a while loop, then with recursion. The command will, of course, be interactive.

The template for an interactive function definition is, as always:

(defun name-of-function (argument-list)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive-expression…)
  body…)

What we need to do is fill in the slots.

The name of the function should be self-explanatory and easy to remember. count-words-region is the obvious choice. Since that name is used for the standard Emacs command to count words, we will name our implementation count-words-example.

The function counts words within a region. This means that the argument list must contain symbols that are bound to the two positions, the beginning and end of the region. These two positions can be called ‘beginning’ and ‘end’ respectively. The first line of the documentation should be a single sentence, since that is all that is printed as documentation by a command such as apropos. The interactive expression will be of the form ‘(interactive "r")’, since that will cause Emacs to pass the beginning and end of the region to the function’s argument list. All this is routine.

The body of the function needs to be written to do three tasks: first, to set up conditions under which the while loop can count words, second, to run the while loop, and third, to send a message to the user.

When a user calls count-words-example, point may be at the beginning or the end of the region. However, the counting process must start at the beginning of the region. This means we will want to put point there if it is not already there. Executing (goto-char beginning) ensures this. Of course, we will want to return point to its expected position when the function finishes its work. For this reason, the body must be enclosed in a save-excursion expression.

The central part of the body of the function consists of a while loop in which one expression jumps point forward word by word, and another expression counts those jumps. The true-or-false-test of the while loop should test true so long as point should jump forward, and false when point is at the end of the region.

We could use (forward-word 1) as the expression for moving point forward word by word, but it is easier to see what Emacs identifies as a “word” if we use a regular expression search.

A regular expression search that finds the pattern for which it is searching leaves point after the last character matched. This means that a succession of successful word searches will move point forward word by word.

As a practical matter, we want the regular expression search to jump over whitespace and punctuation between words as well as over the words themselves. A regexp that refuses to jump over interword whitespace would never jump more than one word! This means that the regexp should include the whitespace and punctuation that follows a word, if any, as well as the word itself. (A word may end a buffer and not have any following whitespace or punctuation, so that part of the regexp must be optional.)

Thus, what we want for the regexp is a pattern defining one or more word constituent characters followed, optionally, by one or more characters that are not word constituents. The regular expression for this is:

\w+\W*

The buffer’s syntax table determines which characters are and are not word constituents. For more information about syntax, see Syntax Tables in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

The search expression looks like this:

(re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*")

(Note that paired backslashes precede the ‘w’ and ‘W’. A single backslash has special meaning to the Emacs Lisp interpreter. It indicates that the following character is interpreted differently than usual. For example, the two characters, ‘\n’, stand for ‘newline’, rather than for a backslash followed by ‘n’. Two backslashes in a row stand for an ordinary, unspecial backslash, so Emacs Lisp interpreter ends of seeing a single backslash followed by a letter. So it discovers the letter is special.)

We need a counter to count how many words there are; this variable must first be set to 0 and then incremented each time Emacs goes around the while loop. The incrementing expression is simply:

(setq count (1+ count))

Finally, we want to tell the user how many words there are in the region. The message function is intended for presenting this kind of information to the user. The message has to be phrased so that it reads properly regardless of how many words there are in the region: we don’t want to say that “there are 1 words in the region”. The conflict between singular and plural is ungrammatical. We can solve this problem by using a conditional expression that evaluates different messages depending on the number of words in the region. There are three possibilities: no words in the region, one word in the region, and more than one word. This means that the cond special form is appropriate.

All this leads to the following function definition:

;;; First version; has bugs!
(defun count-words-example (beginning end)
  "Print number of words in the region.
Words are defined as at least one word-constituent
character followed by at least one character that
is not a word-constituent.  The buffer's syntax
table determines which characters these are."
  (interactive "r")
  (message "Counting words in region ... ")

;;; 1. Set up appropriate conditions.
  (save-excursion
    (goto-char beginning)
    (let ((count 0))

;;; 2. Run the while loop.
      (while (< (point) end)
        (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*")
        (setq count (1+ count)))

;;; 3. Send a message to the user.
      (cond ((zerop count)
             (message
              "The region does NOT have any words."))
            ((= 1 count)
             (message
              "The region has 1 word."))
            (t
             (message
              "The region has %d words." count))))))

As written, the function works, but not in all circumstances.

13.1.1 The Whitespace Bug in count-words-example

The count-words-example command described in the preceding section has two bugs, or rather, one bug with two manifestations. First, if you mark a region containing only whitespace in the middle of some text, the count-words-example command tells you that the region contains one word! Second, if you mark a region containing only whitespace at the end of the buffer or the accessible portion of a narrowed buffer, the command displays an error message that looks like this:

Search failed: "\\w+\\W*"

If you are reading this in Info in GNU Emacs, you can test for these bugs yourself.

First, evaluate the function in the usual manner to install it.

If you wish, you can also install this key binding by evaluating it:

(global-set-key "\C-c=" 'count-words-example)

To conduct the first test, set mark and point to the beginning and end of the following line and then type C-c = (or M-x count-words-example if you have not bound C-c =):

    one   two  three

Emacs will tell you, correctly, that the region has three words.

Repeat the test, but place mark at the beginning of the line and place point just before the word ‘one’. Again type the command C-c = (or M-x count-words-example). Emacs should tell you that the region has no words, since it is composed only of the whitespace at the beginning of the line. But instead Emacs tells you that the region has one word!

For the third test, copy the sample line to the end of the *scratch* buffer and then type several spaces at the end of the line. Place mark right after the word ‘three’ and point at the end of line. (The end of the line will be the end of the buffer.) Type C-c = (or M-x count-words-example) as you did before. Again, Emacs should tell you that the region has no words, since it is composed only of the whitespace at the end of the line. Instead, Emacs displays an error message saying ‘Search failed’.

The two bugs stem from the same problem.

Consider the first manifestation of the bug, in which the command tells you that the whitespace at the beginning of the line contains one word. What happens is this: The M-x count-words-example command moves point to the beginning of the region. The while tests whether the value of point is smaller than the value of end, which it is. Consequently, the regular expression search looks for and finds the first word. It leaves point after the word. count is set to one. The while loop repeats; but this time the value of point is larger than the value of end, the loop is exited; and the function displays a message saying the number of words in the region is one. In brief, the regular expression search looks for and finds the word even though it is outside the marked region.

In the second manifestation of the bug, the region is whitespace at the end of the buffer. Emacs says ‘Search failed’. What happens is that the true-or-false-test in the while loop tests true, so the search expression is executed. But since there are no more words in the buffer, the search fails.

In both manifestations of the bug, the search extends or attempts to extend outside of the region.

The solution is to limit the search to the region—this is a fairly simple action, but as you may have come to expect, it is not quite as simple as you might think.

As we have seen, the re-search-forward function takes a search pattern as its first argument. But in addition to this first, mandatory argument, it accepts three optional arguments. The optional second argument bounds the search. The optional third argument, if t, causes the function to return nil rather than signal an error if the search fails. The optional fourth argument is a repeat count. (In Emacs, you can see a function’s documentation by typing C-h f, the name of the function, and then RET.)

In the count-words-example definition, the value of the end of the region is held by the variable end which is passed as an argument to the function. Thus, we can add end as an argument to the regular expression search expression:

(re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" end)

However, if you make only this change to the count-words-example definition and then test the new version of the definition on a stretch of whitespace, you will receive an error message saying ‘Search failed’.

What happens is this: the search is limited to the region, and fails as you expect because there are no word-constituent characters in the region. Since it fails, we receive an error message. But we do not want to receive an error message in this case; we want to receive the message “The region does NOT have any words.”

The solution to this problem is to provide re-search-forward with a third argument of t, which causes the function to return nil rather than signal an error if the search fails.

However, if you make this change and try it, you will see the message “Counting words in region ... ” and … you will keep on seeing that message …, until you type C-g (keyboard-quit).

Here is what happens: the search is limited to the region, as before, and it fails because there are no word-constituent characters in the region, as expected. Consequently, the re-search-forward expression returns nil. It does nothing else. In particular, it does not move point, which it does as a side effect if it finds the search target. After the re-search-forward expression returns nil, the next expression in the while loop is evaluated. This expression increments the count. Then the loop repeats. The true-or-false-test tests true because the value of point is still less than the value of end, since the re-search-forward expression did not move point. … and the cycle repeats …

The count-words-example definition requires yet another modification, to cause the true-or-false-test of the while loop to test false if the search fails. Put another way, there are two conditions that must be satisfied in the true-or-false-test before the word count variable is incremented: point must still be within the region and the search expression must have found a word to count.

Since both the first condition and the second condition must be true together, the two expressions, the region test and the search expression, can be joined with an and special form and embedded in the while loop as the true-or-false-test, like this:

(and (< (point) end) (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" end t))

The re-search-forward expression returns t if the search succeeds and as a side effect moves point. Consequently, as words are found, point is moved through the region. When the search expression fails to find another word, or when point reaches the end of the region, the true-or-false-test tests false, the while loop exits, and the count-words-example function displays one or other of its messages.

After incorporating these final changes, the count-words-example works without bugs (or at least, without bugs that I have found!). Here is what it looks like:

;;; Final version: while
(defun count-words-example (beginning end)
  "Print number of words in the region."
  (interactive "r")
  (message "Counting words in region ... ")

;;; 1. Set up appropriate conditions.
  (save-excursion
    (let ((count 0))
      (goto-char beginning)

;;; 2. Run the while loop.
      (while (and (< (point) end)
                  (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" end t))
        (setq count (1+ count)))

;;; 3. Send a message to the user.
      (cond ((zerop count)
             (message
              "The region does NOT have any words."))
            ((= 1 count)
             (message
              "The region has 1 word."))
            (t
             (message
              "The region has %d words." count))))))

13.2 Count Words Recursively

You can write the function for counting words recursively as well as with a while loop. Let’s see how this is done.

First, we need to recognize that the count-words-example function has three jobs: it sets up the appropriate conditions for counting to occur; it counts the words in the region; and it sends a message to the user telling how many words there are.

If we write a single recursive function to do everything, we will receive a message for every recursive call. If the region contains 13 words, we will receive thirteen messages, one right after the other. We don’t want this! Instead, we must write two functions to do the job, one of which (the recursive function) will be used inside of the other. One function will set up the conditions and display the message; the other will return the word count.

Let us start with the function that causes the message to be displayed. We can continue to call this count-words-example.

This is the function that the user will call. It will be interactive. Indeed, it will be similar to our previous versions of this function, except that it will call recursive-count-words to determine how many words are in the region.

We can readily construct a template for this function, based on our previous versions:

;; Recursive version; uses regular expression search
(defun count-words-example (beginning end)
  "documentation…"
  (interactive-expression…)

;;; 1. Set up appropriate conditions.
  (explanatory message)
  (set-up functions

;;; 2. Count the words.
    recursive call

;;; 3. Send a message to the user.
    message providing word count))

The definition looks straightforward, except that somehow the count returned by the recursive call must be passed to the message displaying the word count. A little thought suggests that this can be done by making use of a let expression: we can bind a variable in the varlist of a let expression to the number of words in the region, as returned by the recursive call; and then the cond expression, using binding, can display the value to the user.

Often, one thinks of the binding within a let expression as somehow secondary to the primary work of a function. But in this case, what you might consider the primary job of the function, counting words, is done within the let expression.

Using let, the function definition looks like this:

(defun count-words-example (beginning end)
  "Print number of words in the region."
  (interactive "r")

;;; 1. Set up appropriate conditions.
  (message "Counting words in region ... ")
  (save-excursion
    (goto-char beginning)

;;; 2. Count the words.
    (let ((count (recursive-count-words end)))

;;; 3. Send a message to the user.
      (cond ((zerop count)
             (message
              "The region does NOT have any words."))
            ((= 1 count)
             (message
              "The region has 1 word."))
            (t
             (message
              "The region has %d words." count))))))

Next, we need to write the recursive counting function.

A recursive function has at least three parts: the do-again-test, the next-step-expression, and the recursive call.

The do-again-test determines whether the function will or will not be called again. Since we are counting words in a region and can use a function that moves point forward for every word, the do-again-test can check whether point is still within the region. The do-again-test should find the value of point and determine whether point is before, at, or after the value of the end of the region. We can use the point function to locate point. Clearly, we must pass the value of the end of the region to the recursive counting function as an argument.

In addition, the do-again-test should also test whether the search finds a word. If it does not, the function should not call itself again.

The next-step-expression changes a value so that when the recursive function is supposed to stop calling itself, it stops. More precisely, the next-step-expression changes a value so that at the right time, the do-again-test stops the recursive function from calling itself again. In this case, the next-step-expression can be the expression that moves point forward, word by word.

The third part of a recursive function is the recursive call.

Somewhere, we also need a part that does the work of the function, a part that does the counting. A vital part!

But already, we have an outline of the recursive counting function:

(defun recursive-count-words (region-end)
  "documentation…"
   do-again-test
   next-step-expression
   recursive call)

Now we need to fill in the slots. Let’s start with the simplest cases first: if point is at or beyond the end of the region, there cannot be any words in the region, so the function should return zero. Likewise, if the search fails, there are no words to count, so the function should return zero.

On the other hand, if point is within the region and the search succeeds, the function should call itself again.

Thus, the do-again-test should look like this:

(and (< (point) region-end)
     (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" region-end t))

Note that the search expression is part of the do-again-test—the function returns t if its search succeeds and nil if it fails. (See The Whitespace Bug in count-words-example, for an explanation of how re-search-forward works.)

The do-again-test is the true-or-false test of an if clause. Clearly, if the do-again-test succeeds, the then-part of the if clause should call the function again; but if it fails, the else-part should return zero since either point is outside the region or the search failed because there were no words to find.

But before considering the recursive call, we need to consider the next-step-expression. What is it? Interestingly, it is the search part of the do-again-test.

In addition to returning t or nil for the do-again-test, re-search-forward moves point forward as a side effect of a successful search. This is the action that changes the value of point so that the recursive function stops calling itself when point completes its movement through the region. Consequently, the re-search-forward expression is the next-step-expression.

In outline, then, the body of the recursive-count-words function looks like this:

(if do-again-test-and-next-step-combined
    ;; then
    recursive-call-returning-count
  ;; else
  return-zero)

How to incorporate the mechanism that counts?

If you are not used to writing recursive functions, a question like this can be troublesome. But it can and should be approached systematically.

We know that the counting mechanism should be associated in some way with the recursive call. Indeed, since the next-step-expression moves point forward by one word, and since a recursive call is made for each word, the counting mechanism must be an expression that adds one to the value returned by a call to recursive-count-words.

Consider several cases:

  • If there are two words in the region, the function should return a value resulting from adding one to the value returned when it counts the first word, plus the number returned when it counts the remaining words in the region, which in this case is one.
  • If there is one word in the region, the function should return a value resulting from adding one to the value returned when it counts that word, plus the number returned when it counts the remaining words in the region, which in this case is zero.
  • If there are no words in the region, the function should return zero.

From the sketch we can see that the else-part of the if returns zero for the case of no words. This means that the then-part of the if must return a value resulting from adding one to the value returned from a count of the remaining words.

The expression will look like this, where 1+ is a function that adds one to its argument.

(1+ (recursive-count-words region-end))

The whole recursive-count-words function will then look like this:

(defun recursive-count-words (region-end)
  "documentation…"

;;; 1. do-again-test
  (if (and (< (point) region-end)
           (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" region-end t))

;;; 2. then-part: the recursive call
      (1+ (recursive-count-words region-end))

;;; 3. else-part
    0))

Let’s examine how this works:

If there are no words in the region, the else part of the if expression is evaluated and consequently the function returns zero.

If there is one word in the region, the value of point is less than the value of region-end and the search succeeds. In this case, the true-or-false-test of the if expression tests true, and the then-part of the if expression is evaluated. The counting expression is evaluated. This expression returns a value (which will be the value returned by the whole function) that is the sum of one added to the value returned by a recursive call.

Meanwhile, the next-step-expression has caused point to jump over the first (and in this case only) word in the region. This means that when (recursive-count-words region-end) is evaluated a second time, as a result of the recursive call, the value of point will be equal to or greater than the value of region end. So this time, recursive-count-words will return zero. The zero will be added to one, and the original evaluation of recursive-count-words will return one plus zero, which is one, which is the correct amount.

Clearly, if there are two words in the region, the first call to recursive-count-words returns one added to the value returned by calling recursive-count-words on a region containing the remaining word—that is, it adds one to one, producing two, which is the correct amount.

Similarly, if there are three words in the region, the first call to recursive-count-words returns one added to the value returned by calling recursive-count-words on a region containing the remaining two words—and so on and so on.

With full documentation the two functions look like this:

The recursive function:

(defun recursive-count-words (region-end)
  "Number of words between point and REGION-END."

;;; 1. do-again-test
  (if (and (< (point) region-end)
           (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" region-end t))

;;; 2. then-part: the recursive call
      (1+ (recursive-count-words region-end))

;;; 3. else-part
    0))

The wrapper:

;;; Recursive version
(defun count-words-example (beginning end)
  "Print number of words in the region.

Words are defined as at least one word-constituent
character followed by at least one character that is
not a word-constituent.  The buffer's syntax table
determines which characters these are."
  (interactive "r")
  (message "Counting words in region ... ")
  (save-excursion
    (goto-char beginning)
    (let ((count (recursive-count-words end)))
      (cond ((zerop count)
             (message
              "The region does NOT have any words."))
            ((= 1 count)
             (message "The region has 1 word."))
            (t
             (message
              "The region has %d words." count))))))

13.3 Exercise: Counting Punctuation

Using a while loop, write a function to count the number of punctuation marks in a region—period, comma, semicolon, colon, exclamation mark, and question mark. Do the same using recursion.

14 Counting Words in a defun

Our next project is to count the number of words in a function definition. Clearly, this can be done using some variant of count-words-example. See Counting via Repetition and Regexps. If we are just going to count the words in one definition, it is easy enough to mark the definition with the C-M-h (mark-defun) command, and then call count-words-example.

However, I am more ambitious: I want to count the words and symbols in every definition in the Emacs sources and then print a graph that shows how many functions there are of each length: how many contain 40 to 49 words or symbols, how many contain 50 to 59 words or symbols, and so on. I have often been curious how long a typical function is, and this will tell.

Divide and Conquer

Described in one phrase, the histogram project is daunting; but divided into numerous small steps, each of which we can take one at a time, the project becomes less fearsome. Let us consider what the steps must be:

  • First, write a function to count the words in one definition. This includes the problem of handling symbols as well as words.
  • Second, write a function to list the number of words in each function in a file. This function can use the count-words-in-defun function.
  • Third, write a function to list the number of words in each function in each of several files. This entails automatically finding the various files, switching to them, and counting the words in the definitions within them.
  • Fourth, write a function to convert the list of numbers that we created in step three to a form that will be suitable for printing as a graph.
  • Fifth, write a function to print the results as a graph.

This is quite a project! But if we take each step slowly, it will not be difficult.

14.1 What to Count?

When we first start thinking about how to count the words in a function definition, the first question is (or ought to be) what are we going to count? When we speak of “words” with respect to a Lisp function definition, we are actually speaking, in large part, of symbols. For example, the following multiply-by-seven function contains the five symbols defun, multiply-by-seven, number, *, and 7. In addition, in the documentation string, it contains the four words ‘Multiply’, ‘NUMBER’, ‘by’, and ‘seven’. The symbol ‘number’ is repeated, so the definition contains a total of ten words and symbols.

(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
  "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
  (* 7 number))

However, if we mark the multiply-by-seven definition with C-M-h (mark-defun), and then call count-words-example on it, we will find that count-words-example claims the definition has eleven words, not ten! Something is wrong!

The problem is twofold: count-words-example does not count the ‘*’ as a word, and it counts the single symbol, multiply-by-seven, as containing three words. The hyphens are treated as if they were interword spaces rather than intraword connectors: ‘multiply-by-seven’ is counted as if it were written ‘multiply by seven’.

The cause of this confusion is the regular expression search within the count-words-example definition that moves point forward word by word. In the canonical version of count-words-example, the regexp is:

"\\w+\\W*"

This regular expression is a pattern defining one or more word constituent characters possibly followed by one or more characters that are not word constituents. What is meant by “word constituent characters” brings us to the issue of syntax, which is worth a section of its own.

14.2 What Constitutes a Word or Symbol?

Emacs treats different characters as belonging to different syntax categories. For example, the regular expression, ‘\\w+’, is a pattern specifying one or more word constituent characters. Word constituent characters are members of one syntax category. Other syntax categories include the class of punctuation characters, such as the period and the comma, and the class of whitespace characters, such as the blank space and the tab character. (For more information, see Syntax Tables in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

Syntax tables specify which characters belong to which categories. Usually, a hyphen is not specified as a word constituent character. Instead, it is specified as being in the class of characters that are part of symbol names but not words. This means that the count-words-example function treats it in the same way it treats an interword white space, which is why count-words-example counts ‘multiply-by-seven’ as three words.

There are two ways to cause Emacs to count ‘multiply-by-seven’ as one symbol: modify the syntax table or modify the regular expression.

We could redefine a hyphen as a word constituent character by modifying the syntax table that Emacs keeps for each mode. This action would serve our purpose, except that a hyphen is merely the most common character within symbols that is not typically a word constituent character; there are others, too.

Alternatively, we can redefine the regexp used in the count-words-example definition so as to include symbols. This procedure has the merit of clarity, but the task is a little tricky.

The first part is simple enough: the pattern must match at least one character that is a word or symbol constituent. Thus:

"\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+"

The ‘\\(’ is the first part of the grouping construct that includes the ‘\\w’ and the ‘\\s_’ as alternatives, separated by the ‘\\|’. The ‘\\w’ matches any word-constituent character and the ‘\\s_’ matches any character that is part of a symbol name but not a word-constituent character. The ‘+’ following the group indicates that the word or symbol constituent characters must be matched at least once.

However, the second part of the regexp is more difficult to design. What we want is to follow the first part with optionally one or more characters that are not constituents of a word or symbol. At first, I thought I could define this with the following:

"\\(\\W\\|\\S_\\)*"

The upper case ‘W’ and ‘S’ match characters that are not word or symbol constituents. Unfortunately, this expression matches any character that is either not a word constituent or not a symbol constituent. This matches any character!

I then noticed that every word or symbol in my test region was followed by white space (blank space, tab, or newline). So I tried placing a pattern to match one or more blank spaces after the pattern for one or more word or symbol constituents. This failed, too. Words and symbols are often separated by whitespace, but in actual code parentheses may follow symbols and punctuation may follow words. So finally, I designed a pattern in which the word or symbol constituents are followed optionally by characters that are not white space and then followed optionally by white space.

Here is the full regular expression:

"\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+[^ \t\n]*[ \t\n]*"

14.3 The count-words-in-defun Function

We have seen that there are several ways to write a count-words-region function. To write a count-words-in-defun, we need merely adapt one of these versions.

The version that uses a while loop is easy to understand, so I am going to adapt that. Because count-words-in-defun will be part of a more complex program, it need not be interactive and it need not display a message but just return the count. These considerations simplify the definition a little.

On the other hand, count-words-in-defun will be used within a buffer that contains function definitions. Consequently, it is reasonable to ask that the function determine whether it is called when point is within a function definition, and if it is, to return the count for that definition. This adds complexity to the definition, but saves us from needing to pass arguments to the function.

These considerations lead us to prepare the following template:

(defun count-words-in-defun ()
  "documentation…"
  (set up…
     (while loop…)
   return count)

As usual, our job is to fill in the slots.

First, the set up.

We are presuming that this function will be called within a buffer containing function definitions. Point will either be within a function definition or not. For count-words-in-defun to work, point must move to the beginning of the definition, a counter must start at zero, and the counting loop must stop when point reaches the end of the definition.

The beginning-of-defun function searches backwards for an opening delimiter such as a ‘(’ at the beginning of a line, and moves point to that position, or else to the limit of the search. In practice, this means that beginning-of-defun moves point to the beginning of an enclosing or preceding function definition, or else to the beginning of the buffer. We can use beginning-of-defun to place point where we wish to start.

The while loop requires a counter to keep track of the words or symbols being counted. A let expression can be used to create a local variable for this purpose, and bind it to an initial value of zero.

The end-of-defun function works like beginning-of-defun except that it moves point to the end of the definition. end-of-defun can be used as part of an expression that determines the position of the end of the definition.

The set up for count-words-in-defun takes shape rapidly: first we move point to the beginning of the definition, then we create a local variable to hold the count, and finally, we record the position of the end of the definition so the while loop will know when to stop looping.

The code looks like this:

(beginning-of-defun)
(let ((count 0)
      (end (save-excursion (end-of-defun) (point))))

The code is simple. The only slight complication is likely to concern end: it is bound to the position of the end of the definition by a save-excursion expression that returns the value of point after end-of-defun temporarily moves it to the end of the definition.

The second part of the count-words-in-defun, after the set up, is the while loop.

The loop must contain an expression that jumps point forward word by word and symbol by symbol, and another expression that counts the jumps. The true-or-false-test for the while loop should test true so long as point should jump forward, and false when point is at the end of the definition. We have already redefined the regular expression for this, so the loop is straightforward:

(while (and (< (point) end)
            (re-search-forward
             "\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+[^ \t\n]*[ \t\n]*" end t))
  (setq count (1+ count)))

The third part of the function definition returns the count of words and symbols. This part is the last expression within the body of the let expression, and can be, very simply, the local variable count, which when evaluated returns the count.

Put together, the count-words-in-defun definition looks like this:

(defun count-words-in-defun ()
  "Return the number of words and symbols in a defun."
  (beginning-of-defun)
  (let ((count 0)
        (end (save-excursion (end-of-defun) (point))))
    (while
        (and (< (point) end)
             (re-search-forward
              "\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+[^ \t\n]*[ \t\n]*"
              end t))
      (setq count (1+ count)))
    count))

How to test this? The function is not interactive, but it is easy to put a wrapper around the function to make it interactive; we can use almost the same code as for the recursive version of count-words-example:

;;; Interactive version.
(defun count-words-defun ()
  "Number of words and symbols in a function definition."
  (interactive)
  (message
   "Counting words and symbols in function definition ... ")
  (let ((count (count-words-in-defun)))
    (cond
     ((zerop count)
      (message
       "The definition does NOT have any words or symbols."))
     ((= 1 count)
      (message
       "The definition has 1 word or symbol."))
     (t
      (message
       "The definition has %d words or symbols." count)))))

Let’s reuse C-c = as a convenient key binding:

(global-set-key "\C-c=" 'count-words-defun)

Now we can try out count-words-defun: install both count-words-in-defun and count-words-defun, and set the key binding. Then copy the following to an Emacs Lisp buffer (like, for instance, *scratch*), place the cursor within the definition, and use the C-c = command.

(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
  "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
  (* 7 number))
     ⇒ 10

Success! The definition has 10 words and symbols.

The next problem is to count the numbers of words and symbols in several definitions within a single file.

14.4 Count Several defuns Within a File

A file such as simple.el may have a hundred or more function definitions within it. Our long term goal is to collect statistics on many files, but as a first step, our immediate goal is to collect statistics on one file.

The information will be a series of numbers, each number being the length of a function definition. We can store the numbers in a list.

We know that we will want to incorporate the information regarding one file with information about many other files; this means that the function for counting definition lengths within one file need only return the list of lengths. It need not and should not display any messages.

The word count commands contain one expression to jump point forward word by word and another expression to count the jumps. The function to return the lengths of definitions can be designed to work the same way, with one expression to jump point forward definition by definition and another expression to construct the lengths’ list.

This statement of the problem makes it elementary to write the function definition. Clearly, we will start the count at the beginning of the file, so the first command will be (goto-char (point-min)). Next, we start the while loop; and the true-or-false test of the loop can be a regular expression search for the next function definition—so long as the search succeeds, point is moved forward and then the body of the loop is evaluated. The body needs an expression that constructs the lengths’ list. cons, the list construction command, can be used to create the list. That is almost all there is to it.

Here is what this fragment of code looks like:

(goto-char (point-min))
(while (re-search-forward "^(defun" nil t)
  (setq lengths-list
        (cons (count-words-in-defun) lengths-list)))

What we have left out is the mechanism for finding the file that contains the function definitions.

In previous examples, we either used this, the Info file, or we switched back and forth to some other buffer, such as the *scratch* buffer.

Finding a file is a new process that we have not yet discussed.

14.5 Find a File

To find a file in Emacs, you use the C-x C-f (find-file) command. This command is almost, but not quite right for the lengths problem.

Let’s look at the source for find-file:

(defun find-file (filename)
  "Edit file FILENAME.
Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME,
creating one if none already exists."
  (interactive "FFind file: ")
  (switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect filename)))

(The most recent version of the find-file function definition permits you to specify optional wildcards to visit multiple files; that makes the definition more complex and we will not discuss it here, since it is not relevant. You can see its source using either M-. (xref-find-definitions) or C-h f (describe-function).)

The definition I am showing possesses short but complete documentation and an interactive specification that prompts you for a file name when you use the command interactively. The body of the definition contains two functions, find-file-noselect and switch-to-buffer.

According to its documentation as shown by C-h f (the describe-function command), the find-file-noselect function reads the named file into a buffer and returns the buffer. (Its most recent version includes an optional wildcards argument, too, as well as another to read a file literally and another to suppress warning messages. These optional arguments are irrelevant.)

However, the find-file-noselect function does not select the buffer in which it puts the file. Emacs does not switch its attention (or yours if you are using find-file-noselect) to the selected buffer. That is what switch-to-buffer does: it switches the buffer to which Emacs attention is directed; and it switches the buffer displayed in the window to the new buffer. We have discussed buffer switching elsewhere. (See Switching Buffers.)

In this histogram project, we do not need to display each file on the screen as the program determines the length of each definition within it. Instead of employing switch-to-buffer, we can work with set-buffer, which redirects the attention of the computer program to a different buffer but does not redisplay it on the screen. So instead of calling on find-file to do the job, we must write our own expression.

The task is easy: use find-file-noselect and set-buffer.

14.6 lengths-list-file in Detail

The core of the lengths-list-file function is a while loop containing a function to move point forward defun by defun, and a function to count the number of words and symbols in each defun. This core must be surrounded by functions that do various other tasks, including finding the file, and ensuring that point starts out at the beginning of the file. The function definition looks like this:

(defun lengths-list-file (filename)
  "Return list of definitions' lengths within FILE.
The returned list is a list of numbers.
Each number is the number of words or
symbols in one function definition."
  (message "Working on `%s' ... " filename)
  (save-excursion
    (let ((buffer (find-file-noselect filename))
          (lengths-list))
      (set-buffer buffer)
      (setq buffer-read-only t)
      (widen)
      (goto-char (point-min))
      (while (re-search-forward "^(defun" nil t)
        (setq lengths-list
              (cons (count-words-in-defun) lengths-list)))
      (kill-buffer buffer)
      lengths-list)))

The function is passed one argument, the name of the file on which it will work. It has four lines of documentation, but no interactive specification. Since people worry that a computer is broken if they don’t see anything going on, the first line of the body is a message.

The next line contains a save-excursion that returns Emacs’s attention to the current buffer when the function completes. This is useful in case you embed this function in another function that presumes point is restored to the original buffer.

In the varlist of the let expression, Emacs finds the file and binds the local variable buffer to the buffer containing the file. At the same time, Emacs creates lengths-list as a local variable.

Next, Emacs switches its attention to the buffer.

In the following line, Emacs makes the buffer read-only. Ideally, this line is not necessary. None of the functions for counting words and symbols in a function definition should change the buffer. Besides, the buffer is not going to be saved, even if it were changed. This line is entirely the consequence of great, perhaps excessive, caution. The reason for the caution is that this function and those it calls work on the sources for Emacs and it is inconvenient if they are inadvertently modified. It goes without saying that I did not realize a need for this line until an experiment went awry and started to modify my Emacs source files …

Next comes a call to widen the buffer if it is narrowed. This function is usually not needed—Emacs creates a fresh buffer if none already exists; but if a buffer visiting the file already exists Emacs returns that one. In this case, the buffer may be narrowed and must be widened. If we wanted to be fully user-friendly, we would arrange to save the restriction and the location of point, but we won’t.

The (goto-char (point-min)) expression moves point to the beginning of the buffer.

Then comes a while loop in which the work of the function is carried out. In the loop, Emacs determines the length of each definition and constructs a lengths’ list containing the information.

Emacs kills the buffer after working through it. This is to save space inside of Emacs. My version of GNU Emacs 19 contained over 300 source files of interest; GNU Emacs 22 contains over a thousand source files. Another function will apply lengths-list-file to each of the files.

Finally, the last expression within the let expression is the lengths-list variable; its value is returned as the value of the whole function.

You can try this function by installing it in the usual fashion. Then place your cursor after the following expression and type C-x C-e (eval-last-sexp).

(lengths-list-file
 "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1/lisp/emacs-lisp/debug.el")

You may need to change the pathname of the file; the one here is for GNU Emacs version 22.1. To change the expression, copy it to the *scratch* buffer and edit it.

Also, to see the full length of the list, rather than a truncated version, you may have to evaluate the following:

(custom-set-variables '(eval-expression-print-length nil))

(See Specifying Variables using defcustom. Then evaluate the lengths-list-file expression.)

The lengths’ list for debug.el takes less than a second to produce and looks like this in GNU Emacs 22:

(83 113 105 144 289 22 30 97 48 89 25 52 52 88 28 29 77 49 43 290 232 587)

(Using my old machine, the version 19 lengths’ list for debug.el took seven seconds to produce and looked like this:

(75 41 80 62 20 45 44 68 45 12 34 235)

The newer version of debug.el contains more defuns than the earlier one; and my new machine is much faster than the old one.)

Note that the length of the last definition in the file is first in the list.

14.7 Count Words in defuns in Different Files

In the previous section, we created a function that returns a list of the lengths of each definition in a file. Now, we want to define a function to return a master list of the lengths of the definitions in a list of files.

Working on each of a list of files is a repetitious act, so we can use either a while loop or recursion.

Determine the lengths of defuns

The design using a while loop is routine. The argument passed to the function is a list of files. As we saw earlier (see A while Loop and a List), you can write a while loop so that the body of the loop is evaluated if such a list contains elements, but to exit the loop if the list is empty. For this design to work, the body of the loop must contain an expression that shortens the list each time the body is evaluated, so that eventually the list is empty. The usual technique is to set the value of the list to the value of the CDR of the list each time the body is evaluated.

The template looks like this:

(while test-whether-list-is-empty
  bodyset-list-to-cdr-of-list)

Also, we remember that a while loop returns nil (the result of evaluating the true-or-false-test), not the result of any evaluation within its body. (The evaluations within the body of the loop are done for their side effects.) However, the expression that sets the lengths’ list is part of the body—and that is the value that we want returned by the function as a whole. To do this, we enclose the while loop within a let expression, and arrange that the last element of the let expression contains the value of the lengths’ list. (See Loop Example with an Incrementing Counter.)

These considerations lead us directly to the function itself:

;;; Use while loop.
(defun lengths-list-many-files (list-of-files)
  "Return list of lengths of defuns in LIST-OF-FILES."
  (let (lengths-list)

;;; true-or-false-test
    (while list-of-files
      (setq lengths-list
            (append
             lengths-list

;;; Generate a lengths’ list.
             (lengths-list-file
              (expand-file-name (car list-of-files)))))

;;; Make files’ list shorter.
      (setq list-of-files (cdr list-of-files)))

;;; Return final value of lengths’ list.
    lengths-list))

expand-file-name is a built-in function that converts a file name to the absolute, long, path name form. The function employs the name of the directory in which the function is called.

Thus, if expand-file-name is called on debug.el when Emacs is visiting the /usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/emacs-lisp/ directory,

debug.el

becomes

/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/emacs-lisp/debug.el

The only other new element of this function definition is the as yet unstudied function append, which merits a short section for itself.

14.7.1 The append Function

The append function attaches one list to another. Thus,

(append '(1 2 3 4) '(5 6 7 8))

produces the list

(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8)

This is exactly how we want to attach two lengths’ lists produced by lengths-list-file to each other. The results contrast with cons,

(cons '(1 2 3 4) '(5 6 7 8))

which constructs a new list in which the first argument to cons becomes the first element of the new list:

((1 2 3 4) 5 6 7 8)

14.8 Recursively Count Words in Different Files

Besides a while loop, you can work on each of a list of files with recursion. A recursive version of lengths-list-many-files is short and simple.

The recursive function has the usual parts: the do-again-test, the next-step-expression, and the recursive call. The do-again-test determines whether the function should call itself again, which it will do if the list-of-files contains any remaining elements; the next-step-expression resets the list-of-files to the CDR of itself, so eventually the list will be empty; and the recursive call calls itself on the shorter list. The complete function is shorter than this description!

(defun recursive-lengths-list-many-files (list-of-files)
  "Return list of lengths of each defun in LIST-OF-FILES."
  (if list-of-files                     ; do-again-test
      (append
       (lengths-list-file
        (expand-file-name (car list-of-files)))
       (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
        (cdr list-of-files)))))

In a sentence, the function returns the lengths’ list for the first of the list-of-files appended to the result of calling itself on the rest of the list-of-files.

Here is a test of recursive-lengths-list-many-files, along with the results of running lengths-list-file on each of the files individually.

Install recursive-lengths-list-many-files and lengths-list-file, if necessary, and then evaluate the following expressions. You may need to change the files’ pathnames; those here work when this Info file and the Emacs sources are located in their customary places. To change the expressions, copy them to the *scratch* buffer, edit them, and then evaluate them.

The results are shown after the ‘’. (These results are for files from Emacs version 22.1.1; files from other versions of Emacs may produce different results.)

(cd "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/")

(lengths-list-file "./lisp/macros.el")
     ⇒ (283 263 480 90)

(lengths-list-file "./lisp/mail/mailalias.el")
     ⇒ (38 32 29 95 178 180 321 218 324)

(lengths-list-file "./lisp/hex-util.el")
     ⇒ (82 71)

  (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
   '("./lisp/macros.el"
     "./lisp/mail/mailalias.el"
     "./lisp/hex-util.el"))
       ⇒ (283 263 480 90 38 32 29 95 178 180 321 218 324 82 71)

The recursive-lengths-list-many-files function produces the output we want.

The next step is to prepare the data in the list for display in a graph.

14.9 Prepare the Data for Display in a Graph

The recursive-lengths-list-many-files function returns a list of numbers. Each number records the length of a function definition. What we need to do now is transform this data into a list of numbers suitable for generating a graph. The new list will tell how many functions definitions contain less than 10 words and symbols, how many contain between 10 and 19 words and symbols, how many contain between 20 and 29 words and symbols, and so on.

In brief, we need to go through the lengths’ list produced by the recursive-lengths-list-many-files function and count the number of defuns within each range of lengths, and produce a list of those numbers.

The Data for Display in Detail

Based on what we have done before, we can readily foresee that it should not be too hard to write a function that CDRs down the lengths’ list, looks at each element, determines which length range it is in, and increments a counter for that range.

However, before beginning to write such a function, we should consider the advantages of sorting the lengths’ list first, so the numbers are ordered from smallest to largest. First, sorting will make it easier to count the numbers in each range, since two adjacent numbers will either be in the same length range or in adjacent ranges. Second, by inspecting a sorted list, we can discover the highest and lowest number, and thereby determine the largest and smallest length range that we will need.

14.9.1 Sorting Lists

Emacs contains a function to sort lists, called (as you might guess) sort. The sort function takes two arguments, the list to be sorted, and a predicate that determines whether the first of two list elements is less than the second.

As we saw earlier (see Using the Wrong Type Object as an Argument), a predicate is a function that determines whether some property is true or false. The sort function will reorder a list according to whatever property the predicate uses; this means that sort can be used to sort non-numeric lists by non-numeric criteria—it can, for example, alphabetize a list.

The < function is used when sorting a numeric list. For example,

(sort '(4 8 21 17 33 7 21 7) '<)

produces this:

(4 7 7 8 17 21 21 33)

(Note that in this example, both the arguments are quoted so that the symbols are not evaluated before being passed to sort as arguments.)

Sorting the list returned by the recursive-lengths-list-many-files function is straightforward; it uses the < function:

(sort
 (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
  '("./lisp/macros.el"
    "./lisp/mailalias.el"
    "./lisp/hex-util.el"))
 '<)

which produces:

(29 32 38 71 82 90 95 178 180 218 263 283 321 324 480)

(Note that in this example, the first argument to sort is not quoted, since the expression must be evaluated so as to produce the list that is passed to sort.)

14.9.2 Making a List of Files

The recursive-lengths-list-many-files function requires a list of files as its argument. For our test examples, we constructed such a list by hand; but the Emacs Lisp source directory is too large for us to do for that. Instead, we will write a function to do the job for us. In this function, we will use both a while loop and a recursive call.

We did not have to write a function like this for older versions of GNU Emacs, since they placed all the ‘.el’ files in one directory. Instead, we were able to use the directory-files function, which lists the names of files that match a specified pattern within a single directory.

However, recent versions of Emacs place Emacs Lisp files in sub-directories of the top level lisp directory. This re-arrangement eases navigation. For example, all the mail related files are in a lisp sub-directory called mail. But at the same time, this arrangement forces us to create a file listing function that descends into the sub-directories.

We can create this function, called files-in-below-directory, using familiar functions such as car, nthcdr, and substring in conjunction with an existing function called directory-files-and-attributes. This latter function not only lists all the filenames in a directory, including the names of sub-directories, but also their attributes.

To restate our goal: to create a function that will enable us to feed filenames to recursive-lengths-list-many-files as a list that looks like this (but with more elements):

("./lisp/macros.el"
 "./lisp/mail/rmail.el"
 "./lisp/hex-util.el")

The directory-files-and-attributes function returns a list of lists. Each of the lists within the main list consists of 13 elements. The first element is a string that contains the name of the file—which, in GNU/Linux, may be a directory file, that is to say, a file with the special attributes of a directory. The second element of the list is t for a directory, a string for symbolic link (the string is the name linked to), or nil.

For example, the first ‘.el’ file in the lisp/ directory is abbrev.el. Its name is /usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/abbrev.el and it is not a directory or a symbolic link.

This is how directory-files-and-attributes lists that file and its attributes:

("abbrev.el"
nil
1
1000
100
(20615 27034 579989 697000)
(17905 55681 0 0)
(20615 26327 734791 805000)(17)
13188
"-rw-r--r--"
t
2971624
773)

On the other hand, mail/ is a directory within the lisp/ directory. The beginning of its listing looks like this:

("mail"
t
…
)

(To learn about the different attributes, look at the documentation of file-attributes. Bear in mind that the file-attributes function does not list the filename, so its first element is directory-files-and-attributes’s second element.)

We will want our new function, files-in-below-directory, to list the ‘.el’ files in the directory it is told to check, and in any directories below that directory.

This gives us a hint on how to construct files-in-below-directory: within a directory, the function should add ‘.el’ filenames to a list; and if, within a directory, the function comes upon a sub-directory, it should go into that sub-directory and repeat its actions.

However, we should note that every directory contains a name that refers to itself, called . (“dot”), and a name that refers to its parent directory, called .. (“dot dot”). (In /, the root directory, .. refers to itself, since / has no parent.) Clearly, we do not want our files-in-below-directory function to enter those directories, since they always lead us, directly or indirectly, to the current directory.

Consequently, our files-in-below-directory function must do several tasks:

  • Check to see whether it is looking at a filename that ends in ‘.el’; and if so, add its name to a list.
  • Check to see whether it is looking at a filename that is the name of a directory; and if so,
    • - Check to see whether it is looking at . or ..; and if so skip it.
    • - Or else, go into that directory and repeat the process.

Let’s write a function definition to do these tasks. We will use a while loop to move from one filename to another within a directory, checking what needs to be done; and we will use a recursive call to repeat the actions on each sub-directory. The recursive pattern is Accumulate (see Recursive Pattern: accumulate), using append as the combiner.

Here is the function:

(defun files-in-below-directory (directory)
  "List the .el files in DIRECTORY and in its sub-directories."
  ;; Although the function will be used non-interactively,
  ;; it will be easier to test if we make it interactive.
  ;; The directory will have a name such as
  ;;  "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/"
  (interactive "DDirectory name: ")
  (let (el-files-list
        (current-directory-list
         (directory-files-and-attributes directory t)))
    ;; while we are in the current directory
    (while current-directory-list
      (cond
       ;; check to see whether filename ends in '.el'
       ;; and if so, add its name to a list.
       ((equal ".el" (substring (car (car current-directory-list)) -3))
        (setq el-files-list
              (cons (car (car current-directory-list)) el-files-list)))
       ;; check whether filename is that of a directory
       ((eq t (car (cdr (car current-directory-list))))
        ;; decide whether to skip or recurse
        (if
            (equal "."
                   (substring (car (car current-directory-list)) -1))
            ;; then do nothing since filename is that of
            ;;   current directory or parent, "." or ".."
            ()
          ;; else descend into the directory and repeat the process
          (setq el-files-list
                (append
                 (files-in-below-directory
                  (car (car current-directory-list)))
                 el-files-list)))))
      ;; move to the next filename in the list; this also
      ;; shortens the list so the while loop eventually comes to an end
      (setq current-directory-list (cdr current-directory-list)))
    ;; return the filenames
    el-files-list))

The files-in-below-directory directory-files function takes one argument, the name of a directory.

Thus, on my system,

(length
 (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/"))

tells me that in and below my Lisp sources directory are 1031 ‘.el’ files.

files-in-below-directory returns a list in reverse alphabetical order. An expression to sort the list in alphabetical order looks like this:

(sort
 (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/")
 'string-lessp)

14.9.3 Counting function definitions

Our immediate goal is to generate a list that tells us how many function definitions contain fewer than 10 words and symbols, how many contain between 10 and 19 words and symbols, how many contain between 20 and 29 words and symbols, and so on.

With a sorted list of numbers, this is easy: count how many elements of the list are smaller than 10, then, after moving past the numbers just counted, count how many are smaller than 20, then, after moving past the numbers just counted, count how many are smaller than 30, and so on. Each of the numbers, 10, 20, 30, 40, and the like, is one larger than the top of that range. We can call the list of such numbers the top-of-ranges list.

If we wished, we could generate this list automatically, but it is simpler to write a list manually. Here it is:

(defvar top-of-ranges
 '(10  20  30  40  50
   60  70  80  90 100
  110 120 130 140 150
  160 170 180 190 200
  210 220 230 240 250
  260 270 280 290 300)
 "List specifying ranges for `defuns-per-range'.")

To change the ranges, we edit this list.

Next, we need to write the function that creates the list of the number of definitions within each range. Clearly, this function must take the sorted-lengths and the top-of-ranges lists as arguments.

The defuns-per-range function must do two things again and again: it must count the number of definitions within a range specified by the current top-of-range value; and it must shift to the next higher value in the top-of-ranges list after counting the number of definitions in the current range. Since each of these actions is repetitive, we can use while loops for the job. One loop counts the number of definitions in the range defined by the current top-of-range value, and the other loop selects each of the top-of-range values in turn.

Several entries of the sorted-lengths list are counted for each range; this means that the loop for the sorted-lengths list will be inside the loop for the top-of-ranges list, like a small gear inside a big gear.

The inner loop counts the number of definitions within the range. It is a simple counting loop of the type we have seen before. (See A loop with an incrementing counter.) The true-or-false test of the loop tests whether the value from the sorted-lengths list is smaller than the current value of the top of the range. If it is, the function increments the counter and tests the next value from the sorted-lengths list.

The inner loop looks like this:

(while length-element-smaller-than-top-of-range
  (setq number-within-range (1+ number-within-range))
  (setq sorted-lengths (cdr sorted-lengths)))

The outer loop must start with the lowest value of the top-of-ranges list, and then be set to each of the succeeding higher values in turn. This can be done with a loop like this:

(while top-of-ranges
  body-of-loop…
  (setq top-of-ranges (cdr top-of-ranges)))

Put together, the two loops look like this:

(while top-of-ranges

  ;; Count the number of elements within the current range.
  (while length-element-smaller-than-top-of-range
    (setq number-within-range (1+ number-within-range))
    (setq sorted-lengths (cdr sorted-lengths)))

  ;; Move to next range.
  (setq top-of-ranges (cdr top-of-ranges)))

In addition, in each circuit of the outer loop, Emacs should record the number of definitions within that range (the value of number-within-range) in a list. We can use cons for this purpose. (See cons.)

The cons function works fine, except that the list it constructs will contain the number of definitions for the highest range at its beginning and the number of definitions for the lowest range at its end. This is because cons attaches new elements of the list to the beginning of the list, and since the two loops are working their way through the lengths’ list from the lower end first, the defuns-per-range-list will end up largest number first. But we will want to print our graph with smallest values first and the larger later. The solution is to reverse the order of the defuns-per-range-list. We can do this using the nreverse function, which reverses the order of a list.

For example,

(nreverse '(1 2 3 4))

produces:

(4 3 2 1)

Note that the nreverse function is destructive—that is, it changes the list to which it is applied; this contrasts with the car and cdr functions, which are non-destructive. In this case, we do not want the original defuns-per-range-list, so it does not matter that it is destroyed. (The reverse function provides a reversed copy of a list, leaving the original list as is.)

Put all together, the defuns-per-range looks like this:

(defun defuns-per-range (sorted-lengths top-of-ranges)
  "SORTED-LENGTHS defuns in each TOP-OF-RANGES range."
  (let ((top-of-range (car top-of-ranges))
        (number-within-range 0)
        defuns-per-range-list)

    ;; Outer loop.
    (while top-of-ranges

      ;; Inner loop.
      (while (and
              ;; Need number for numeric test.
              (car sorted-lengths)
              (< (car sorted-lengths) top-of-range))

        ;; Count number of definitions within current range.
        (setq number-within-range (1+ number-within-range))
        (setq sorted-lengths (cdr sorted-lengths)))

      ;; Exit inner loop but remain within outer loop.

      (setq defuns-per-range-list
            (cons number-within-range defuns-per-range-list))
      (setq number-within-range 0)      ; Reset count to zero.

      ;; Move to next range.
      (setq top-of-ranges (cdr top-of-ranges))
      ;; Specify next top of range value.
      (setq top-of-range (car top-of-ranges)))

    ;; Exit outer loop and count the number of defuns larger than
    ;;   the largest top-of-range value.
    (setq defuns-per-range-list
          (cons
           (length sorted-lengths)
           defuns-per-range-list))

    ;; Return a list of the number of definitions within each range,
    ;;   smallest to largest.
    (nreverse defuns-per-range-list)))

The function is straightforward except for one subtle feature. The true-or-false test of the inner loop looks like this:

(and (car sorted-lengths)
     (< (car sorted-lengths) top-of-range))

instead of like this:

(< (car sorted-lengths) top-of-range)

The purpose of the test is to determine whether the first item in the sorted-lengths list is less than the value of the top of the range.

The simple version of the test works fine unless the sorted-lengths list has a nil value. In that case, the (car sorted-lengths) expression function returns nil. The < function cannot compare a number to nil, which is an empty list, so Emacs signals an error and stops the function from attempting to continue to execute.

The sorted-lengths list always becomes nil when the counter reaches the end of the list. This means that any attempt to use the defuns-per-range function with the simple version of the test will fail.

We solve the problem by using the (car sorted-lengths) expression in conjunction with the and expression. The (car sorted-lengths) expression returns a non-nil value so long as the list has at least one number within it, but returns nil if the list is empty. The and expression first evaluates the (car sorted-lengths) expression, and if it is nil, returns false without evaluating the < expression. But if the (car sorted-lengths) expression returns a non-nil value, the and expression evaluates the < expression, and returns that value as the value of the and expression.

This way, we avoid an error.

Here is a short test of the defuns-per-range function. First, evaluate the expression that binds (a shortened) top-of-ranges list to the list of values, then evaluate the expression for binding the sorted-lengths list, and then evaluate the defuns-per-range function.

;; (Shorter list than we will use later.)
(setq top-of-ranges
 '(110 120 130 140 150
   160 170 180 190 200))

(setq sorted-lengths
      '(85 86 110 116 122 129 154 176 179 200 265 300 300))

(defuns-per-range sorted-lengths top-of-ranges)

The list returned looks like this:

(2 2 2 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 4)

Indeed, there are two elements of the sorted-lengths list smaller than 110, two elements between 110 and 119, two elements between 120 and 129, and so on. There are four elements with a value of 200 or larger.


15 Readying a Graph

Our goal is to construct a graph showing the numbers of function definitions of various lengths in the Emacs lisp sources.

As a practical matter, if you were creating a graph, you would probably use a program such as gnuplot to do the job. (gnuplot is nicely integrated into GNU Emacs.) In this case, however, we create one from scratch, and in the process we will re-acquaint ourselves with some of what we learned before and learn more.

In this chapter, we will first write a simple graph printing function. This first definition will be a prototype, a rapidly written function that enables us to reconnoiter this unknown graph-making territory. We will discover dragons, or find that they are myth. After scouting the terrain, we will feel more confident and enhance the function to label the axes automatically.

Printing the Columns of a Graph

Since Emacs is designed to be flexible and work with all kinds of terminals, including character-only terminals, the graph will need to be made from one of the typewriter symbols. An asterisk will do; as we enhance the graph-printing function, we can make the choice of symbol a user option.

We can call this function graph-body-print; it will take a numbers-list as its only argument. At this stage, we will not label the graph, but only print its body.

The graph-body-print function inserts a vertical column of asterisks for each element in the numbers-list. The height of each line is determined by the value of that element of the numbers-list.

Inserting columns is a repetitive act; that means that this function can be written either with a while loop or recursively.

Our first challenge is to discover how to print a column of asterisks. Usually, in Emacs, we print characters onto a screen horizontally, line by line, by typing. We have two routes we can follow: write our own column-insertion function or discover whether one exists in Emacs.

To see whether there is one in Emacs, we can use the M-x apropos command. This command is like the C-h a (command-apropos) command, except that the latter finds only those functions that are commands. The M-x apropos command lists all symbols that match a regular expression, including functions that are not interactive.

What we want to look for is some command that prints or inserts columns. Very likely, the name of the function will contain either the word “print” or the word “insert” or the word “column”. Therefore, we can simply type M-x apropos RET print\|insert\|column RET and look at the result. On my system, this command once took quite some time, and then produced a list of 79 functions and variables. Now it does not take much time at all and produces a list of 211 functions and variables. Scanning down the list, the only function that looks as if it might do the job is insert-rectangle.

Indeed, this is the function we want; its documentation says:

insert-rectangle:
Insert text of RECTANGLE with upper left corner at point.
RECTANGLE's first line is inserted at point,
its second line is inserted at a point vertically under point, etc.
RECTANGLE should be a list of strings.
After this command, the mark is at the upper left corner
and point is at the lower right corner.

We can run a quick test, to make sure it does what we expect of it.

Here is the result of placing the cursor after the insert-rectangle expression and typing C-u C-x C-e (eval-last-sexp). The function inserts the strings ‘"first"’, ‘"second"’, and ‘"third"’ at and below point. Also the function returns nil.

(insert-rectangle '("first" "second" "third"))first
                                              second
                                              thirdnil

Of course, we won’t be inserting the text of the insert-rectangle expression itself into the buffer in which we are making the graph, but will call the function from our program. We shall, however, have to make sure that point is in the buffer at the place where the insert-rectangle function will insert its column of strings.

If you are reading this in Info, you can see how this works by switching to another buffer, such as the *scratch* buffer, placing point somewhere in the buffer, typing M-:, typing the insert-rectangle expression into the minibuffer at the prompt, and then typing RET. This causes Emacs to evaluate the expression in the minibuffer, but to use as the value of point the position of point in the *scratch* buffer. (M-: is the key binding for eval-expression. Also, nil does not appear in the *scratch* buffer since the expression is evaluated in the minibuffer.)

We find when we do this that point ends up at the end of the last inserted line—that is to say, this function moves point as a side-effect. If we were to repeat the command, with point at this position, the next insertion would be below and to the right of the previous insertion. We don’t want this! If we are going to make a bar graph, the columns need to be beside each other.

So we discover that each cycle of the column-inserting while loop must reposition point to the place we want it, and that place will be at the top, not the bottom, of the column. Moreover, we remember that when we print a graph, we do not expect all the columns to be the same height. This means that the top of each column may be at a different height from the previous one. We cannot simply reposition point to the same line each time, but moved over to the right—or perhaps we can…

We are planning to make the columns of the bar graph out of asterisks. The number of asterisks in the column is the number specified by the current element of the numbers-list. We need to construct a list of asterisks of the right length for each call to insert-rectangle. If this list consists solely of the requisite number of asterisks, then we will have to position point the right number of lines above the base for the graph to print correctly. This could be difficult.

Alternatively, if we can figure out some way to pass insert-rectangle a list of the same length each time, then we can place point on the same line each time, but move it over one column to the right for each new column. If we do this, however, some of the entries in the list passed to insert-rectangle must be blanks rather than asterisks. For example, if the maximum height of the graph is 5, but the height of the column is 3, then insert-rectangle requires an argument that looks like this:

(" " " " "*" "*" "*")

This last proposal is not so difficult, so long as we can determine the column height. There are two ways for us to specify the column height: we can arbitrarily state what it will be, which would work fine for graphs of that height; or we can search through the list of numbers and use the maximum height of the list as the maximum height of the graph. If the latter operation were difficult, then the former procedure would be easiest, but there is a function built into Emacs that determines the maximum of its arguments. We can use that function. The function is called max and it returns the largest of all its arguments, which must be numbers. Thus, for example,

(max  3 4 6 5 7 3)

returns 7. (A corresponding function called min returns the smallest of all its arguments.)

However, we cannot simply call max on the numbers-list; the max function expects numbers as its argument, not a list of numbers. Thus, the following expression,

(max  '(3 4 6 5 7 3))

produces the following error message;

Wrong type of argument:  number-or-marker-p, (3 4 6 5 7 3)

We need a function that passes a list of arguments to a function. This function is apply. This function applies its first argument (a function) to its remaining arguments, the last of which may be a list.

For example,

(apply 'max 3 4 7 3 '(4 8 5))

returns 8.

(Incidentally, I don’t know how you would learn of this function without a book such as this. It is possible to discover other functions, like search-forward or insert-rectangle, by guessing at a part of their names and then using apropos. Even though its base in metaphor is clear—apply its first argument to the rest—I doubt a novice would come up with that particular word when using apropos or other aid. Of course, I could be wrong; after all, the function was first named by someone who had to invent it.)

The second and subsequent arguments to apply are optional, so we can use apply to call a function and pass the elements of a list to it, like this, which also returns 8:

(apply 'max '(4 8 5))

This latter way is how we will use apply. The recursive-lengths-list-many-files function returns a numbers’ list to which we can apply max (we could also apply max to the sorted numbers’ list; it does not matter whether the list is sorted or not.)

Hence, the operation for finding the maximum height of the graph is this:

(setq max-graph-height (apply 'max numbers-list))

Now we can return to the question of how to create a list of strings for a column of the graph. Told the maximum height of the graph and the number of asterisks that should appear in the column, the function should return a list of strings for the insert-rectangle command to insert.

Each column is made up of asterisks or blanks. Since the function is passed the value of the height of the column and the number of asterisks in the column, the number of blanks can be found by subtracting the number of asterisks from the height of the column. Given the number of blanks and the number of asterisks, two while loops can be used to construct the list:

;;; First version.
(defun column-of-graph (max-graph-height actual-height)
  "Return list of strings that is one column of a graph."
  (let ((insert-list nil)
        (number-of-top-blanks
         (- max-graph-height actual-height)))

    ;; Fill in asterisks.
    (while (> actual-height 0)
      (setq insert-list (cons "*" insert-list))
      (setq actual-height (1- actual-height)))

    ;; Fill in blanks.
    (while (> number-of-top-blanks 0)
      (setq insert-list (cons " " insert-list))
      (setq number-of-top-blanks
            (1- number-of-top-blanks)))

    ;; Return whole list.
    insert-list))

If you install this function and then evaluate the following expression you will see that it returns the list as desired:

(column-of-graph 5 3)

returns

(" " " " "*" "*" "*")

As written, column-of-graph contains a major flaw: the symbols used for the blank and for the marked entries in the column are hard-coded as a space and asterisk. This is fine for a prototype, but you, or another user, may wish to use other symbols. For example, in testing the graph function, you may want to use a period in place of the space, to make sure the point is being repositioned properly each time the insert-rectangle function is called; or you might want to substitute a ‘+’ sign or other symbol for the asterisk. You might even want to make a graph-column that is more than one display column wide. The program should be more flexible. The way to do that is to replace the blank and the asterisk with two variables that we can call graph-blank and graph-symbol and define those variables separately.

Also, the documentation is not well written. These considerations lead us to the second version of the function:

(defvar graph-symbol "*"
  "String used as symbol in graph, usually an asterisk.")

(defvar graph-blank " "
  "String used as blank in graph, usually a blank space.
graph-blank must be the same number of columns wide
as graph-symbol.")

(For an explanation of defvar, see Initializing a Variable with defvar.)

;;; Second version.
(defun column-of-graph (max-graph-height actual-height)
  "Return MAX-GRAPH-HEIGHT strings; ACTUAL-HEIGHT are graph-symbols.

The graph-symbols are contiguous entries at the end
of the list.
The list will be inserted as one column of a graph.
The strings are either graph-blank or graph-symbol."

  (let ((insert-list nil)
        (number-of-top-blanks
         (- max-graph-height actual-height)))

    ;; Fill in graph-symbols.
    (while (> actual-height 0)
      (setq insert-list (cons graph-symbol insert-list))
      (setq actual-height (1- actual-height)))

    ;; Fill in graph-blanks.
    (while (> number-of-top-blanks 0)
      (setq insert-list (cons graph-blank insert-list))
      (setq number-of-top-blanks
            (1- number-of-top-blanks)))

    ;; Return whole list.
    insert-list))

If we wished, we could rewrite column-of-graph a third time to provide optionally for a line graph as well as for a bar graph. This would not be hard to do. One way to think of a line graph is that it is no more than a bar graph in which the part of each bar that is below the top is blank. To construct a column for a line graph, the function first constructs a list of blanks that is one shorter than the value, then it uses cons to attach a graph symbol to the list; then it uses cons again to attach the top blanks to the list.

It is easy to see how to write such a function, but since we don’t need it, we will not do it. But the job could be done, and if it were done, it would be done with column-of-graph. Even more important, it is worth noting that few changes would have to be made anywhere else. The enhancement, if we ever wish to make it, is simple.

Now, finally, we come to our first actual graph printing function. This prints the body of a graph, not the labels for the vertical and horizontal axes, so we can call this graph-body-print.

15.1 The graph-body-print Function

After our preparation in the preceding section, the graph-body-print function is straightforward. The function will print column after column of asterisks and blanks, using the elements of a numbers’ list to specify the number of asterisks in each column. This is a repetitive act, which means we can use a decrementing while loop or recursive function for the job. In this section, we will write the definition using a while loop.

The column-of-graph function requires the height of the graph as an argument, so we should determine and record that as a local variable.

This leads us to the following template for the while loop version of this function:

(defun graph-body-print (numbers-list)
  "documentation…"
  (let ((height  …
         …))

    (while numbers-list
      insert-columns-and-reposition-point
      (setq numbers-list (cdr numbers-list)))))

We need to fill in the slots of the template.

Clearly, we can use the (apply 'max numbers-list) expression to determine the height of the graph.

The while loop will cycle through the numbers-list one element at a time. As it is shortened by the (setq numbers-list (cdr numbers-list)) expression, the CAR of each instance of the list is the value of the argument for column-of-graph.

At each cycle of the while loop, the insert-rectangle function inserts the list returned by column-of-graph. Since the insert-rectangle function moves point to the lower right of the inserted rectangle, we need to save the location of point at the time the rectangle is inserted, move back to that position after the rectangle is inserted, and then move horizontally to the next place from which insert-rectangle is called.

If the inserted columns are one character wide, as they will be if single blanks and asterisks are used, the repositioning command is simply (forward-char 1); however, the width of a column may be greater than one. This means that the repositioning command should be written (forward-char symbol-width). The symbol-width itself is the length of a graph-blank and can be found using the expression (length graph-blank). The best place to bind the symbol-width variable to the value of the width of graph column is in the varlist of the let expression.

These considerations lead to the following function definition:

(defun graph-body-print (numbers-list)
  "Print a bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values."

  (let ((height (apply 'max numbers-list))
        (symbol-width (length graph-blank))
        from-position)

    (while numbers-list
      (setq from-position (point))
      (insert-rectangle
       (column-of-graph height (car numbers-list)))
      (goto-char from-position)
      (forward-char symbol-width)
      ;; Draw graph column by column.
      (sit-for 0)
      (setq numbers-list (cdr numbers-list)))
    ;; Place point for X axis labels.
    (forward-line height)
    (insert "\n")
))

The one unexpected expression in this function is the (sit-for 0) expression in the while loop. This expression makes the graph printing operation more interesting to watch than it would be otherwise. The expression causes Emacs to sit or do nothing for a zero length of time and then redraw the screen. Placed here, it causes Emacs to redraw the screen column by column. Without it, Emacs would not redraw the screen until the function exits.

We can test graph-body-print with a short list of numbers.

  1. Install graph-symbol, graph-blank, column-of-graph, which are in Printing the Columns of a Graph, and graph-body-print.
  2. Copy the following expression:
    (graph-body-print '(1 2 3 4 6 4 3 5 7 6 5 2 3))
    
  3. Switch to the *scratch* buffer and place the cursor where you want the graph to start.
  4. Type M-: (eval-expression).
  5. Yank the graph-body-print expression into the minibuffer with C-y (yank).
  6. Press RET to evaluate the graph-body-print expression.

Emacs will print a graph like this:

                    *
                *   **
                *  ****
               *** ****
              ********* *
             ************
            *************

15.2 The recursive-graph-body-print Function

The graph-body-print function may also be written recursively. The recursive solution is divided into two parts: an outside wrapper that uses a let expression to determine the values of several variables that need only be found once, such as the maximum height of the graph, and an inside function that is called recursively to print the graph.

The wrapper is uncomplicated:

(defun recursive-graph-body-print (numbers-list)
  "Print a bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values."
  (let ((height (apply 'max numbers-list))
        (symbol-width (length graph-blank))
        from-position)
    (recursive-graph-body-print-internal
     numbers-list
     height
     symbol-width)))

The recursive function is a little more difficult. It has four parts: the do-again-test, the printing code, the recursive call, and the next-step-expression. The do-again-test is a when expression that determines whether the numbers-list contains any remaining elements; if it does, the function prints one column of the graph using the printing code and calls itself again. The function calls itself again according to the value produced by the next-step-expression which causes the call to act on a shorter version of the numbers-list.

(defun recursive-graph-body-print-internal
  (numbers-list height symbol-width)
  "Print a bar graph.
Used within recursive-graph-body-print function."

  (when numbers-list
        (setq from-position (point))
        (insert-rectangle
         (column-of-graph height (car numbers-list)))
        (goto-char from-position)
        (forward-char symbol-width)
        (sit-for 0)     ; Draw graph column by column.
        (recursive-graph-body-print-internal
         (cdr numbers-list) height symbol-width)))

After installation, this expression can be tested; here is a sample:

(recursive-graph-body-print '(3 2 5 6 7 5 3 4 6 4 3 2 1))

Here is what recursive-graph-body-print produces:

                *
               **   *
              ****  *
              **** ***
            * *********
            ************
            *************

Either of these two functions, graph-body-print or recursive-graph-body-print, create the body of a graph.

15.3 Need for Printed Axes

A graph needs printed axes, so you can orient yourself. For a do-once project, it may be reasonable to draw the axes by hand using Emacs’s Picture mode; but a graph drawing function may be used more than once.

For this reason, I have written enhancements to the basic print-graph-body function that automatically print labels for the horizontal and vertical axes. Since the label printing functions do not contain much new material, I have placed their description in an appendix. See A Graph with Labeled Axes.

15.4 Exercise

Write a line graph version of the graph printing functions.

16 Your .emacs File

“You don’t have to like Emacs to like it”—this seemingly paradoxical statement is the secret of GNU Emacs. The plain, out-of-the-box Emacs is a generic tool. Most people who use it customize it to suit themselves.

GNU Emacs is mostly written in Emacs Lisp; this means that by writing expressions in Emacs Lisp you can change or extend Emacs.

Emacs’s Default Configuration

There are those who appreciate Emacs’s default configuration. After all, Emacs starts you in C mode when you edit a C file, starts you in Fortran mode when you edit a Fortran file, and starts you in Fundamental mode when you edit an unadorned file. This all makes sense, if you do not know who is going to use Emacs. Who knows what a person hopes to do with an unadorned file? Fundamental mode is the right default for such a file, just as C mode is the right default for editing C code. (Enough programming languages have syntaxes that enable them to share or nearly share features, so C mode is now provided by CC mode, the C Collection.)

But when you do know who is going to use Emacs—you, yourself—then it makes sense to customize Emacs.

For example, I seldom want Fundamental mode when I edit an otherwise undistinguished file; I want Text mode. This is why I customize Emacs: so it suits me.

You can customize and extend Emacs by writing or adapting a ~/.emacs file. This is your personal initialization file; its contents, written in Emacs Lisp, tell Emacs what to do.18

A ~/.emacs file contains Emacs Lisp code. You can write this code yourself; or you can use Emacs’s customize feature to write the code for you. You can combine your own expressions and auto-written Customize expressions in your .emacs file.

(I myself prefer to write my own expressions, except for those, particularly fonts, that I find easier to manipulate using the customize command. I combine the two methods.)

Most of this chapter is about writing expressions yourself. It describes a simple .emacs file; for more information, see The Init File in The GNU Emacs Manual, and The Init File in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

16.1 Site-wide Initialization Files

In addition to your personal initialization file, Emacs automatically loads various site-wide initialization files, if they exist. These have the same form as your .emacs file, but are loaded by everyone.

Two site-wide initialization files, site-load.el and site-init.el, are loaded into Emacs and then dumped if a dumped version of Emacs is created, as is most common. (Dumped copies of Emacs load more quickly. However, once a file is loaded and dumped, a change to it does not lead to a change in Emacs unless you load it yourself or re-dump Emacs. See Building Emacs in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, and the INSTALL file.)

Three other site-wide initialization files are loaded automatically each time you start Emacs, if they exist. These are site-start.el, which is loaded before your .emacs file, and default.el, and the terminal type file, which are both loaded after your .emacs file.

Settings and definitions in your .emacs file will overwrite conflicting settings and definitions in a site-start.el file, if it exists; but the settings and definitions in a default.el or terminal type file will overwrite those in your .emacs file. (You can prevent interference from a terminal type file by setting term-file-prefix to nil. See A Simple Extension.)

The INSTALL file that comes in the distribution contains descriptions of the site-init.el and site-load.el files.

The loadup.el, startup.el, and loaddefs.el files control loading. These files are in the lisp directory of the Emacs distribution and are worth perusing.

The loaddefs.el file contains a good many suggestions as to what to put into your own .emacs file, or into a site-wide initialization file.

16.2 Specifying Variables using defcustom

You can specify variables using defcustom so that you and others can then use Emacs’s customize feature to set their values. (You cannot use customize to write function definitions; but you can write defuns in your .emacs file. Indeed, you can write any Lisp expression in your .emacs file.)

The customize feature depends on the defcustom macro. Although you can use defvar or setq for variables that users set, the defcustom macro is designed for the job.

You can use your knowledge of defvar for writing the first three arguments for defcustom. The first argument to defcustom is the name of the variable. The second argument is the variable’s initial value, if any; and this value is set only if the value has not already been set. The third argument is the documentation.

The fourth and subsequent arguments to defcustom specify types and options; these are not featured in defvar. (These arguments are optional.)

Each of these arguments consists of a keyword followed by a value. Each keyword starts with the colon character ‘:’.

For example, the customizable user option variable text-mode-hook looks like this:

(defcustom text-mode-hook nil
  "Normal hook run when entering Text mode and many related modes."
  :type 'hook
  :options '(turn-on-auto-fill flyspell-mode)
  :group 'wp)

The name of the variable is text-mode-hook; it has no default value; and its documentation string tells you what it does.

The :type keyword tells Emacs the kind of data to which text-mode-hook should be set and how to display the value in a Customization buffer.

The :options keyword specifies a suggested list of values for the variable. Usually, :options applies to a hook. The list is only a suggestion; it is not exclusive; a person who sets the variable may set it to other values; the list shown following the :options keyword is intended to offer convenient choices to a user.

Finally, the :group keyword tells the Emacs Customization command in which group the variable is located. This tells where to find it.

The defcustom macro recognizes more than a dozen keywords. For more information, see Writing Customization Definitions in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

Consider text-mode-hook as an example.

There are two ways to customize this variable. You can use the customization command or write the appropriate expressions yourself.

Using the customization command, you can type:

M-x customize

and find that the group for editing files of text is called “Text”. Enter that group. Text Mode Hook is the first member. You can click on its various options, such as turn-on-auto-fill, to set the values. After you click on the button to

Save for Future Sessions

Emacs will write an expression into your .emacs file. It will look like this:

(custom-set-variables
  ;; custom-set-variables was added by Custom.
  ;; If you edit it by hand, you could mess it up, so be careful.
  ;; Your init file should contain only one such instance.
  ;; If there is more than one, they won't work right.
 '(text-mode-hook '(turn-on-auto-fill text-mode-hook-identify)))

(The text-mode-hook-identify function tells toggle-text-mode-auto-fill which buffers are in Text mode. It comes on automatically.)

The custom-set-variables function works somewhat differently than a setq. While I have never learned the differences, I modify the custom-set-variables expressions in my .emacs file by hand: I make the changes in what appears to me to be a reasonable manner and have not had any problems. Others prefer to use the Customization command and let Emacs do the work for them.

Another custom-set-… function is custom-set-faces. This function sets the various font faces. Over time, I have set a considerable number of faces. Some of the time, I re-set them using customize; other times, I simply edit the custom-set-faces expression in my .emacs file itself.

The second way to customize your text-mode-hook is to set it yourself in your .emacs file using code that has nothing to do with the custom-set-… functions.

When you do this, and later use customize, you will see a message that says

CHANGED outside Customize; operating on it here may be unreliable.

This message is only a warning. If you click on the button to

Save for Future Sessions

Emacs will write a custom-set-… expression near the end of your .emacs file that will be evaluated after your hand-written expression. It will, therefore, overrule your hand-written expression. No harm will be done. When you do this, however, be careful to remember which expression is active; if you forget, you may confuse yourself.

So long as you remember where the values are set, you will have no trouble. In any event, the values are always set in your initialization file, which is usually called .emacs.

I myself use customize for hardly anything. Mostly, I write expressions myself.

Incidentally, to be more complete concerning defines: defsubst defines an inline function. The syntax is just like that of defun. defconst defines a symbol as a constant. The intent is that neither programs nor users should ever change a value set by defconst. (You can change it; the value set is a variable; but please do not.)

16.3 Beginning a .emacs File

When you start Emacs, it loads your .emacs file unless you tell it not to by specifying ‘-q’ on the command line. (The emacs -q command gives you a plain, out-of-the-box Emacs.)

A .emacs file contains Lisp expressions. Often, these are no more than expressions to set values; sometimes they are function definitions.

See The Init File ~/.emacs in The GNU Emacs Manual, for a short description of initialization files.

This chapter goes over some of the same ground, but is a walk among extracts from a complete, long-used .emacs file—my own.

The first part of the file consists of comments: reminders to myself. By now, of course, I remember these things, but when I started, I did not.

;;;; Bob's .emacs file
; Robert J. Chassell
; 26 September 1985

Look at that date! I started this file a long time ago. I have been adding to it ever since.

; Each section in this file is introduced by a
; line beginning with four semicolons; and each
; entry is introduced by a line beginning with
; three semicolons.

This describes the usual conventions for comments in Emacs Lisp. Everything on a line that follows a semicolon is a comment. Two, three, and four semicolons are used as subsection and section markers. (See Comments in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more about comments.)

;;;; The Help Key
; Control-h is the help key;
; after typing control-h, type a letter to
; indicate the subject about which you want help.
; For an explanation of the help facility,
; type control-h two times in a row.

Just remember: type C-h two times for help.

; To find out about any mode, type control-h m
; while in that mode.  For example, to find out
; about mail mode, enter mail mode and then type
; control-h m.

“Mode help”, as I call this, is very helpful. Usually, it tells you all you need to know.

Of course, you don’t need to include comments like these in your .emacs file. I included them in mine because I kept forgetting about Mode help or the conventions for comments—but I was able to remember to look here to remind myself.

16.4 Text and Auto Fill Mode

Now we come to the part that turns on Text mode and Auto Fill mode19.

;;; Text mode and Auto Fill mode
;; The next two lines put Emacs into Text mode
;; and Auto Fill mode, and are for writers who
;; want to start writing prose rather than code.
(setq-default major-mode 'text-mode)
(add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)

Here is the first part of this .emacs file that does something besides remind a forgetful human!

The first of the two lines in parentheses tells Emacs to turn on Text mode when you find a file, unless that file should go into some other mode, such as C mode.

When Emacs reads a file, it looks at the extension to the file name, if any. (The extension is the part that comes after a ‘.’.) If the file ends with a ‘.c’ or ‘.h’ extension then Emacs turns on C mode. Also, Emacs looks at first nonblank line of the file; if the line says ‘-*- C -*-, Emacs turns on C mode. Emacs possesses a list of extensions and specifications that it uses automatically. In addition, Emacs looks near the last page for a per-buffer, local variables list, if any.

Now, back to the .emacs file.

Here is the line again; how does it work?

(setq-default major-mode 'text-mode)

This line is a short, but complete Emacs Lisp expression.

We are already familiar with setq. We use a similar macro setq-default to set the following variable, major-mode20, to the subsequent value, which is text-mode. The single-quote before text-mode tells Emacs to deal directly with the text-mode symbol, not with whatever it might stand for. See Setting the Value of a Variable, for a reminder of how setq works. The main point is that there is no difference between the procedure you use to set a value in your .emacs file and the procedure you use anywhere else in Emacs.

Here is the next line:

(add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)

In this line, the add-hook command adds turn-on-auto-fill to the variable.

turn-on-auto-fill is the name of a program, that, you guessed it!, turns on Auto Fill mode.

Every time Emacs turns on Text mode, Emacs runs the commands hooked onto Text mode. So every time Emacs turns on Text mode, Emacs also turns on Auto Fill mode.

In brief, the first line causes Emacs to enter Text mode when you edit a file, unless the file name extension, a first non-blank line, or local variables to tell Emacs otherwise.

Text mode among other actions, sets the syntax table to work conveniently for writers. In Text mode, Emacs considers an apostrophe as part of a word like a letter; but Emacs does not consider a period or a space as part of a word. Thus, M-f moves you over ‘it's’. On the other hand, in C mode, M-f stops just after the ‘t’ of ‘it's’.

The second line causes Emacs to turn on Auto Fill mode when it turns on Text mode. In Auto Fill mode, Emacs automatically breaks a line that is too wide and brings the excessively wide part of the line down to the next line. Emacs breaks lines between words, not within them.

When Auto Fill mode is turned off, lines continue to the right as you type them. Depending on how you set the value of truncate-lines, the words you type either disappear off the right side of the screen, or else are shown, in a rather ugly and unreadable manner, as a continuation line on the screen.

In addition, in this part of my .emacs file, I tell the Emacs fill commands to insert two spaces after a colon:

(setq colon-double-space t)

16.5 Mail Aliases

Here is a setq that turns on mail aliases, along with more reminders.

;;; Message mode
; To enter message mode, type 'C-x m'
; To enter RMAIL (for reading mail),
; type 'M-x rmail'
(setq mail-aliases t)

This setq sets the value of the variable mail-aliases to t. Since t means true, the line says, in effect, “Yes, use mail aliases.”

Mail aliases are convenient short names for long email addresses or for lists of email addresses. The file where you keep your aliases is ~/.mailrc. You write an alias like this:

alias geo [email protected]

When you write a message to George, address it to ‘geo’; the mailer will automatically expand ‘geo’ to the full address.

16.6 Indent Tabs Mode

By default, Emacs inserts tabs in place of multiple spaces when it formats a region. (For example, you might indent many lines of text all at once with the indent-region command.) Tabs look fine on a terminal or with ordinary printing, but they produce badly indented output when you use TeX or Texinfo since TeX ignores tabs.

The following turns off Indent Tabs mode:

;;; Prevent Extraneous Tabs
(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil)

Note that this line uses setq-default rather than the setq that we have seen before; setq-default sets values only in buffers that do not have their own local values for the variable.

16.7 Some Key Bindings

Now for some personal key bindings:

;;; Compare windows
(global-set-key "\C-cw" 'compare-windows)

compare-windows is a nifty command that compares the text in your current window with text in the next window. It makes the comparison by starting at point in each window, moving over text in each window as far as they match. I use this command all the time.

This also shows how to set a key globally, for all modes.

The command is global-set-key. It is followed by the key binding. In a .emacs file, the keybinding is written as shown: \C-c stands for Control-C, which means to press the control key and the c key at the same time. The w means to press the w key. The key binding is surrounded by double quotation marks. In documentation, you would write this as C-c w. (If you were binding a META key, such as M-c, rather than a CTRL key, you would write \M-c in your .emacs file. See Rebinding Keys in Your Init File in The GNU Emacs Manual, for details.)

The command invoked by the keys is compare-windows. Note that compare-windows is preceded by a single-quote; otherwise, Emacs would first try to evaluate the symbol to determine its value.

These three things, the double quotation marks, the backslash before the ‘C’, and the single-quote are necessary parts of key binding that I tend to forget. Fortunately, I have come to remember that I should look at my existing .emacs file, and adapt what is there.

As for the key binding itself: C-c w. This combines the prefix key, C-c, with a single character, in this case, w. This set of keys, C-c followed by a single character, is strictly reserved for individuals’ own use. (I call these own keys, since these are for my own use.) You should always be able to create such a key binding for your own use without stomping on someone else’s key binding. If you ever write an extension to Emacs, please avoid taking any of these keys for public use. Create a key like C-c C-w instead. Otherwise, we will run out of own keys.

Here is another key binding, with a comment:

;;; Key binding for 'occur'
; I use occur a lot, so let's bind it to a key:
(global-set-key "\C-co" 'occur)

The occur command shows all the lines in the current buffer that contain a match for a regular expression. When the region is active, occur restricts matches to such region. Otherwise it uses the entire buffer. Matching lines are shown in a buffer called *Occur*. That buffer serves as a menu to jump to occurrences.

Here is how to unbind a key, so it does not work:

;;; Unbind 'C-x f'
(global-unset-key "\C-xf")

There is a reason for this unbinding: I found I inadvertently typed C-x f when I meant to type C-x C-f. Rather than find a file, as I intended, I accidentally set the width for filled text, almost always to a width I did not want. Since I hardly ever reset my default width, I simply unbound the key.

The following rebinds an existing key:

;;; Rebind 'C-x C-b' for 'buffer-menu'
(global-set-key "\C-x\C-b" 'buffer-menu)

By default, C-x C-b runs the list-buffers command. This command lists your buffers in another window. Since I almost always want to do something in that window, I prefer the buffer-menu command, which not only lists the buffers, but moves point into that window.

16.8 Keymaps

Emacs uses keymaps to record which keys call which commands. When you use global-set-key to set the key binding for a single command in all parts of Emacs, you are specifying the key binding in current-global-map.

Specific modes, such as C mode or Text mode, have their own keymaps; the mode-specific keymaps override the global map that is shared by all buffers.

The global-set-key function binds, or rebinds, the global keymap. For example, the following binds the key C-x C-b to the function buffer-menu:

(global-set-key "\C-x\C-b" 'buffer-menu)

Mode-specific keymaps are bound using the define-key function, which takes a specific keymap as an argument, as well as the key and the command. For example, my .emacs file contains the following expression to bind the texinfo-insert-@group command to C-c C-c g:

(define-key texinfo-mode-map "\C-c\C-cg" 'texinfo-insert-@group)

The texinfo-insert-@group function itself is a little extension to Texinfo mode that inserts ‘@group’ into a Texinfo file. I use this command all the time and prefer to type the three strokes C-c C-c g rather than the six strokes @ g r o u p. (‘@group’ and its matching ‘@end group’ are commands that keep all enclosed text together on one page; many multi-line examples in this book are surrounded by ‘@group … @end group’.)

Here is the texinfo-insert-@group function definition:

(defun texinfo-insert-@group ()
  "Insert the string @group in a Texinfo buffer."
  (interactive)
  (beginning-of-line)
  (insert "@group\n"))

(Of course, I could have used Abbrev mode to save typing, rather than write a function to insert a word; but I prefer key strokes consistent with other Texinfo mode key bindings.)

You will see numerous define-key expressions in loaddefs.el as well as in the various mode libraries, such as cc-mode.el and lisp-mode.el.

See Customizing Key Bindings in The GNU Emacs Manual, and Keymaps in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more information about keymaps.

Next: , Previous: , Up: Your .emacs File   [Contents][Index]

16.9 Loading Files

Many people in the GNU Emacs community have written extensions to Emacs. As time goes by, these extensions are often included in new releases. For example, the Calendar and Diary packages are now part of the standard GNU Emacs, as is Calc.

You can use a load command to evaluate a complete file and thereby install all the functions and variables in the file into Emacs. For example:

(load "~/emacs/slowsplit")

This evaluates, i.e., loads, the slowsplit.el file or if it exists, the faster, byte compiled slowsplit.elc file from the emacs sub-directory of your home directory. The file contains the function split-window-quietly, which John Robinson wrote in 1989.

The split-window-quietly function splits a window with the minimum of redisplay. I installed it in 1989 because it worked well with the slow 1200 baud terminals I was then using. Nowadays, I only occasionally come across such a slow connection, but I continue to use the function because I like the way it leaves the bottom half of a buffer in the lower of the new windows and the top half in the upper window.

To replace the key binding for the default split-window-vertically, you must also unset that key and bind the keys to split-window-quietly, like this:

(global-unset-key "\C-x2")
(global-set-key "\C-x2" 'split-window-quietly)

If you load many extensions, as I do, then instead of specifying the exact location of the extension file, as shown above, you can specify that directory as part of Emacs’s load-path. Then, when Emacs loads a file, it will search that directory as well as its default list of directories. (The default list is specified in paths.h when Emacs is built.)

The following command adds your ~/emacs directory to the existing load path:

;;; Emacs Load Path
(setq load-path (cons "~/emacs" load-path))

Incidentally, load-library is an interactive interface to the load function. The complete function looks like this:

(defun load-library (library)
  "Load the Emacs Lisp library named LIBRARY.
This is an interface to the function `load'.  LIBRARY is searched
for in `load-path', both with and without `load-suffixes' (as
well as `load-file-rep-suffixes').

See Info node `(emacs)Lisp Libraries' for more details.
See `load-file' for a different interface to `load'."
  (interactive
   (list (completing-read "Load library: "
                          (apply-partially 'locate-file-completion-table
                                           load-path
                                           (get-load-suffixes)))))
  (load library))

The name of the function, load-library, comes from the use of “library” as a conventional synonym for “file”. The source for the load-library command is in the files.el library.

Another interactive command that does a slightly different job is load-file. See Libraries of Lisp Code for Emacs in The GNU Emacs Manual, for information on the distinction between load-library and this command.

16.10 Autoloading

Instead of installing a function by loading the file that contains it, or by evaluating the function definition, you can make the function available but not actually install it until it is first called. This is called autoloading.

When you execute an autoloaded function, Emacs automatically evaluates the file that contains the definition, and then calls the function.

Emacs starts quicker with autoloaded functions, since their libraries are not loaded right away; but you need to wait a moment when you first use such a function, while its containing file is evaluated.

Rarely used functions are frequently autoloaded. The loaddefs.el library contains thousands of autoloaded functions, from 5x5 to zone. Of course, you may come to use a rare function frequently. When you do, you should load that function’s file with a load expression in your .emacs file.

In my .emacs file, I load 14 libraries that contain functions that would otherwise be autoloaded. (Actually, it would have been better to include these files in my dumped Emacs, but I forgot. See Building Emacs in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, and the INSTALL file for more about dumping.)

You may also want to include autoloaded expressions in your .emacs file. autoload is a built-in function that takes up to five arguments, the final three of which are optional. The first argument is the name of the function to be autoloaded; the second is the name of the file to be loaded. The third argument is documentation for the function, and the fourth tells whether the function can be called interactively. The fifth argument tells what type of object—autoload can handle a keymap or macro as well as a function (the default is a function).

Here is a typical example:

(autoload 'html-helper-mode
  "html-helper-mode" "Edit HTML documents" t)

(html-helper-mode is an older alternative to html-mode, which is a standard part of the distribution.)

This expression autoloads the html-helper-mode function. It takes it from the html-helper-mode.el file (or from the byte compiled version html-helper-mode.elc, if that exists.) The file must be located in a directory specified by load-path. The documentation says that this is a mode to help you edit documents written in the HyperText Markup Language. You can call this mode interactively by typing M-x html-helper-mode. (You need to duplicate the function’s regular documentation in the autoload expression because the regular function is not yet loaded, so its documentation is not available.)

See Autoload in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more information.

Next: , Previous: , Up: Your .emacs File   [Contents][Index]

16.11 A Simple Extension: line-to-top-of-window

Here is a simple extension to Emacs that moves the line that point is on to the top of the window. I use this all the time, to make text easier to read.

You can put the following code into a separate file and then load it from your .emacs file, or you can include it within your .emacs file.

Here is the definition:

;;; Line to top of window;
;;; replace three keystroke sequence  C-u 0 C-l
(defun line-to-top-of-window ()
  "Move the line that point is on to top of window."
  (interactive)
  (recenter 0))

Now for the key binding.

Function keys as well as mouse button events and non-ASCII characters are written within square brackets, without quotation marks.

I bind line-to-top-of-window to my F6 function key like this:

(global-set-key [f6] 'line-to-top-of-window)

For more information, see Rebinding Keys in Your Init File in The GNU Emacs Manual.

If you run two versions of GNU Emacs, such as versions 27 and 28, and use one .emacs file, you can select which code to evaluate with the following conditional:

(cond
 ((= 27 emacs-major-version)
  ;; evaluate version 27 code
  ( … ))
 ((= 28 emacs-major-version)
  ;; evaluate version 28 code
  ( … )))

For example, recent versions blink their cursors by default. I hate such blinking, as well as other features, so I placed the following in my .emacs file21:

(when (>= emacs-major-version 21)
  (blink-cursor-mode 0)
  ;; Insert newline when you press 'C-n' (next-line)
  ;; at the end of the buffer
  (setq next-line-add-newlines t)
  ;; Turn on image viewing
  (auto-image-file-mode t)
  ;; Turn on menu bar (this bar has text)
  ;; (Use numeric argument to turn on)
  (menu-bar-mode 1)
  ;; Turn off tool bar (this bar has icons)
  ;; (Use numeric argument to turn on)
  (tool-bar-mode nil)
  ;; Turn off tooltip mode for tool bar
  ;; (This mode causes icon explanations to pop up)
  ;; (Use numeric argument to turn on)
  (tooltip-mode nil)
  ;; If tooltips turned on, make tips appear promptly
  (setq tooltip-delay 0.1)  ; default is 0.7 second
   )

16.12 X11 Colors

You can specify colors when you use Emacs with the MIT X Windowing system.

I dislike the default colors and specify my own.

Here are the expressions in my .emacs file that set values:

;; Set cursor color
(set-cursor-color "white")

;; Set mouse color
(set-mouse-color "white")

;; Set foreground and background
(set-foreground-color "white")
(set-background-color "darkblue")

;;; Set highlighting colors for isearch and drag
(set-face-foreground 'highlight "white")
(set-face-background 'highlight "blue")

(set-face-foreground 'region "cyan")
(set-face-background 'region "blue")

(set-face-foreground 'secondary-selection "skyblue")
(set-face-background 'secondary-selection "darkblue")

;; Set calendar highlighting colors
(with-eval-after-load 'calendar
  (set-face-foreground 'diary   "skyblue")
  (set-face-background 'holiday "slate blue")
  (set-face-foreground 'holiday "white"))

The various shades of blue soothe my eye and prevent me from seeing the screen flicker.

Alternatively, I could have set my specifications in various X initialization files. For example, I could set the foreground, background, cursor, and pointer (i.e., mouse) colors in my ~/.Xresources file like this:

Emacs*foreground:   white
Emacs*background:   darkblue
Emacs*cursorColor:  white
Emacs*pointerColor: white

In any event, since it is not part of Emacs, I set the root color of my X window in my ~/.xinitrc file, like this22:

xsetroot -solid Navy -fg white &

16.13 Miscellaneous Settings for a .emacs File

Here are a few miscellaneous settings:


  • - Set the shape and color of the mouse cursor:
    ; Cursor shapes are defined in
    ; '/usr/include/X11/cursorfont.h';
    ; for example, the 'target' cursor is number 128;
    ; the 'top_left_arrow' cursor is number 132.
    
    
    
    (let ((mpointer (x-get-resource "*mpointer"
                                    "*emacs*mpointer")))
      ;; If you have not set your mouse pointer
      ;;     then set it, otherwise leave as is:
      (if (eq mpointer nil)
          (setq mpointer "132")) ; top_left_arrow
    
      (setq x-pointer-shape (string-to-number mpointer))
      (set-mouse-color "white"))
    
  • - Or you can set the values of a variety of features in an alist, like this:
    (setq-default
     default-frame-alist
     '((cursor-color . "white")
       (mouse-color . "white")
       (foreground-color . "white")
       (background-color . "DodgerBlue4")
       ;; (cursor-type . bar)
       (cursor-type . box)
    
       (tool-bar-lines . 0)
       (menu-bar-lines . 1)
       (width . 80)
       (height . 58)
       (font .
             "-Misc-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal--20-200-75-75-C-100-ISO8859-1")
       ))
    
  • - Convert CTRL-h into DEL and DEL into CTRL-h.
    (Some older keyboards needed this, although I have not seen the problem recently.)
    ;; Translate 'C-h' to <DEL>.
    ; (keyboard-translate ?\C-h ?\C-?)
    
    ;; Translate <DEL> to 'C-h'.
    (keyboard-translate ?\C-? ?\C-h)
    
  • - Turn off a blinking cursor!
    (if (fboundp 'blink-cursor-mode)
        (blink-cursor-mode -1))
    

    or start GNU Emacs with the command emacs -nbc.

  • - When using grep
    -i’   Ignore case distinctions
    -n’   Prefix each line of output with line number
    -H’   Print the filename for each match.
    -e’   Protect patterns beginning with a hyphen character, ‘-
    (setq grep-command "grep -i -nH -e ")
    
  • - Find an existing buffer, even if it has a different name
    This avoids problems with symbolic links.
    (setq find-file-existing-other-name t)
    
  • - Set your language environment and default input method
    (set-language-environment "latin-1")
    ;; Remember you can enable or disable multilingual text input
    ;; with the toggle-input-method' (C-\) command
    (setq default-input-method "latin-1-prefix")
    

    If you want to write with Chinese GB characters, set this instead:

    (set-language-environment "Chinese-GB")
    (setq default-input-method "chinese-tonepy")
    

Fixing Unpleasant Key Bindings

Some systems bind keys unpleasantly. Sometimes, for example, the CTRL key appears in an awkward spot rather than at the far left of the home row.

Usually, when people fix these sorts of key bindings, they do not change their ~/.emacs file. Instead, they bind the proper keys on their consoles with the loadkeys or install-keymap commands in their boot script and then include xmodmap commands in their .xinitrc or .Xsession file for X Windows.

For a boot script:

loadkeys /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwerty/emacs2.kmap.gz
or
install-keymap emacs2

For a .xinitrc or .Xsession file when the Caps Lock key is at the far left of the home row:

# Bind the key labeled 'Caps Lock' to 'Control'
# (Such a broken user interface suggests that keyboard manufacturers
# think that computers are typewriters from 1885.)

xmodmap -e "clear Lock"
xmodmap -e "add Control = Caps_Lock"

In a .xinitrc or .Xsession file, to convert an ALT key to a META key:

# Some ill designed keyboards have a key labeled ALT and no Meta
xmodmap -e "keysym Alt_L = Meta_L Alt_L"

16.14 A Modified Mode Line

Finally, a feature I really like: a modified mode line.

When I work over a network, I forget which machine I am using. Also, I tend to lose track of where I am, and which line point is on.

So I reset my mode line to look like this:

-:-- foo.texi   rattlesnake:/home/bob/  Line 1  (Texinfo Fill) Top

I am visiting a file called foo.texi, on my machine rattlesnake in my /home/bob buffer. I am on line 1, in Texinfo mode, and am at the top of the buffer.

My .emacs file has a section that looks like this:

;; Set a Mode Line that tells me which machine, which directory,
;; and which line I am on, plus the other customary information.
(setq-default mode-line-format
 (quote
  (#("-" 0 1
     (help-echo
      "mouse-1: select window, mouse-2: delete others ..."))
   mode-line-mule-info
   mode-line-modified
   mode-line-frame-identification
   "    "
   mode-line-buffer-identification
   "    "
   (:eval (substring
           (system-name) 0 (string-match "\\..+" (system-name))))
   ":"
   default-directory
   #(" " 0 1
     (help-echo
      "mouse-1: select window, mouse-2: delete others ..."))
   (line-number-mode " Line %l ")
   global-mode-string
   #("   %[(" 0 6
     (help-echo
      "mouse-1: select window, mouse-2: delete others ..."))
   (:eval (format-time-string "%F"))
   mode-line-process
   minor-mode-alist
   #("%n" 0 2 (help-echo "mouse-2: widen" local-map (keymap ...)))
   ")%] "
   (-3 . "%P")
   ;;   "-%-"
   )))

Here, I redefine the default mode line. Most of the parts are from the original; but I make a few changes. I set the default mode line format so as to permit various modes, such as Info, to override it.

Many elements in the list are self-explanatory: mode-line-modified is a variable that tells whether the buffer has been modified, mode-name tells the name of the mode, and so on. However, the format looks complicated because of two features we have not discussed.

The first string in the mode line is a dash or hyphen, ‘-’. In the old days, it would have been specified simply as "-". But nowadays, Emacs can add properties to a string, such as highlighting or, as in this case, a help feature. If you place your mouse cursor over the hyphen, some help information appears (By default, you must wait seven-tenths of a second before the information appears. You can change that timing by changing the value of tooltip-delay.)

The new string format has a special syntax:

#("-" 0 1 (help-echo "mouse-1: select window, ..."))

The #( begins a list. The first element of the list is the string itself, just one ‘-’. The second and third elements specify the range over which the fourth element applies. A range starts after a character, so a zero means the range starts just before the first character; a 1 means that the range ends just after the first character. The third element is the property for the range. It consists of a property list, a property name, in this case, ‘help-echo’, followed by a value, in this case, a string. The second, third, and fourth elements of this new string format can be repeated.

See Text Properties in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, and see Mode Line Format in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more information.

mode-line-buffer-identification displays the current buffer name. It is a list beginning (#("%12b" 0 4 …. The #( begins the list.

The ‘"%12b"’ displays the current buffer name, using the buffer-name function with which we are familiar; the ‘12’ specifies the maximum number of characters that will be displayed. When a name has fewer characters, whitespace is added to fill out to this number. (Buffer names can and often should be longer than 12 characters; this length works well in a typical 80 column wide window.)

:eval says to evaluate the following form and use the result as a string to display. In this case, the expression displays the first component of the full system name. The end of the first component is a ‘.’ (period), so I use the string-match function to tell me the length of the first component. The substring from the zeroth character to that length is the name of the machine.

This is the expression:

(:eval (substring
        (system-name) 0 (string-match "\\..+" (system-name))))

%[’ and ‘%]’ cause a pair of square brackets to appear for each recursive editing level. ‘%n’ says “Narrow” when narrowing is in effect. ‘%P’ tells you the percentage of the buffer that is above the bottom of the window, or “Top”, “Bottom”, or “All”. (A lower case ‘p’ tell you the percentage above the top of the window.) ‘%-’ inserts enough dashes to fill out the line.

Remember, you don’t have to like Emacs to like it—your own Emacs can have different colors, different commands, and different keys than a default Emacs.

On the other hand, if you want to bring up a plain out-of-the-box Emacs, with no customization, type:

emacs -q

This will start an Emacs that does not load your ~/.emacs initialization file. A plain, default Emacs. Nothing more.

17 Debugging

GNU Emacs has two debuggers, debug and edebug. The first is built into the internals of Emacs and is always with you; the second requires that you instrument a function before you can use it.

Both debuggers are described extensively in Debugging Lisp Programs in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. In this chapter, I will walk through a short example of each.

17.1 debug

Suppose you have written a function definition that is intended to return the sum of the numbers 1 through a given number. (This is the triangle function discussed earlier. See Example with Decrementing Counter, for a discussion.)

However, your function definition has a bug. You have mistyped ‘1=’ for ‘1-’. Here is the broken definition:

(defun triangle-bugged (number)
  "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive."
  (let ((total 0))
    (while (> number 0)
      (setq total (+ total number))
      (setq number (1= number)))      ; Error here.
    total))

If you are reading this in Info, you can evaluate this definition in the normal fashion. You will see triangle-bugged appear in the echo area.

Now evaluate the triangle-bugged function with an argument of 4:

(triangle-bugged 4)

This will create and enter a *Backtrace* buffer that says:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function 1=)
  (1= number)
  (setq number (1= number))
  (while (> number 0) (setq total (+ total number))
        (setq number (1= number)))
  (let ((total 0)) (while (> number 0) (setq total ...)
    (setq number ...)) total)
  triangle-bugged(4)
  eval((triangle-bugged 4) nil)
  eval-expression((triangle-bugged 4) nil nil 127)
  funcall-interactively(eval-expression (triangle-bugged 4) nil nil 127)
  call-interactively(eval-expression nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-expression)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

(I have reformatted this example slightly; the debugger does not fold long lines. As usual, you can quit the debugger by typing q in the *Backtrace* buffer.)

In practice, for a bug as simple as this, the Lisp error line will tell you what you need to know to correct the definition. The function 1= is void.

However, suppose you are not quite certain what is going on? You can read the complete backtrace.

Emacs automatically starts the debugger that puts you in the *Backtrace* buffer. You can also start the debugger manually as described below.

Read the *Backtrace* buffer from the bottom up; it tells you what Emacs did that led to the error. Emacs made an interactive call to C-x C-e (eval-last-sexp), which led to the evaluation of the triangle-bugged expression. Each line above tells you what the Lisp interpreter evaluated next.

The third line from the top of the buffer is

(setq number (1= number))

Emacs tried to evaluate this expression; in order to do so, it tried to evaluate the inner expression shown on the second line from the top:

(1= number)

This is where the error occurred; as the top line says:

Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function 1=)

You can correct the mistake, re-evaluate the function definition, and then run your test again.

17.2 debug-on-entry

Emacs starts the debugger automatically when your function has an error.

Incidentally, you can start the debugger manually for all versions of Emacs; the advantage is that the debugger runs even if you do not have a bug in your code. Sometimes your code will be free of bugs!

You can enter the debugger when you call the function by calling debug-on-entry.

Type:

M-x debug-on-entry RET triangle-bugged RET

Now, evaluate the following:

(triangle-bugged 5)

All versions of Emacs will create a *Backtrace* buffer and tell you that it is beginning to evaluate the triangle-bugged function:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--entering a function:
* triangle-bugged(5)
  eval((triangle-bugged 5) nil)
  eval-expression((triangle-bugged 5) nil nil 127)
  funcall-interactively(eval-expression (triangle-bugged 5) nil nil 127)
  call-interactively(eval-expression nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-expression)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

In the *Backtrace* buffer, type d. Emacs will evaluate the first expression in triangle-bugged; the buffer will look like this:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--beginning evaluation of function call form:
* (let ((total 0)) (while (> number 0) (setq total ...)
        (setq number ...)) total)
* triangle-bugged(5)
  eval((triangle-bugged 5))
  eval((triangle-bugged 5) nil)
  eval-expression((triangle-bugged 5) nil nil 127)
  funcall-interactively(eval-expression (triangle-bugged 5) nil nil 127)
  call-interactively(eval-expression nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-expression)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

Now, type d again, eight times, slowly. Each time you type d, Emacs will evaluate another expression in the function definition.

Eventually, the buffer will look like this:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--beginning evaluation of function call form:
* (setq number (1= number))
* (while (> number 0) (setq total (+ total number))
        (setq number (1= number)))
* (let ((total 0)) (while (> number 0) (setq total ...)
        (setq number ...)) total)
* triangle-bugged(5)
  eval((triangle-bugged 5) nil)
  eval-expression((triangle-bugged 5) nil nil 127)
  funcall-interactively(eval-expression (triangle-bugged 5) nil nil 127)
  call-interactively(eval-expression nil nil)
  command-execute(eval-expression)
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

Finally, after you type d two more times, Emacs will reach the error, and the top two lines of the *Backtrace* buffer will look like this:

---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function 1=)
* (1= number)
…
---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------

By typing d, you were able to step through the function.

You can quit a *Backtrace* buffer by typing q in it; this quits the trace, but does not cancel debug-on-entry.

To cancel the effect of debug-on-entry, call cancel-debug-on-entry and the name of the function, like this:

M-x cancel-debug-on-entry RET triangle-bugged RET

(If you are reading this in Info, cancel debug-on-entry now.)

17.3 debug-on-quit and (debug)

In addition to setting debug-on-error or calling debug-on-entry, there are two other ways to start debug.

You can start debug whenever you type C-g (keyboard-quit) by setting the variable debug-on-quit to t. This is useful for debugging infinite loops.

Or, you can insert a line that says (debug) into your code where you want the debugger to start, like this:

(defun triangle-bugged (number)
  "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive."
  (let ((total 0))
    (while (> number 0)
      (setq total (+ total number))
      (debug)                         ; Start debugger.
      (setq number (1= number)))      ; Error here.
    total))

The debug function is described in detail in The Lisp Debugger in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

17.4 The edebug Source Level Debugger

Edebug is a source level debugger. Edebug normally displays the source of the code you are debugging, with an arrow at the left that shows which line you are currently executing.

You can walk through the execution of a function, line by line, or run quickly until reaching a breakpoint where execution stops.

Edebug is described in Edebug in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

Here is a bugged function definition for triangle-recursively. See Recursion in place of a counter, for a review of it.

(defun triangle-recursively-bugged (number)
  "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
Uses recursion."
  (if (= number 1)
      1
    (+ number
       (triangle-recursively-bugged
        (1= number)))))               ; Error here.

Normally, you would install this definition by positioning your cursor after the function’s closing parenthesis and typing C-x C-e (eval-last-sexp) or else by positioning your cursor within the definition and typing C-M-x (eval-defun). (By default, the eval-defun command works only in Emacs Lisp mode or in Lisp Interaction mode.)

However, to prepare this function definition for Edebug, you must first instrument the code using a different command. You can do this by positioning your cursor within or just after the definition and typing

M-x edebug-defun RET

This will cause Emacs to load Edebug automatically if it is not already loaded, and properly instrument the function.

After instrumenting the function, place your cursor after the following expression and type C-x C-e (eval-last-sexp):

(triangle-recursively-bugged 3)

You will be jumped back to the source for triangle-recursively-bugged and the cursor positioned at the beginning of the if line of the function. Also, you will see an arrowhead at the left hand side of that line. The arrowhead marks the line where the function is executing. (In the following examples, we show the arrowhead with ‘=>’; in a windowing system, you may see the arrowhead as a solid triangle in the window fringe.)

=>∗(if (= number 1)

In the example, the location of point is displayed as ‘’ (in a printed book, it is displayed with a five pointed star).

If you now press SPC, point will move to the next expression to be executed; the line will look like this:

=>(if ∗(= number 1)

As you continue to press SPC, point will move from expression to expression. At the same time, whenever an expression returns a value, that value will be displayed in the echo area. For example, after you move point past number, you will see the following:

Result: 3 (#o3, #x3, ?\C-c)

This means the value of number is 3, which is octal three, hexadecimal three, and ASCII Control-C (the third letter of the alphabet, in case you need to know this information).

You can continue moving through the code until you reach the line with the error. Before evaluation, that line looks like this:

=>        ∗(1= number)))))               ; Error here.

When you press SPC once again, you will produce an error message that says:

Symbol's function definition is void: 1=

This is the bug.

Press q to quit Edebug.

To remove instrumentation from a function definition, simply re-evaluate it with a command that does not instrument it. For example, you could place your cursor after the definition’s closing parenthesis and type C-x C-e.

Edebug does a great deal more than walk with you through a function. You can set it so it races through on its own, stopping only at an error or at specified stopping points; you can cause it to display the changing values of various expressions; you can find out how many times a function is called, and more.

Edebug is described in Edebug in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

17.5 Debugging Exercises

  • Install the count-words-example function and then cause it to enter the built-in debugger when you call it. Run the command on a region containing two words. You will need to press d a remarkable number of times. On your system, is a hook called after the command finishes? (For information on hooks, see Command Loop Overview in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)
  • Copy count-words-example into the *scratch* buffer, instrument the function for Edebug, and walk through its execution. The function does not need to have a bug, although you can introduce one if you wish. If the function lacks a bug, the walk-through completes without problems.
  • While running Edebug, type ? to see a list of all the Edebug commands. (The global-edebug-prefix is usually C-x X, i.e., CTRL-x followed by an upper case X; use this prefix for commands made outside of the Edebug debugging buffer.)
  • In the Edebug debugging buffer, use the p (edebug-bounce-point) command to see where in the region the count-words-example is working.
  • Move point to some spot further down the function and then type the h (edebug-goto-here) command to jump to that location.
  • Use the t (edebug-trace-mode) command to cause Edebug to walk through the function on its own; use an upper case T for edebug-Trace-fast-mode.
  • Set a breakpoint, then run Edebug in Trace mode until it reaches the stopping point.

18 Conclusion

We have now reached the end of this Introduction. You have now learned enough about programming in Emacs Lisp to set values, to write simple .emacs files for yourself and your friends, and write simple customizations and extensions to Emacs.

This is a place to stop. Or, if you wish, you can now go onward, and teach yourself.

You have learned some of the basic nuts and bolts of programming. But only some. There are a great many more brackets and hinges that are easy to use that we have not touched.

A path you can follow right now lies among the sources to GNU Emacs and in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

The Emacs Lisp sources are an adventure. When you read the sources and come across a function or expression that is unfamiliar, you need to figure out or find out what it does.

Go to the Reference Manual. It is a thorough, complete, and fairly easy-to-read description of Emacs Lisp. It is written not only for experts, but for people who know what you know. (The Reference Manual comes with the standard GNU Emacs distribution. Like this introduction, it comes as a Texinfo source file, so you can read it on your computer and as a typeset, printed book.)

Go to the other built-in help that is part of GNU Emacs: the built-in documentation for all functions and variables, and xref-find-definitions, the program that takes you to sources.

Here is an example of how I explore the sources. Because of its name, simple.el is the file I looked at first, a long time ago. As it happens some of the functions in simple.el are complicated, or at least look complicated at first sight. The open-line function, for example, looks complicated.

You may want to walk through this function slowly, as we did with the forward-sentence function. (See The forward-sentence function.) Or you may want to skip that function and look at another, such as split-line. You don’t need to read all the functions. According to count-words-in-defun, the split-line function contains 102 words and symbols.

Even though it is short, split-line contains expressions we have not studied: skip-chars-forward, indent-to, current-column and insert-and-inherit.

Consider the skip-chars-forward function. In GNU Emacs, you can find out more about skip-chars-forward by typing C-h f (describe-function) and the name of the function. This gives you the function documentation.

You may be able to guess what is done by a well named function such as indent-to; or you can look it up, too. Incidentally, the describe-function function itself is in help.el; it is one of those long, but decipherable functions. You can look up describe-function using the C-h f command!

In this instance, since the code is Lisp, the *Help* buffer contains the name of the library containing the function’s source. You can put point over the name of the library and press the RET key, which in this situation is bound to help-follow, and be taken directly to the source, in the same way as M-. (xref-find-definitions).

The definition for describe-function illustrates how to customize the interactive expression without using the standard character codes; and it shows how to create a temporary buffer.

(The indent-to function is written in C rather than Emacs Lisp; it is a built-in function. help-follow takes you to its source as does xref-find-definitions, when properly set up.)

You can look at a function’s source using xref-find-definitions, which is bound to M-. Finally, you can find out what the Reference Manual has to say by visiting the manual in Info, and typing i (Info-index) and the name of the function, or by looking up the function in the index to a printed copy of the manual.

Similarly, you can find out what is meant by insert-and-inherit.

Other interesting source files include paragraphs.el, loaddefs.el, and loadup.el. The paragraphs.el file includes short, easily understood functions as well as longer ones. The loaddefs.el file contains the many standard autoloads and many keymaps. I have never looked at it all; only at parts. loadup.el is the file that loads the standard parts of Emacs; it tells you a great deal about how Emacs is built. (See Building Emacs in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more about building.)

As I said, you have learned some nuts and bolts; however, and very importantly, we have hardly touched major aspects of programming; I have said nothing about how to sort information, except to use the predefined sort function; I have said nothing about how to store information, except to use variables and lists; I have said nothing about how to write programs that write programs. These are topics for another, and different kind of book, a different kind of learning.

What you have done is learn enough for much practical work with GNU Emacs. What you have done is get started. This is the end of a beginning.

Appendix A The the-the Function

Sometimes when you you write text, you duplicate words—as with “you you” near the beginning of this sentence. I find that most frequently, I duplicate “the”; hence, I call the function for detecting duplicated words, the-the.

As a first step, you could use the following regular expression to search for duplicates:

\\(\\w+[ \t\n]+\\)\\1

This regexp matches one or more word-constituent characters followed by one or more spaces, tabs, or newlines. However, it does not detect duplicated words on different lines, since the ending of the first word, the end of the line, is different from the ending of the second word, a space. (For more information about regular expressions, see Regular Expression Searches, as well as Syntax of Regular Expressions in The GNU Emacs Manual, and Regular Expressions in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.)

You might try searching just for duplicated word-constituent characters but that does not work since the pattern detects doubles such as the two occurrences of “th” in “with the”.

Another possible regexp searches for word-constituent characters followed by non-word-constituent characters, reduplicated. Here, ‘\\w+ matches one or more word-constituent characters and ‘\\W* matches zero or more non-word-constituent characters.

\\(\\(\\w+\\)\\W*\\)\\1

Again, not useful.

Here is the pattern that I use. It is not perfect, but good enough. ‘\\b matches the empty string, provided it is at the beginning or end of a word; ‘[^@ \n\t]+ matches one or more occurrences of any characters that are not an @-sign, space, newline, or tab.

\\b\\([^@ \n\t]+\\)[ \n\t]+\\1\\b

One can write more complicated expressions, but I found that this expression is good enough, so I use it.

Here is the the-the function, as I include it in my .emacs file, along with a handy global key binding:

(defun the-the ()
  "Search forward for for a duplicated word."
  (interactive)
  (message "Searching for for duplicated words ...")
  (push-mark)
  ;; This regexp is not perfect
  ;; but is fairly good over all:
  (if (re-search-forward
       "\\b\\([^@ \n\t]+\\)[ \n\t]+\\1\\b" nil 'move)
      (message "Found duplicated word.")
    (message "End of buffer")))

;; Bind 'the-the' to  C-c \
(global-set-key "\C-c\\" 'the-the)

Here is test text:

one two two three four five
five six seven

You can substitute the other regular expressions shown above in the function definition and try each of them on this list.

Appendix B Handling the Kill Ring

The kill ring is a list that is transformed into a ring by the workings of the current-kill function. The yank and yank-pop commands use the current-kill function.

This appendix describes the current-kill function as well as both the yank and the yank-pop commands, but first, consider the workings of the kill ring.

What the Kill Ring Does

The kill ring has a default maximum length of sixty items; this number is too large for an explanation. Instead, set it to four. Please evaluate the following:

(setq old-kill-ring-max kill-ring-max)
(setq kill-ring-max 4)

Then, please copy each line of the following indented example into the kill ring. You may kill each line with C-k or mark it and copy it with M-w.

(In a read-only buffer, such as the *info* buffer, the kill command, C-k (kill-line), will not remove the text, merely copy it to the kill ring. However, your machine may beep at you. Alternatively, for silence, you may copy the region of each line with the M-w (kill-ring-save) command. You must mark each line for this command to succeed, but it does not matter at which end you put point or mark.)

Please invoke the calls in order, so that five elements attempt to fill the kill ring:

first some text
second piece of text
third line
fourth line of text
fifth bit of text

Then find the value of kill-ring by evaluating

kill-ring

It is:

("fifth bit of text" "fourth line of text"
"third line" "second piece of text")

The first element, ‘first some text’, was dropped.

To return to the old value for the length of the kill ring, evaluate:

(setq kill-ring-max old-kill-ring-max)

B.1 The current-kill Function

The current-kill function changes the element in the kill ring to which kill-ring-yank-pointer points. (Also, the kill-new function sets kill-ring-yank-pointer to point to the latest element of the kill ring. The kill-new function is used directly or indirectly by kill-append, copy-region-as-kill, kill-ring-save, kill-line, and kill-region.)

The code for current-kill

The current-kill function is used by yank and by yank-pop. Here is the code for current-kill:

(defun current-kill (n &optional do-not-move)
  "Rotate the yanking point by N places, and then return that kill.
If N is zero and `interprogram-paste-function' is set to a
function that returns a string or a list of strings, and if that
function doesn't return nil, then that string (or list) is added
to the front of the kill ring and the string (or first string in
the list) is returned as the latest kill.
If N is not zero, and if `yank-pop-change-selection' is
non-nil, use `interprogram-cut-function' to transfer the
kill at the new yank point into the window system selection.
If optional arg DO-NOT-MOVE is non-nil, then don't actually
move the yanking point; just return the Nth kill forward."

  (let ((interprogram-paste (and (= n 0)
                                 interprogram-paste-function
                                 (funcall interprogram-paste-function))))
    (if interprogram-paste
        (progn
          ;; Disable the interprogram cut function when we add the new
          ;; text to the kill ring, so Emacs doesn't try to own the
          ;; selection, with identical text.
          (let ((interprogram-cut-function nil))
            (if (listp interprogram-paste)
              (mapc 'kill-new (nreverse interprogram-paste))
              (kill-new interprogram-paste)))
          (car kill-ring))
      (or kill-ring (error "Kill ring is empty"))
      (let ((ARGth-kill-element
             (nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
                          (length kill-ring))
                     kill-ring)))
        (unless do-not-move
          (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element)
          (when (and yank-pop-change-selection
                     (> n 0)
                     interprogram-cut-function)
            (funcall interprogram-cut-function (car ARGth-kill-element))))
        (car ARGth-kill-element)))))

Remember also that the kill-new function sets kill-ring-yank-pointer to the latest element of the kill ring, which means that all the functions that call it set the value indirectly: kill-append, copy-region-as-kill, kill-ring-save, kill-line, and kill-region.

Here is the line in kill-new, which is explained in The kill-new function.

(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)

current-kill in Outline

The current-kill function looks complex, but as usual, it can be understood by taking it apart piece by piece. First look at it in skeletal form:

(defun current-kill (n &optional do-not-move)
  "Rotate the yanking point by N places, and then return that kill."
  (let varlist
    body…)

This function takes two arguments, one of which is optional. It has a documentation string. It is not interactive.

The Body of current-kill

The body of the function definition is a let expression, which itself has a body as well as a varlist.

The let expression declares a variable that will be only usable within the bounds of this function. This variable is called interprogram-paste and is for copying to another program. It is not for copying within this instance of GNU Emacs. Most window systems provide a facility for interprogram pasting. Sadly, that facility usually provides only for the last element. Most windowing systems have not adopted a ring of many possibilities, even though Emacs has provided it for decades.

The if expression has two parts, one if there exists interprogram-paste and one if not.

Let us consider the else-part of the current-kill function. (The then-part uses the kill-new function, which we have already described. See The kill-new function.)

(or kill-ring (error "Kill ring is empty"))
(let ((ARGth-kill-element
       (nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
                    (length kill-ring))
               kill-ring)))
  (or do-not-move
      (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element))
  (car ARGth-kill-element))

The code first checks whether the kill ring has content; otherwise it signals an error.

Note that the or expression is very similar to testing length with an if:

(if (zerop (length kill-ring))          ; if-part
    (error "Kill ring is empty"))       ; then-part
  ;; No else-part

If there is not anything in the kill ring, its length must be zero and an error message sent to the user: ‘Kill ring is empty’. The current-kill function uses an or expression which is simpler. But an if expression reminds us what goes on.

This if expression uses the function zerop which returns true if the value it is testing is zero. When zerop tests true, the then-part of the if is evaluated. The then-part is a list starting with the function error, which is a function that is similar to the message function (see The message Function) in that it prints a one-line message in the echo area. However, in addition to printing a message, error also stops evaluation of the function within which it is embedded. This means that the rest of the function will not be evaluated if the length of the kill ring is zero.

Then the current-kill function selects the element to return. The selection depends on the number of places that current-kill rotates and on where kill-ring-yank-pointer points.

Next, either the optional do-not-move argument is true or the current value of kill-ring-yank-pointer is set to point to the list. Finally, another expression returns the first element of the list even if the do-not-move argument is true.

Digression about the word “error”

In my opinion, it is slightly misleading, at least to humans, to use the term “error” as the name of the error function. A better term would be “cancel”. Strictly speaking, of course, you cannot point to, much less rotate a pointer to a list that has no length, so from the point of view of the computer, the word “error” is correct. But a human expects to attempt this sort of thing, if only to find out whether the kill ring is full or empty. This is an act of exploration.

From the human point of view, the act of exploration and discovery is not necessarily an error, and therefore should not be labeled as one, even in the bowels of a computer. As it is, the code in Emacs implies that a human who is acting virtuously, by exploring his or her environment, is making an error. This is bad. Even though the computer takes the same steps as it does when there is an error, a term such as “cancel” would have a clearer connotation.

Determining the Element

Among other actions, the else-part of the if expression sets the value of kill-ring-yank-pointer to ARGth-kill-element when the kill ring has something in it and the value of do-not-move is nil.

The code looks like this:

(nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
             (length kill-ring))
        kill-ring)))

This needs some examination. Unless it is not supposed to move the pointer, the current-kill function changes where kill-ring-yank-pointer points. That is what the (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element)) expression does. Also, clearly, ARGth-kill-element is being set to be equal to some CDR of the kill ring, using the nthcdr function that is described in an earlier section. (See copy-region-as-kill.) How does it do this?

As we have seen before (see nthcdr), the nthcdr function works by repeatedly taking the CDR of a list—it takes the CDR of the CDR of the CDR

The two following expressions produce the same result:

(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer (cdr kill-ring))

(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer (nthcdr 1 kill-ring))

However, the nthcdr expression is more complicated. It uses the mod function to determine which CDR to select.

(You will remember to look at inner functions first; indeed, we will have to go inside the mod.)

The mod function returns the value of its first argument modulo the second; that is to say, it returns the remainder after dividing the first argument by the second. The value returned has the same sign as the second argument.

Thus,

(mod 12 4)
  ⇒ 0  ;; because there is no remainder
(mod 13 4)
  ⇒ 1

In this case, the first argument is often smaller than the second. That is fine.

(mod 0 4)
  ⇒ 0
(mod 1 4)
  ⇒ 1

We can guess what the - function does. It is like + but subtracts instead of adds; the - function subtracts its second argument from its first. Also, we already know what the length function does (see Find the Length of a List: length). It returns the length of a list.

And n is the name of the required argument to the current-kill function.

So when the first argument to nthcdr is zero, the nthcdr expression returns the whole list, as you can see by evaluating the following:

;; kill-ring-yank-pointer and kill-ring have a length of four
;; and (mod (- 0 4) 4) ⇒ 0
(nthcdr (mod (- 0 4) 4)
        '("fourth line of text"
          "third line"
          "second piece of text"
          "first some text"))

When the first argument to the current-kill function is one, the nthcdr expression returns the list without its first element.

(nthcdr (mod (- 1 4) 4)
        '("fourth line of text"
          "third line"
          "second piece of text"
          "first some text"))

Incidentally, both kill-ring and kill-ring-yank-pointer are global variables. That means that any expression in Emacs Lisp can access them. They are not like the local variables set by let or like the symbols in an argument list. Local variables can only be accessed within the let that defines them or the function that specifies them in an argument list (and within expressions called by them).

(See let Prevents Confusion, and The defun Macro.)


B.2 yank

After learning about current-kill, the code for the yank function is almost easy.

The yank function does not use the kill-ring-yank-pointer variable directly. It calls insert-for-yank which calls current-kill which sets the kill-ring-yank-pointer variable.

The code looks like this:

(defun yank (&optional arg)
  "Reinsert (\"paste\") the last stretch of killed text.
More precisely, reinsert the stretch of killed text most recently
killed OR yanked.  Put point at end, and set mark at beginning.
With just \\[universal-argument] as argument, same but put point at beginning (and mark at end).
With argument N, reinsert the Nth most recently killed stretch of killed
text.

When this command inserts killed text into the buffer, it honors
`yank-excluded-properties' and `yank-handler' as described in the
doc string for `insert-for-yank-1', which see.

See also the command `yank-pop' (\\[yank-pop])."
  (interactive "*P")
  (setq yank-window-start (window-start))
  ;; If we don't get all the way thru, make last-command indicate that
  ;; for the following command.
  (setq this-command t)
  (push-mark (point))
  (insert-for-yank (current-kill (cond
                                  ((listp arg) 0)
                                  ((eq arg '-) -2)
                                  (t (1- arg)))))
  (if (consp arg)
      ;; This is like exchange-point-and-mark, but doesn't activate the mark.
      ;; It is cleaner to avoid activation, even though the command
      ;; loop would deactivate the mark because we inserted text.
      (goto-char (prog1 (mark t)
                   (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer)))))
  ;; If we do get all the way thru, make this-command indicate that.
  (if (eq this-command t)
      (setq this-command 'yank))
  nil)

The key expression is insert-for-yank, which inserts the string returned by current-kill, but removes some text properties from it.

However, before getting to that expression, the function sets the value of yank-window-start to the position returned by the (window-start) expression, the position at which the display currently starts. The yank function also sets this-command and pushes the mark.

After it yanks the appropriate element, if the optional argument is a CONS rather than a number or nothing, it puts point at beginning of the yanked text and mark at its end.

(The prog1 function is like progn but returns the value of its first argument rather than the value of its last argument. Its first argument is forced to return the buffer’s mark as an integer. You can see the documentation for these functions by placing point over them in this buffer and then typing C-h f (describe-function) followed by a RET; the default is the function.)

The last part of the function tells what to do when it succeeds.

B.3 yank-pop

After understanding yank and current-kill, you know how to approach the yank-pop function. Leaving out the documentation to save space, it looks like this:

(defun yank-pop (&optional arg)
  "…"
  (interactive "*p")
  (if (not (eq last-command 'yank))
      (error "Previous command was not a yank"))
  (setq this-command 'yank)
  (unless arg (setq arg 1))
  (let ((inhibit-read-only t)
        (before (< (point) (mark t))))
    (if before
        (funcall (or yank-undo-function 'delete-region) (point) (mark t))
      (funcall (or yank-undo-function 'delete-region) (mark t) (point)))
    (setq yank-undo-function nil)
    (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer))
    (insert-for-yank (current-kill arg))
    ;; Set the window start back where it was in the yank command,
    ;; if possible.
    (set-window-start (selected-window) yank-window-start t)
    (if before
        ;; This is like exchange-point-and-mark,
        ;;     but doesn't activate the mark.
        ;; It is cleaner to avoid activation, even though the command
        ;; loop would deactivate the mark because we inserted text.
        (goto-char (prog1 (mark t)
                     (set-marker (mark-marker)
                                 (point)
                                 (current-buffer))))))
  nil)

The function is interactive with a small ‘p’ so the prefix argument is processed and passed to the function. The command can only be used after a previous yank; otherwise an error message is sent. This check uses the variable last-command which is set by yank and is discussed elsewhere. (See copy-region-as-kill.)

The let clause sets the variable before to true or false depending whether point is before or after mark and then the region between point and mark is deleted. This is the region that was just inserted by the previous yank and it is this text that will be replaced.

funcall calls its first argument as a function, passing remaining arguments to it. The first argument is whatever the or expression returns. The two remaining arguments are the positions of point and mark set by the preceding yank command.

There is more, but that is the hardest part.

B.4 The ring.el File

Interestingly, GNU Emacs possesses a file called ring.el that provides many of the features we just discussed. But functions such as kill-ring-yank-pointer do not use this library, possibly because they were written earlier.

Appendix C A Graph with Labeled Axes

Printed axes help you understand a graph. They convey scale. In an earlier chapter (see Readying a Graph), we wrote the code to print the body of a graph. Here we write the code for printing and labeling vertical and horizontal axes, along with the body itself.

Labeled Example Graph

Since insertions fill a buffer to the right and below point, the new graph printing function should first print the Y or vertical axis, then the body of the graph, and finally the X or horizontal axis. This sequence lays out for us the contents of the function:

  1. Set up code.
  2. Print Y axis.
  3. Print body of graph.
  4. Print X axis.

Here is an example of how a finished graph should look:

    10 -
                  *
                  *  *
                  *  **
                  *  ***
     5 -      *   *******
            * *** *******
            *************
          ***************
     1 - ****************
         |   |    |    |
         1   5   10   15

In this graph, both the vertical and the horizontal axes are labeled with numbers. However, in some graphs, the horizontal axis is time and would be better labeled with months, like this:

     5 -      *
            * ** *
            *******
          ********** **
     1 - **************
         |    ^      |
         Jan  June   Jan

Indeed, with a little thought, we can easily come up with a variety of vertical and horizontal labeling schemes. Our task could become complicated. But complications breed confusion. Rather than permit this, it is better choose a simple labeling scheme for our first effort, and to modify or replace it later.

These considerations suggest the following outline for the print-graph function:

(defun print-graph (numbers-list)
  "documentation…"
  (let ((height  …
        …))
    (print-Y-axis height … )
    (graph-body-print numbers-list)
    (print-X-axis … )))

We can work on each part of the print-graph function definition in turn.

Appendix D Free Software and Free Manuals

by Richard M. Stallman


The biggest deficiency in free operating systems is not in the software—it is the lack of good free manuals that we can include in these systems. Many of our most important programs do not come with full manuals. Documentation is an essential part of any software package; when an important free software package does not come with a free manual, that is a major gap. We have many such gaps today.

Once upon a time, many years ago, I thought I would learn Perl. I got a copy of a free manual, but I found it hard to read. When I asked Perl users about alternatives, they told me that there were better introductory manuals—but those were not free.

Why was this? The authors of the good manuals had written them for O’Reilly Associates, which published them with restrictive terms—no copying, no modification, source files not available—which exclude them from the free software community.

That wasn’t the first time this sort of thing has happened, and (to our community’s great loss) it was far from the last. Proprietary manual publishers have enticed a great many authors to restrict their manuals since then. Many times I have heard a GNU user eagerly tell me about a manual that he is writing, with which he expects to help the GNU project—and then had my hopes dashed, as he proceeded to explain that he had signed a contract with a publisher that would restrict it so that we cannot use it.

Given that writing good English is a rare skill among programmers, we can ill afford to lose manuals this way.

Free documentation, like free software, is a matter of freedom, not price. The problem with these manuals was not that O’Reilly Associates charged a price for printed copies—that in itself is fine. The Free Software Foundation sells printed copies of free GNU manuals, too. But GNU manuals are available in source code form, while these manuals are available only on paper. GNU manuals come with permission to copy and modify; the Perl manuals do not. These restrictions are the problems.

The criterion for a free manual is pretty much the same as for free software: it is a matter of giving all users certain freedoms. Redistribution (including commercial redistribution) must be permitted, so that the manual can accompany every copy of the program, on-line or on paper. Permission for modification is crucial too.

As a general rule, I don’t believe that it is essential for people to have permission to modify all sorts of articles and books. The issues for writings are not necessarily the same as those for software. For example, I don’t think you or I are obliged to give permission to modify articles like this one, which describe our actions and our views.

But there is a particular reason why the freedom to modify is crucial for documentation for free software. When people exercise their right to modify the software, and add or change its features, if they are conscientious they will change the manual too—so they can provide accurate and usable documentation with the modified program. A manual which forbids programmers to be conscientious and finish the job, or more precisely requires them to write a new manual from scratch if they change the program, does not fill our community’s needs.

While a blanket prohibition on modification is unacceptable, some kinds of limits on the method of modification pose no problem. For example, requirements to preserve the original author’s copyright notice, the distribution terms, or the list of authors, are ok. It is also no problem to require modified versions to include notice that they were modified, even to have entire sections that may not be deleted or changed, as long as these sections deal with nontechnical topics. (Some GNU manuals have them.)

These kinds of restrictions are not a problem because, as a practical matter, they don’t stop the conscientious programmer from adapting the manual to fit the modified program. In other words, they don’t block the free software community from making full use of the manual.

However, it must be possible to modify all the technical content of the manual, and then distribute the result in all the usual media, through all the usual channels; otherwise, the restrictions do block the community, the manual is not free, and so we need another manual.

Unfortunately, it is often hard to find someone to write another manual when a proprietary manual exists. The obstacle is that many users think that a proprietary manual is good enough—so they don’t see the need to write a free manual. They do not see that the free operating system has a gap that needs filling.

Why do users think that proprietary manuals are good enough? Some have not considered the issue. I hope this article will do something to change that.

Other users consider proprietary manuals acceptable for the same reason so many people consider proprietary software acceptable: they judge in purely practical terms, not using freedom as a criterion. These people are entitled to their opinions, but since those opinions spring from values which do not include freedom, they are no guide for those of us who do value freedom.

Please spread the word about this issue. We continue to lose manuals to proprietary publishing. If we spread the word that proprietary manuals are not sufficient, perhaps the next person who wants to help GNU by writing documentation will realize, before it is too late, that he must above all make it free.

We can also encourage commercial publishers to sell free, copylefted manuals instead of proprietary ones. One way you can help this is to check the distribution terms of a manual before you buy it, and prefer copylefted manuals to non-copylefted ones.



Note: The Free Software Foundation maintains a page on its Web site that lists free books available from other publishers:
https://www.gnu.org/doc/other-free-books.html

Appendix E GNU Free Documentation License

Version 1.3, 3 November 2008
Copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
https://fsf.org/

Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
  1. PREAMBLE

    The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other functional and useful document free in the sense of freedom: to assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it, with or without modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not being considered responsible for modifications made by others.

    This License is a kind of “copyleft”, which means that derivative works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft license designed for free software.

    We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free software, because free software needs free documentation: a free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference.

  2. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS

    This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium, that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration, to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The “Document”, below, refers to any such manual or work. Any member of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as “you”. You accept the license if you copy, modify or distribute the work in a way requiring permission under copyright law.

    A “Modified Version” of the Document means any work containing the Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with modifications and/or translated into another language.

    A “Secondary Section” is a named appendix or a front-matter section of the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the publishers or authors of the Document to the Document’s overall subject (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could fall directly within that overall subject. (Thus, if the Document is in part a textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not explain any mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of historical connection with the subject or with related matters, or of legal, commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position regarding them.

    The “Invariant Sections” are certain Secondary Sections whose titles are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the notice that says that the Document is released under this License. If a section does not fit the above definition of Secondary then it is not allowed to be designated as Invariant. The Document may contain zero Invariant Sections. If the Document does not identify any Invariant Sections then there are none.

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    The “Title Page” means, for a printed book, the title page itself, plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the material this License requires to appear in the title page. For works in formats which do not have any title page as such, “Title Page” means the text near the most prominent appearance of the work’s title, preceding the beginning of the body of the text.

    The “publisher” means any person or entity that distributes copies of the Document to the public.

    A section “Entitled XYZ” means a named subunit of the Document whose title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses following text that translates XYZ in another language. (Here XYZ stands for a specific section name mentioned below, such as “Acknowledgements”, “Dedications”, “Endorsements”, or “History”.) To “Preserve the Title” of such a section when you modify the Document means that it remains a section “Entitled XYZ” according to this definition.

    The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice which states that this License applies to the Document. These Warranty Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in this License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and has no effect on the meaning of this License.

  3. VERBATIM COPYING

    You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You may not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading or further copying of the copies you make or distribute. However, you may accept compensation in exchange for copies. If you distribute a large enough number of copies you must also follow the conditions in section 3.

    You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above, and you may publicly display copies.

  4. COPYING IN QUANTITY

    If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly have printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and the Document’s license notice requires Cover Texts, you must enclose the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all these Cover Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and Back-Cover Texts on the back cover. Both covers must also clearly and legibly identify you as the publisher of these copies. The front cover must present the full title with all words of the title equally prominent and visible. You may add other material on the covers in addition. Copying with changes limited to the covers, as long as they preserve the title of the Document and satisfy these conditions, can be treated as verbatim copying in other respects.

    If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto adjacent pages.

    If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document numbering more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable Transparent copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with each Opaque copy a computer-network location from which the general network-using public has access to download using public-standard network protocols a complete Transparent copy of the Document, free of added material. If you use the latter option, you must take reasonably prudent steps, when you begin distribution of Opaque copies in quantity, to ensure that this Transparent copy will remain thus accessible at the stated location until at least one year after the last time you distribute an Opaque copy (directly or through your agents or retailers) of that edition to the public.

    It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of the Document well before redistributing any large number of copies, to give them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the Document.

  5. MODIFICATIONS

    You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing distribution and modification of the Modified Version to whoever possesses a copy of it. In addition, you must do these things in the Modified Version:

    1. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title distinct from that of the Document, and from those of previous versions (which should, if there were any, be listed in the History section of the Document). You may use the same title as a previous version if the original publisher of that version gives permission.
    2. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in the Modified Version, together with at least five of the principal authors of the Document (all of its principal authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you from this requirement.
    3. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the Modified Version, as the publisher.
    4. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
    5. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications adjacent to the other copyright notices.
    6. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license notice giving the public permission to use the Modified Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in the Addendum below.
    7. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document’s license notice.
    8. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
    9. Preserve the section Entitled “History”, Preserve its Title, and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on the Title Page. If there is no section Entitled “History” in the Document, create one stating the title, year, authors, and publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page, then add an item describing the Modified Version as stated in the previous sentence.
    10. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and likewise the network locations given in the Document for previous versions it was based on. These may be placed in the “History” section. You may omit a network location for a work that was published at least four years before the Document itself, or if the original publisher of the version it refers to gives permission.
    11. For any section Entitled “Acknowledgements” or “Dedications”, Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the section all the substance and tone of each of the contributor acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein.
    12. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document, unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers or the equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.
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    If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no material copied from the Document, you may at your option designate some or all of these sections as invariant. To do this, add their titles to the list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version’s license notice. These titles must be distinct from any other section titles.

    You may add a section Entitled “Endorsements”, provided it contains nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various parties—for example, statements of peer review or that the text has been approved by an organization as the authoritative definition of a standard.

    You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text, and a passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of the list of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one passage of Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the Document already includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added by you or by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on behalf of, you may not add another; but you may replace the old one, on explicit permission from the previous publisher that added the old one.

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  6. COMBINING DOCUMENTS

    You may combine the Document with other documents released under this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for modified versions, provided that you include in the combination all of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents, unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your combined work in its license notice, and that you preserve all their Warranty Disclaimers.

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    In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled “History” in the various original documents, forming one section Entitled “History”; likewise combine any sections Entitled “Acknowledgements”, and any sections Entitled “Dedications”. You must delete all sections Entitled “Endorsements.”

  7. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS

    You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other documents released under this License, and replace the individual copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the documents in all other respects.

    You may extract a single document from such a collection, and distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow this License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of that document.

  8. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS

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  9. TRANSLATION

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  10. TERMINATION

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  11. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE

    The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

    Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this License “or any later version” applies to it, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that specified version or of any later version that has been published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document specifies that a proxy can decide which future versions of this License can be used, that proxy’s public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you to choose that version for the Document.

  12. RELICENSING

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ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents

To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of the License in the document and put the following copyright and license notices just after the title page:

  Copyright (C)  year  your name.
  Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
  or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
  with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover
  Texts.  A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
  Free Documentation License''.

If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover Texts, replace the “with…Texts.” line with this:

    with the Invariant Sections being list their titles, with
    the Front-Cover Texts being list, and with the Back-Cover Texts
    being list.

If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the situation.

If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit their use in free software.

Index

Jump to:   %   '   (   *   .   /   <   >  
A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  
Index Entry  Section

%
% (remainder function): Compute a Remainder

'
' for quoting: Run a Program

(
(debug) in code: debug-on-quit

*
* (multiplication): defun
* for read-only buffer: Read-only buffer
*scratch* buffer: print-elements-of-list

.
.emacs file: Emacs Initialization
.emacs file, beginning of: Beginning init File

/
/ (division): Large buffer case

<
<= (less than or equal): Inc Example parts

>
> (greater than): if in more detail

A
Accumulate, type of recursive pattern: Accumulate
add-hook: Text and Auto-fill
and: kill-new function
and: fwd-para let
Anonymous function: lambda
apostrophe for quoting: Run a Program
append-to-buffer: append-to-buffer
apply: Columns of a graph
apropos: Columns of a graph
Argument as local variable: Dec Example altogether
argument’ defined: Arguments
argument list’ defined: defun
Argument, wrong type of: Wrong Type of Argument
Arguments: Arguments
Arguments’ data types: Data types
Arguments, variable number of: Variable Number of Arguments
Asterisk for read-only buffer: Read-only buffer
Auto Fill mode turned on: Text and Auto-fill
autoload: Autoload
Automatic mode selection: Text and Auto-fill
Axis, print horizontal: print-X-axis
Axis, print vertical: print-Y-axis

B
beginning-of-buffer: beginning-of-buffer
bind’ defined: setq
Binding, dynamic: Lexical & Dynamic Binding Differences
Binding, lexical: Lexical & Dynamic Binding Differences
Bindings, key, fixing unpleasant: Miscellaneous
body’ defined: defun
Body of graph: Readying a Graph
Buffer size: Buffer Size & Locations
Buffer, history of word: Buffer Names
buffer-file-name: Buffer Names
buffer-menu, bound to key: Key Bindings
buffer-name: Buffer Names
Bug, most insidious type: Another Bug
Building robots: Building Robots
Byte compiling: Byte Compiling

C
C language primitives: Primitive Functions
C, a digression into: Digression into C
call’ defined: Switching Buffers
cancel-debug-on-entry: debug-on-entry
car, introduced: car cdr & cons
cdr, introduced: car cdr & cons
Changing a function definition: Change a defun
Chest of Drawers, metaphor for a symbol: Symbols as Chest
Clipping text: Cutting & Storing Text
Code installation: Permanent Installation
command’ defined: How to Evaluate
Comments in Lisp code: Change a defun
Common Lisp: Lisp History
compare-windows: Key Bindings
concat: Data types
cond: Recursion with cond
condition-case: condition-case
Conditional ’twixt two versions of Emacs: Simple Extension
Conditional with if: if
cons cell: Lists diagrammed
cons, introduced: cons
copy-region-as-kill: copy-region-as-kill
copy-to-buffer: copy-to-buffer
Count words recursively: recursive-count-words
count-words-example: count-words-example
count-words-in-defun: count-words-in-defun
Counting: Counting
Counting words in a defun: Words in a defun
Counting words in a defun: count-words-in-defun
curly quotes: Complete zap-to-char
current-buffer: Getting Buffers
current-kill: current-kill
curved quotes: Complete zap-to-char
Customizing your .emacs file: Emacs Initialization
Cutting and storing text: Cutting & Storing Text

D
Data types: Data types
debug: debug
debug-on-entry: debug-on-entry
debug-on-quit: debug-on-quit
debugging: Debugging
default.el init file: Site-wide Init
defconst: defcustom
defcustom: defcustom
Deferment in recursion: No Deferment
Definition installation: Install
Definition writing: Writing Defuns
Definition, how to change: Change a defun
defsubst: defcustom
defun: defun
defvar: defvar
defvar for a user customizable variable: defvar and asterisk
defvar with an asterisk: defvar and asterisk
delete-and-extract-region: Digression into C
Deleting text: Cutting & Storing Text
describe-function: simplified-beginning-of-buffer
describe-function, introduced: Finding More
Digression into C: Digression into C
directory-files: Files List
Division: Large buffer case
dolist: dolist
dotimes: dotimes
dotted pair: Lists diagrammed
Drawers, Chest of, metaphor for a symbol: Symbols as Chest
Duplicated words function: the-the
Dynamic binding: Lexical & Dynamic Binding Differences

E
edebug: edebug
Else: else
Emacs version, choosing: Simple Extension
empty list’ defined: Lisp Atoms
empty string’ defined: Review
eobp: fwd-para while
eq: Review
eq (example of use): last-command & this-command
equal: Review
Erasing text: Cutting & Storing Text
error: Body of current-kill
Error for symbol without function: Void Function
Error for symbol without value: Void Variable
Error message generation: Making Errors
evaluate’ defined: Run a Program
Evaluating inner lists: Evaluating Inner Lists
Evaluation: Evaluation
Evaluation practice: Practicing Evaluation
Every, type of recursive pattern: Every
Example variable, fill-column: fill-column Example
expression’ defined: Lisp Atoms

F
Falsehood and truth in Emacs Lisp: Truth & Falsehood
FDL, GNU Free Documentation License: GNU Free Documentation License
files-in-below-directory: Files List
fill-column, an example variable: fill-column Example
filter-buffer-substring: last-command & this-command
Find a File: Find a File
Find function documentation: Finding More
Find source of function: Finding More
Flowers in a field: Lisp Lists
Focusing attention (narrowing): Narrowing & Widening
form’ defined: Lisp Atoms
Formatting convention: append save-excursion
Formatting help: Typing Lists
forward-paragraph: forward-paragraph
forward-sentence: forward-sentence
function’ defined: Making Errors
function’ defined: Making Errors
function definition’ defined: defun
Function definition installation: Install
Function definition writing: Writing Defuns
Function definition, how to change: Change a defun
Functions, primitive: Primitive Functions

G
Generate an error message: Making Errors
Getting a buffer: Getting Buffers
Global set key: Key Bindings
global variable’ defined: Determining the Element
global-set-key: Key Bindings
global-unset-key: Key Bindings
Graph prototype: Readying a Graph
Graph, printing all: Print Whole Graph
graph-body-print: graph-body-print
graph-body-print Final version.: The final version

H
Handling the kill ring: Kill Ring
Help typing lists: Typing Lists
Horizontal axis printing: print-X-axis

I
if: if
if-part’ defined: if in more detail
indent-tabs-mode: Indent Tabs Mode
Indentation for formatting: append save-excursion
Initialization file: Emacs Initialization
Initializing a variable: defvar
Inner list evaluation: Evaluating Inner Lists
insert-buffer: insert-buffer
insert-buffer, new version body: New insert-buffer
insert-buffer-substring: append-to-buffer overview
Insidious type of bug: Another Bug
Install a Function Definition: Install
Install code permanently: Permanent Installation
interactive: Interactive
interactive function’ defined: How to Evaluate
Interactive functions: Interactive
Interactive options: Interactive Options
interactive, example use of: insert-buffer interactive
Interpreter, Lisp, explained: Run a Program
Interpreter, what it does: Lisp Interpreter

K
Keep, type of recursive pattern: Keep
Key bindings, fixing: Miscellaneous
Key setting globally: Key Bindings
Key unbinding: Key Bindings
Keymaps: Keymaps
Keyword: Optional Arguments
Kill ring handling: Kill Ring
Kill ring overview: Kill Ring Overview
kill-append: kill-append function
kill-new: kill-new function
kill-region: kill-region
Killing text: Cutting & Storing Text

L
lambda: lambda
length: length
lengths-list-file: lengths-list-file
lengths-list-many-files: lengths-list-many-files
let: let
let expression sample: Sample let Expression
let expression, parts of: Parts of let Expression
let variables uninitialized: Uninitialized let Variables
let*: append save-excursion
let*: fwd-para let
Lexical binding: Lexical & Dynamic Binding Differences
Library, as term for “file”: Finding More
line-to-top-of-window: Simple Extension
Lisp Atoms: Lisp Atoms
Lisp history: Lisp History
Lisp interpreter, explained: Run a Program
Lisp interpreter, what it does: Lisp Interpreter
Lisp Lists: Lisp Lists
Lisp macro: Lisp macro
list-buffers, rebound: Key Bindings
Lists in a computer: List Implementation
load-library: Loading Files
load-path: Loading Files
Loading files: Loading Files
local variable’ defined: Prevent confusion
Local variables list, per-buffer,: Text and Auto-fill
Location of point: Buffer Size & Locations
looking-at: fwd-para while
Loops: while
Loops and recursion: Loops & Recursion

M
Maclisp: Lisp History
Macro, lisp: Lisp macro
Mail aliases: Mail Aliases
make-string: Y Axis Element
mapcar: mapcar
mark: save-excursion
mark-whole-buffer: mark-whole-buffer
match-beginning: fwd-para while
max: Columns of a graph
message: message
min: Columns of a graph
Mode line format: Mode Line
Mode selection, automatic: Text and Auto-fill
mode-line-format: Mode Line
Motion by sentence and paragraph: Regexp Search

N
Narrowing: Narrowing & Widening
narrowing’ defined: Buffer Size & Locations
new version body for insert-buffer: New insert-buffer
nil: Truth & Falsehood
nil, history of word: Buffer Names
No deferment solution: No deferment solution
nreverse: Counting function definitions
nth: nth
nthcdr: nthcdr
nthcdr: copy-region-as-kill
nthcdr, example: kill-new function
number-to-string: Y Axis Element

O
occur: Key Bindings
optional: Optional Arguments
Optional arguments: Optional Arguments
Options for interactive: Interactive Options
or: Insert or
other-buffer: Getting Buffers

P
Paragraphs, movement by: Regexp Search
Parts of a Recursive Definition: Recursive Definition Parts
Parts of let expression: Parts of let Expression
Passing information to functions: Arguments
Pasting text: Yanking
Patterns, searching for: Regexp Search
Per-buffer, local variables list: Text and Auto-fill
Permanent code installation: Permanent Installation
point: save-excursion
Point and buffer preservation: save-excursion
point’ defined: Buffer Size & Locations
Point location: Buffer Size & Locations
Practicing evaluation: Practicing Evaluation
predicate’ defined: Wrong Type of Argument
Preserving point and buffer: save-excursion
Primitive functions: Primitive Functions
Primitives written in C: Primitive Functions
Print horizontal axis: print-X-axis
Print vertical axis: print-Y-axis
print-elements-of-list: print-elements-of-list
print-elements-recursively: Recursion with list
print-graph Final version.: The final version
print-graph varlist: print-graph Varlist
print-X-axis: X Axis Tic Marks
print-X-axis-numbered-line: X Axis Tic Marks
print-X-axis-tic-line: X Axis Tic Marks
print-Y-axis: print-Y-axis Penultimate
Printing the whole graph: Print Whole Graph
progn: progn
Program, running one: Run a Program
Properties, in mode line example: Mode Line
Properties, mention of buffer-substring-no-properties: narrow Exercise
Prototype graph: Readying a Graph
push, example: kill-new function

Q
quote: Run a Program
quoting using apostrophe: Run a Program

R
re-search-forward: re-search-forward
Read-only buffer: Read-only buffer
Readying a graph: Readying a Graph
Rebinding keys: Keymaps
Recursion: Recursion
Recursion and loops: Loops & Recursion
Recursion without Deferments: No Deferment
Recursive Definition Parts: Recursive Definition Parts
Recursive pattern - accumulate: Accumulate
Recursive pattern - every: Every
Recursive pattern - keep: Keep
Recursive Patterns: Recursive Patterns
recursive-count-words: recursive-count-words
recursive-graph-body-print: recursive-graph-body-print
recursive-lengths-list-many-files: Several files recursively
Recursively counting words: recursive-count-words
regexp-quote: fwd-para let
Region, what it is: save-excursion
Regular expression searches: Regexp Search
Regular expressions for word counting: Counting Words
Remainder function, %: Compute a Remainder
Repetition (loops): Loops & Recursion
Repetition for word counting: Counting Words
Retrieving text: Yanking
returned value’ explained: How the Interpreter Acts
reverse: Counting function definitions
Ring, making a list like a: Kill Ring
ring.el file: ring file
Robots, building: Building Robots
Run a program: Run a Program

S
Sample let expression: Sample let Expression
save-excursion: save-excursion
save-restriction: save-restriction
search-forward: search-forward
Searches, illustrating: Regexp Search
sentence-end: sentence-end
Sentences, movement by: Regexp Search
set: Using setq
set-buffer: Switching Buffers
set-variable: defvar and asterisk
setcar: setcar
setcdr: setcdr
setcdr, example: kill-new function
Setting a key globally: Key Bindings
Setting value of variable: setq
side effect’ defined: How the Interpreter Acts
Simple extension in .emacs file: Simple Extension
simplified-beginning-of-buffer: simplified-beginning-of-buffer
site-init.el init file: Site-wide Init
site-load.el init file: Site-wide Init
Size of buffer: Buffer Size & Locations
Solution without deferment: No deferment solution
sort: Sorting
Source level debugger: edebug
Special form: Complications
Storing and cutting text: Cutting & Storing Text
string’ defined: Lisp Atoms
substring: Data types
switch-to-buffer: Switching Buffers
Switching to a buffer: Switching Buffers
Symbol names: Names & Definitions
Symbol without function error: Void Function
Symbol without value error: Void Variable
Symbolic expressions, introduced: Lisp Atoms
Symbols as a Chest of Drawers: Symbols as Chest
Syntax categories and tables: Syntax

T
Tabs, preventing: Indent Tabs Mode
Text between double quotation marks: Lisp Atoms
Text Mode turned on: Text and Auto-fill
Text retrieval: Yanking
the-the: the-the
then-part’ defined: if in more detail
top-of-ranges: Counting function definitions
triangle-bugged: debug
triangle-recursively: Recursive triangle function
Truth and falsehood in Emacs Lisp: Truth & Falsehood
Types of data: Data types

U
Unbinding key: Key Bindings
Uninitialized let variables: Uninitialized let Variables

V
Variable initialization: defvar
Variable number of arguments: Variable Number of Arguments
Variable, example of, fill-column: fill-column Example
variable, global’, defined: Determining the Element
variable, local’, defined: Prevent confusion
Variable, setting value: setq
Variables: Variables
varlist’ defined: Parts of let Expression
Version of Emacs, choosing: Simple Extension
Vertical axis printing: print-Y-axis

W
what-line: what-line
while: while
Whitespace in lists: Whitespace in Lists
Whole graph printing: Print Whole Graph
Widening: Narrowing & Widening
Widening, example of: what-line
Word counting in a defun: Words in a defun
Words and symbols in defun: Words and Symbols
Words, counted recursively: recursive-count-words
Words, duplicated: the-the
Writing a function definition: Writing Defuns
Wrong type of argument: Wrong Type of Argument

X
X axis printing: print-X-axis
X-axis-element: X Axis Tic Marks

Y
Y axis printing: print-Y-axis
Y-axis-column: Y-axis-column
Y-axis-column Final version.: The final version
Y-axis-label-spacing: Compute a Remainder
Y-axis-tic: Y Axis Element
yank: Yanking
yank: yank
yank-pop: yank-pop

Z
zap-to-char: zap-to-char
zerop: Body of current-kill

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About the Author

Robert J. Chassell (1946–2017) started working with GNU Emacs in 1985. He wrote and edited, taught Emacs and Emacs Lisp, and spoke throughout the world on software freedom. Chassell was a founding Director and Treasurer of the Free Software Foundation, Inc. He was co-author of the Texinfo manual, and edited more than a dozen other books. He graduated from Cambridge University, in England. He had an abiding interest in social and economic history and flew his own airplane.

"Goodbye to Bob Chassell"


Footnotes

(1)

A single-quote is an abbreviation for the special form quote; you need not think about special forms now. See Complications.

(2)

Emacs shows integer values in decimal, in octal and in hex, and also as a character, but let’s ignore this convenience feature for now.

(3)

It is curious to track the path by which the word “argument” came to have two different meanings, one in mathematics and the other in everyday English. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word derives from the Latin for ‘to make clear, prove’; thus it came to mean, by one thread of derivation, “the evidence offered as proof”, which is to say, “the information offered”, which led to its meaning in Lisp. But in the other thread of derivation, it came to mean “to assert in a manner against which others may make counter assertions”, which led to the meaning of the word as a disputation. (Note here that the English word has two different definitions attached to it at the same time. By contrast, in Emacs Lisp, a symbol cannot have two different function definitions at the same time.)

(4)

(quote hello) is an expansion of the abbreviation 'hello.

(5)

Actually, you can use %s to print a number. It is non-specific. %d prints only the part of a number left of a decimal point, and not anything that is not a number.

(6)

Actually, by default, if the buffer from which you just switched is visible to you in another window, other-buffer will choose the most recent buffer that you cannot see; this is a subtlety that I often forget.

(7)

Or rather, to save typing, you probably only typed RET if the default buffer was *scratch*, or if it was different, then you typed just part of the name, such as *sc, pressed your TAB key to cause it to expand to the full name, and then typed RET.

(8)

Remember, this expression will move you to your most recent other buffer that you cannot see. If you really want to go to your most recently selected buffer, even if you can still see it, you need to evaluate the following more complex expression:

(switch-to-buffer (other-buffer (current-buffer) t))

In this case, the first argument to other-buffer tells it which buffer to skip—the current one—and the second argument tells other-buffer it is OK to switch to a visible buffer. In regular use, switch-to-buffer takes you to a buffer not visible in windows since you would most likely use C-x o (other-window) to go to another visible buffer.

(9)

This describes the behavior of let when using a style called “lexical binding” (see How let Binds Variables).

(10)

According to Jared Diamond in Guns, Germs, and Steel, “… zebras become impossibly dangerous as they grow older” but the claim here is that they do not become fierce like a tiger. (1997, W. W. Norton and Co., ISBN 0-393-03894-2, page 171)

(11)

If instead of showing the source code for a Lisp function, Emacs asks you which tags table to visit, invoke M-. from a buffer whose major mode is Emacs Lisp or Lisp Interaction.

(12)

It is like calling (save-excursion (set-buffer …) …) in one go, though it is defined slightly differently which interested reader can find out using describe-function.

(13)

Actually, you can cons an element to an atom to produce a dotted pair. Dotted pairs are not discussed here; see Dotted Pair Notation in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.

(14)

You can write recursive functions to be frugal or wasteful of mental or computer resources; as it happens, methods that people find easy—that are frugal of mental resources—sometimes use considerable computer resources. Emacs was designed to run on machines that we now consider limited and its default settings are conservative. You may want to increase the value of max-lisp-eval-depth. In my .emacs file, I set it to 30 times its default value.

(15)

The phrase tail recursive is used to describe such a process, one that uses constant space.

(16)

The jargon is mildly confusing: triangle-recursive-helper uses a process that is iterative in a procedure that is recursive. The process is called iterative because the computer need only record the three values, sum, counter, and number; the procedure is recursive because the function calls itself. On the other hand, both the process and the procedure used by triangle-recursively are called recursive. The word “recursive” has different meanings in the two contexts.

(17)

If current-time-list is nil the three timestamps are (1351051674579989697 . 1000000000), (1173477761000000000 . 1000000000), and (1351050967734791805 . 1000000000), respectively.

(18)

You may also add .el to ~/.emacs and call it a ~/.emacs.el file. In the past, you were forbidden to type the extra keystrokes that the name ~/.emacs.el requires, but now you may. The new format is consistent with the Emacs Lisp file naming conventions; the old format saves typing.

(19)

This section suggests settings that are more suitable for writers. For programmers, the default mode will be set to the corresponding prog-mode automatically based on the type of the file. And it’s perfectly fine if you want to keep the fundamental mode as the default mode.

(20)

We use setq-default here because text-mode is buffer-local. If we use setq, it will only apply to the current buffer, whereas using setq-default will also apply to newly created buffers. This is not recommended for programmers.

(21)

When I start instances of Emacs that do not load my .emacs file or any site file, I also turn off blinking:

emacs -q --no-site-file -eval '(blink-cursor-mode nil)'

Or nowadays, using an even more sophisticated set of options,

emacs -Q -D
(22)

I also run more modern window managers, such as Enlightenment, Gnome, or KDE; in those cases, I often specify an image rather than a plain color.