@c -*- mode: texinfo; coding: utf-8 -*- @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. @c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2019 Free Software @c Foundation, Inc. @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions. @node Functions @chapter Functions A Lisp program is composed mainly of Lisp functions. This chapter explains what functions are, how they accept arguments, and how to define them. @menu * What Is a Function:: Lisp functions vs. primitives; terminology. * Lambda Expressions:: How functions are expressed as Lisp objects. * Function Names:: A symbol can serve as the name of a function. * Defining Functions:: Lisp expressions for defining functions. * Calling Functions:: How to use an existing function. * Mapping Functions:: Applying a function to each element of a list, etc. * Anonymous Functions:: Lambda expressions are functions with no names. * Generic Functions:: Polymorphism, Emacs-style. * Function Cells:: Accessing or setting the function definition of a symbol. * Closures:: Functions that enclose a lexical environment. * Advising Functions:: Adding to the definition of a function. * Obsolete Functions:: Declaring functions obsolete. * Inline Functions:: Functions that the compiler will expand inline. * Declare Form:: Adding additional information about a function. * Declaring Functions:: Telling the compiler that a function is defined. * Function Safety:: Determining whether a function is safe to call. * Related Topics:: Cross-references to specific Lisp primitives that have a special bearing on how functions work. @end menu @node What Is a Function @section What Is a Function? @cindex return value @cindex value of function @cindex argument @cindex pure function In a general sense, a function is a rule for carrying out a computation given input values called @dfn{arguments}. The result of the computation is called the @dfn{value} or @dfn{return value} of the function. The computation can also have side effects, such as lasting changes in the values of variables or the contents of data structures (@pxref{Definition of side effect}). A @dfn{pure function} is a function which, in addition to having no side effects, always returns the same value for the same combination of arguments, regardless of external factors such as machine type or system state. In most computer languages, every function has a name. But in Lisp, a function in the strictest sense has no name: it is an object which can @emph{optionally} be associated with a symbol (e.g., @code{car}) that serves as the function name. @xref{Function Names}. When a function has been given a name, we usually also refer to that symbol as a ``function'' (e.g., we refer to ``the function @code{car}''). In this manual, the distinction between a function name and the function object itself is usually unimportant, but we will take note wherever it is relevant. Certain function-like objects, called @dfn{special forms} and @dfn{macros}, also accept arguments to carry out computations. However, as explained below, these are not considered functions in Emacs Lisp. Here are important terms for functions and function-like objects: @table @dfn @item lambda expression A function (in the strict sense, i.e., a function object) which is written in Lisp. These are described in the following section. @ifnottex @xref{Lambda Expressions}. @end ifnottex @item primitive @cindex primitive @cindex subr @cindex built-in function A function which is callable from Lisp but is actually written in C@. Primitives are also called @dfn{built-in functions}, or @dfn{subrs}. Examples include functions like @code{car} and @code{append}. In addition, all special forms (see below) are also considered primitives. Usually, a function is implemented as a primitive because it is a fundamental part of Lisp (e.g., @code{car}), or because it provides a low-level interface to operating system services, or because it needs to run fast. Unlike functions defined in Lisp, primitives can be modified or added only by changing the C sources and recompiling Emacs. See @ref{Writing Emacs Primitives}. @item special form A primitive that is like a function but does not evaluate all of its arguments in the usual way. It may evaluate only some of the arguments, or may evaluate them in an unusual order, or several times. Examples include @code{if}, @code{and}, and @code{while}. @xref{Special Forms}. @item macro @cindex macro A construct defined in Lisp, which differs from a function in that it translates a Lisp expression into another expression which is to be evaluated instead of the original expression. Macros enable Lisp programmers to do the sorts of things that special forms can do. @xref{Macros}. @item command @cindex command An object which can be invoked via the @code{command-execute} primitive, usually due to the user typing in a key sequence @dfn{bound} to that command. @xref{Interactive Call}. A command is usually a function; if the function is written in Lisp, it is made into a command by an @code{interactive} form in the function definition (@pxref{Defining Commands}). Commands that are functions can also be called from Lisp expressions, just like other functions. Keyboard macros (strings and vectors) are commands also, even though they are not functions. @xref{Keyboard Macros}. We say that a symbol is a command if its function cell contains a command (@pxref{Symbol Components}); such a @dfn{named command} can be invoked with @kbd{M-x}. @item closure A function object that is much like a lambda expression, except that it also encloses an environment of lexical variable bindings. @xref{Closures}. @item byte-code function A function that has been compiled by the byte compiler. @xref{Byte-Code Type}. @item autoload object @cindex autoload object A place-holder for a real function. If the autoload object is called, Emacs loads the file containing the definition of the real function, and then calls the real function. @xref{Autoload}. @end table You can use the function @code{functionp} to test if an object is a function: @defun functionp object This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is any kind of function, i.e., can be passed to @code{funcall}. Note that @code{functionp} returns @code{t} for symbols that are function names, and returns @code{nil} for special forms. @end defun It is also possible to find out how many arguments an arbitrary function expects: @defun func-arity function This function provides information about the argument list of the specified @var{function}. The returned value is a cons cell of the form @w{@code{(@var{min} . @var{max})}}, where @var{min} is the minimum number of arguments, and @var{max} is either the maximum number of arguments, or the symbol @code{many} for functions with @code{&rest} arguments, or the symbol @code{unevalled} if @var{function} is a special form. Note that this function might return inaccurate results in some situations, such as the following: @itemize @minus @item Functions defined using @code{apply-partially} (@pxref{Calling Functions, apply-partially}). @item Functions that are advised using @code{advice-add} (@pxref{Advising Named Functions}). @item Functions that determine the argument list dynamically, as part of their code. @end itemize @end defun @noindent Unlike @code{functionp}, the next three functions do @emph{not} treat a symbol as its function definition. @defun subrp object This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a built-in function (i.e., a Lisp primitive). @example @group (subrp 'message) ; @r{@code{message} is a symbol,} @result{} nil ; @r{not a subr object.} @end group @group (subrp (symbol-function 'message)) @result{} t @end group @end example @end defun @defun byte-code-function-p object This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a byte-code function. For example: @example @group (byte-code-function-p (symbol-function 'next-line)) @result{} t @end group @end example @end defun @defun subr-arity subr This works like @code{func-arity}, but only for built-in functions and without symbol indirection. It signals an error for non-built-in functions. We recommend to use @code{func-arity} instead. @end defun @node Lambda Expressions @section Lambda Expressions @cindex lambda expression A lambda expression is a function object written in Lisp. Here is an example: @example (lambda (x) "Return the hyperbolic cosine of X." (* 0.5 (+ (exp x) (exp (- x))))) @end example @noindent In Emacs Lisp, such a list is a valid expression which evaluates to a function object. A lambda expression, by itself, has no name; it is an @dfn{anonymous function}. Although lambda expressions can be used this way (@pxref{Anonymous Functions}), they are more commonly associated with symbols to make @dfn{named functions} (@pxref{Function Names}). Before going into these details, the following subsections describe the components of a lambda expression and what they do. @menu * Lambda Components:: The parts of a lambda expression. * Simple Lambda:: A simple example. * Argument List:: Details and special features of argument lists. * Function Documentation:: How to put documentation in a function. @end menu @node Lambda Components @subsection Components of a Lambda Expression A lambda expression is a list that looks like this: @example (lambda (@var{arg-variables}@dots{}) [@var{documentation-string}] [@var{interactive-declaration}] @var{body-forms}@dots{}) @end example @cindex lambda list The first element of a lambda expression is always the symbol @code{lambda}. This indicates that the list represents a function. The reason functions are defined to start with @code{lambda} is so that other lists, intended for other uses, will not accidentally be valid as functions. The second element is a list of symbols---the argument variable names. This is called the @dfn{lambda list}. When a Lisp function is called, the argument values are matched up against the variables in the lambda list, which are given local bindings with the values provided. @xref{Local Variables}. The documentation string is a Lisp string object placed within the function definition to describe the function for the Emacs help facilities. @xref{Function Documentation}. The interactive declaration is a list of the form @code{(interactive @var{code-string})}. This declares how to provide arguments if the function is used interactively. Functions with this declaration are called @dfn{commands}; they can be called using @kbd{M-x} or bound to a key. Functions not intended to be called in this way should not have interactive declarations. @xref{Defining Commands}, for how to write an interactive declaration. @cindex body of function The rest of the elements are the @dfn{body} of the function: the Lisp code to do the work of the function (or, as a Lisp programmer would say, ``a list of Lisp forms to evaluate''). The value returned by the function is the value returned by the last element of the body. @node Simple Lambda @subsection A Simple Lambda Expression Example Consider the following example: @example (lambda (a b c) (+ a b c)) @end example @noindent We can call this function by passing it to @code{funcall}, like this: @example @group (funcall (lambda (a b c) (+ a b c)) 1 2 3) @end group @end example @noindent This call evaluates the body of the lambda expression with the variable @code{a} bound to 1, @code{b} bound to 2, and @code{c} bound to 3. Evaluation of the body adds these three numbers, producing the result 6; therefore, this call to the function returns the value 6. Note that the arguments can be the results of other function calls, as in this example: @example @group (funcall (lambda (a b c) (+ a b c)) 1 (* 2 3) (- 5 4)) @end group @end example @noindent This evaluates the arguments @code{1}, @code{(* 2 3)}, and @code{(- 5 4)} from left to right. Then it applies the lambda expression to the argument values 1, 6 and 1 to produce the value 8. As these examples show, you can use a form with a lambda expression as its @sc{car} to make local variables and give them values. In the old days of Lisp, this technique was the only way to bind and initialize local variables. But nowadays, it is clearer to use the special form @code{let} for this purpose (@pxref{Local Variables}). Lambda expressions are mainly used as anonymous functions for passing as arguments to other functions (@pxref{Anonymous Functions}), or stored as symbol function definitions to produce named functions (@pxref{Function Names}). @node Argument List @subsection Other Features of Argument Lists @kindex wrong-number-of-arguments @cindex argument binding @cindex binding arguments @cindex argument lists, features Our simple sample function, @code{(lambda (a b c) (+ a b c))}, specifies three argument variables, so it must be called with three arguments: if you try to call it with only two arguments or four arguments, you get a @code{wrong-number-of-arguments} error (@pxref{Errors}). It is often convenient to write a function that allows certain arguments to be omitted. For example, the function @code{substring} accepts three arguments---a string, the start index and the end index---but the third argument defaults to the @var{length} of the string if you omit it. It is also convenient for certain functions to accept an indefinite number of arguments, as the functions @code{list} and @code{+} do. @cindex optional arguments @cindex rest arguments @kindex &optional @kindex &rest To specify optional arguments that may be omitted when a function is called, simply include the keyword @code{&optional} before the optional arguments. To specify a list of zero or more extra arguments, include the keyword @code{&rest} before one final argument. Thus, the complete syntax for an argument list is as follows: @example @group (@var{required-vars}@dots{} @r{[}&optional @r{[}@var{optional-vars}@dots{}@r{]}@r{]} @r{[}&rest @r{[}@var{rest-var}@r{]}@r{]}) @end group @end example @noindent The square brackets indicate that the @code{&optional} and @code{&rest} clauses, and the variables that follow them, are optional. A call to the function requires one actual argument for each of the @var{required-vars}. There may be actual arguments for zero or more of the @var{optional-vars}, and there cannot be any actual arguments beyond that unless the lambda list uses @code{&rest}. In that case, there may be any number of extra actual arguments. If actual arguments for the optional and rest variables are omitted, then they always default to @code{nil}. There is no way for the function to distinguish between an explicit argument of @code{nil} and an omitted argument. However, the body of the function is free to consider @code{nil} an abbreviation for some other meaningful value. This is what @code{substring} does; @code{nil} as the third argument to @code{substring} means to use the length of the string supplied. @cindex CL note---default optional arg @quotation @b{Common Lisp note:} Common Lisp allows the function to specify what default value to use when an optional argument is omitted; Emacs Lisp always uses @code{nil}. Emacs Lisp does not support @code{supplied-p} variables that tell you whether an argument was explicitly passed. @end quotation For example, an argument list that looks like this: @example (a b &optional c d &rest e) @end example @noindent binds @code{a} and @code{b} to the first two actual arguments, which are required. If one or two more arguments are provided, @code{c} and @code{d} are bound to them respectively; any arguments after the first four are collected into a list and @code{e} is bound to that list. Thus, if there are only two arguments, @code{c}, @code{d} and @code{e} are @code{nil}; if two or three arguments, @code{d} and @code{e} are @code{nil}; if four arguments or fewer, @code{e} is @code{nil}. Note that exactly five arguments with an explicit @code{nil} argument provided for @code{e} will cause that @code{nil} argument to be passed as a list with one element, @code{(nil)}, as with any other single value for @code{e}. There is no way to have required arguments following optional ones---it would not make sense. To see why this must be so, suppose that @code{c} in the example were optional and @code{d} were required. Suppose three actual arguments are given; which variable would the third argument be for? Would it be used for the @var{c}, or for @var{d}? One can argue for both possibilities. Similarly, it makes no sense to have any more arguments (either required or optional) after a @code{&rest} argument. Here are some examples of argument lists and proper calls: @example (funcall (lambda (n) (1+ n)) ; @r{One required:} 1) ; @r{requires exactly one argument.} @result{} 2 (funcall (lambda (n &optional n1) ; @r{One required and one optional:} (if n1 (+ n n1) (1+ n))) ; @r{1 or 2 arguments.} 1 2) @result{} 3 (funcall (lambda (n &rest ns) ; @r{One required and one rest:} (+ n (apply '+ ns))) ; @r{1 or more arguments.} 1 2 3 4 5) @result{} 15 @end example @node Function Documentation @subsection Documentation Strings of Functions @cindex documentation of function A lambda expression may optionally have a @dfn{documentation string} just after the lambda list. This string does not affect execution of the function; it is a kind of comment, but a systematized comment which actually appears inside the Lisp world and can be used by the Emacs help facilities. @xref{Documentation}, for how the documentation string is accessed. It is a good idea to provide documentation strings for all the functions in your program, even those that are called only from within your program. Documentation strings are like comments, except that they are easier to access. The first line of the documentation string should stand on its own, because @code{apropos} displays just this first line. It should consist of one or two complete sentences that summarize the function's purpose. The start of the documentation string is usually indented in the source file, but since these spaces come before the starting double-quote, they are not part of the string. Some people make a practice of indenting any additional lines of the string so that the text lines up in the program source. @emph{That is a mistake.} The indentation of the following lines is inside the string; what looks nice in the source code will look ugly when displayed by the help commands. You may wonder how the documentation string could be optional, since there are required components of the function that follow it (the body). Since evaluation of a string returns that string, without any side effects, it has no effect if it is not the last form in the body. Thus, in practice, there is no confusion between the first form of the body and the documentation string; if the only body form is a string then it serves both as the return value and as the documentation. The last line of the documentation string can specify calling conventions different from the actual function arguments. Write text like this: @example \(fn @var{arglist}) @end example @noindent following a blank line, at the beginning of the line, with no newline following it inside the documentation string. (The @samp{\} is used to avoid confusing the Emacs motion commands.) The calling convention specified in this way appears in help messages in place of the one derived from the actual arguments of the function. This feature is particularly useful for macro definitions, since the arguments written in a macro definition often do not correspond to the way users think of the parts of the macro call. Do not use this feature if you want to deprecate the calling convention and favor the one you advertise by the above specification. Instead, use the @code{advertised-calling-convention} declaration (@pxref{Declare Form}) or @code{set-advertised-calling-convention} (@pxref{Obsolete Functions}), because these two will cause the byte compiler emit a warning message when it compiles Lisp programs which use the deprecated calling convention. @node Function Names @section Naming a Function @cindex function definition @cindex named function @cindex function name A symbol can serve as the name of a function. This happens when the symbol's @dfn{function cell} (@pxref{Symbol Components}) contains a function object (e.g., a lambda expression). Then the symbol itself becomes a valid, callable function, equivalent to the function object in its function cell. The contents of the function cell are also called the symbol's @dfn{function definition}. The procedure of using a symbol's function definition in place of the symbol is called @dfn{symbol function indirection}; see @ref{Function Indirection}. If you have not given a symbol a function definition, its function cell is said to be @dfn{void}, and it cannot be used as a function. In practice, nearly all functions have names, and are referred to by their names. You can create a named Lisp function by defining a lambda expression and putting it in a function cell (@pxref{Function Cells}). However, it is more common to use the @code{defun} special form, described in the next section. @ifnottex @xref{Defining Functions}. @end ifnottex We give functions names because it is convenient to refer to them by their names in Lisp expressions. Also, a named Lisp function can easily refer to itself---it can be recursive. Furthermore, primitives can only be referred to textually by their names, since primitive function objects (@pxref{Primitive Function Type}) have no read syntax. A function need not have a unique name. A given function object @emph{usually} appears in the function cell of only one symbol, but this is just a convention. It is easy to store it in several symbols using @code{fset}; then each of the symbols is a valid name for the same function. Note that a symbol used as a function name may also be used as a variable; these two uses of a symbol are independent and do not conflict. (This is not the case in some dialects of Lisp, like Scheme.) By convention, if a function's symbol consists of two names separated by @samp{--}, the function is intended for internal use and the first part names the file defining the function. For example, a function named @code{vc-git--rev-parse} is an internal function defined in @file{vc-git.el}. Internal-use functions written in C have names ending in @samp{-internal}, e.g., @code{bury-buffer-internal}. Emacs code contributed before 2018 may follow other internal-use naming conventions, which are being phased out. @node Defining Functions @section Defining Functions @cindex defining a function We usually give a name to a function when it is first created. This is called @dfn{defining a function}, and it is done with the @code{defun} macro. @defmac defun name args [doc] [declare] [interactive] body@dots{} @code{defun} is the usual way to define new Lisp functions. It defines the symbol @var{name} as a function with argument list @var{args} and body forms given by @var{body}. Neither @var{name} nor @var{args} should be quoted. @var{doc}, if present, should be a string specifying the function's documentation string (@pxref{Function Documentation}). @var{declare}, if present, should be a @code{declare} form specifying function metadata (@pxref{Declare Form}). @var{interactive}, if present, should be an @code{interactive} form specifying how the function is to be called interactively (@pxref{Interactive Call}). The return value of @code{defun} is undefined. Here are some examples: @example @group (defun foo () 5) (foo) @result{} 5 @end group @group (defun bar (a &optional b &rest c) (list a b c)) (bar 1 2 3 4 5) @result{} (1 2 (3 4 5)) @end group @group (bar 1) @result{} (1 nil nil) @end group @group (bar) @error{} Wrong number of arguments. @end group @group (defun capitalize-backwards () "Upcase the last letter of the word at point." (interactive) (backward-word 1) (forward-word 1) (backward-char 1) (capitalize-word 1)) @end group @end example @cindex override existing functions @cindex redefine existing functions Be careful not to redefine existing functions unintentionally. @code{defun} redefines even primitive functions such as @code{car} without any hesitation or notification. Emacs does not prevent you from doing this, because redefining a function is sometimes done deliberately, and there is no way to distinguish deliberate redefinition from unintentional redefinition. @end defmac @cindex function aliases @cindex alias, for functions @defun defalias name definition &optional doc @anchor{Definition of defalias} This function defines the symbol @var{name} as a function, with definition @var{definition} (which can be any valid Lisp function). Its return value is @emph{undefined}. If @var{doc} is non-@code{nil}, it becomes the function documentation of @var{name}. Otherwise, any documentation provided by @var{definition} is used. @cindex defalias-fset-function property Internally, @code{defalias} normally uses @code{fset} to set the definition. If @var{name} has a @code{defalias-fset-function} property, however, the associated value is used as a function to call in place of @code{fset}. The proper place to use @code{defalias} is where a specific function name is being defined---especially where that name appears explicitly in the source file being loaded. This is because @code{defalias} records which file defined the function, just like @code{defun} (@pxref{Unloading}). By contrast, in programs that manipulate function definitions for other purposes, it is better to use @code{fset}, which does not keep such records. @xref{Function Cells}. @end defun You cannot create a new primitive function with @code{defun} or @code{defalias}, but you can use them to change the function definition of any symbol, even one such as @code{car} or @code{x-popup-menu} whose normal definition is a primitive. However, this is risky: for instance, it is next to impossible to redefine @code{car} without breaking Lisp completely. Redefining an obscure function such as @code{x-popup-menu} is less dangerous, but it still may not work as you expect. If there are calls to the primitive from C code, they call the primitive's C definition directly, so changing the symbol's definition will have no effect on them. See also @code{defsubst}, which defines a function like @code{defun} and tells the Lisp compiler to perform inline expansion on it. @xref{Inline Functions}. Alternatively, you can define a function by providing the code which will inline it as a compiler macro. The following macros make this possible. @c FIXME: Can define-inline use the interactive spec? @defmac define-inline name args [doc] [declare] body@dots{} Define a function @var{name} by providing code that does its inlining, as a compiler macro. The function will accept the argument list @var{args} and will have the specified @var{body}. If present, @var{doc} should be the function's documentation string (@pxref{Function Documentation}); @var{declare}, if present, should be a @code{declare} form (@pxref{Declare Form}) specifying the function's metadata. @end defmac Functions defined via @code{define-inline} have several advantages with respect to macros defined by @code{defsubst} or @code{defmacro}: @itemize @minus @item They can be passed to @code{mapcar} (@pxref{Mapping Functions}). @item They are more efficient. @item They can be used as @dfn{place forms} to store values (@pxref{Generalized Variables}). @item They behave in a more predictable way than @code{cl-defsubst} (@pxref{Argument Lists,,, cl, Common Lisp Extensions for GNU Emacs Lisp}). @end itemize Like @code{defmacro}, a function inlined with @code{define-inline} inherits the scoping rules, either dynamic or lexical, from the call site. @xref{Variable Scoping}. The following macros should be used in the body of a function defined by @code{define-inline}. @defmac inline-quote expression Quote @var{expression} for @code{define-inline}. This is similar to the backquote (@pxref{Backquote}), but quotes code and accepts only @code{,}, not @code{,@@}. @end defmac @defmac inline-letevals (bindings@dots{}) body@dots{} This is similar to @code{let} (@pxref{Local Variables}): it sets up local variables as specified by @var{bindings}, and then evaluates @var{body} with those bindings in effect. Each element of @var{bindings} should be either a symbol or a list of the form @w{@code{(@var{var} @var{expr})}}; the result is to evaluate @var{expr} and bind @var{var} to the result. The tail of @var{bindings} can be either @code{nil} or a symbol which should hold a list of arguments, in which case each argument is evaluated, and the symbol is bound to the resulting list. @end defmac @defmac inline-const-p expression Return non-@code{nil} if the value of @var{expression} is already known. @end defmac @defmac inline-const-val expression Return the value of @var{expression}. @end defmac @defmac inline-error format &rest args Signal an error, formatting @var{args} according to @var{format}. @end defmac Here's an example of using @code{define-inline}: @lisp (define-inline myaccessor (obj) (inline-letevals (obj) (inline-quote (if (foo-p ,obj) (aref (cdr ,obj) 3) (aref ,obj 2))))) @end lisp @noindent This is equivalent to @lisp (defsubst myaccessor (obj) (if (foo-p obj) (aref (cdr obj) 3) (aref obj 2))) @end lisp @node Calling Functions @section Calling Functions @cindex function invocation @cindex calling a function Defining functions is only half the battle. Functions don't do anything until you @dfn{call} them, i.e., tell them to run. Calling a function is also known as @dfn{invocation}. The most common way of invoking a function is by evaluating a list. For example, evaluating the list @code{(concat "a" "b")} calls the function @code{concat} with arguments @code{"a"} and @code{"b"}. @xref{Evaluation}, for a description of evaluation. When you write a list as an expression in your program, you specify which function to call, and how many arguments to give it, in the text of the program. Usually that's just what you want. Occasionally you need to compute at run time which function to call. To do that, use the function @code{funcall}. When you also need to determine at run time how many arguments to pass, use @code{apply}. @defun funcall function &rest arguments @code{funcall} calls @var{function} with @var{arguments}, and returns whatever @var{function} returns. Since @code{funcall} is a function, all of its arguments, including @var{function}, are evaluated before @code{funcall} is called. This means that you can use any expression to obtain the function to be called. It also means that @code{funcall} does not see the expressions you write for the @var{arguments}, only their values. These values are @emph{not} evaluated a second time in the act of calling @var{function}; the operation of @code{funcall} is like the normal procedure for calling a function, once its arguments have already been evaluated. The argument @var{function} must be either a Lisp function or a primitive function. Special forms and macros are not allowed, because they make sense only when given the unevaluated argument expressions. @code{funcall} cannot provide these because, as we saw above, it never knows them in the first place. If you need to use @code{funcall} to call a command and make it behave as if invoked interactively, use @code{funcall-interactively} (@pxref{Interactive Call}). @example @group (setq f 'list) @result{} list @end group @group (funcall f 'x 'y 'z) @result{} (x y z) @end group @group (funcall f 'x 'y '(z)) @result{} (x y (z)) @end group @group (funcall 'and t nil) @error{} Invalid function: # @end group @end example Compare these examples with the examples of @code{apply}. @end defun @defun apply function &rest arguments @code{apply} calls @var{function} with @var{arguments}, just like @code{funcall} but with one difference: the last of @var{arguments} is a list of objects, which are passed to @var{function} as separate arguments, rather than a single list. We say that @code{apply} @dfn{spreads} this list so that each individual element becomes an argument. @code{apply} returns the result of calling @var{function}. As with @code{funcall}, @var{function} must either be a Lisp function or a primitive function; special forms and macros do not make sense in @code{apply}. @example @group (setq f 'list) @result{} list @end group @group (apply f 'x 'y 'z) @error{} Wrong type argument: listp, z @end group @group (apply '+ 1 2 '(3 4)) @result{} 10 @end group @group (apply '+ '(1 2 3 4)) @result{} 10 @end group @group (apply 'append '((a b c) nil (x y z) nil)) @result{} (a b c x y z) @end group @end example For an interesting example of using @code{apply}, see @ref{Definition of mapcar}. @end defun @cindex partial application of functions @cindex currying Sometimes it is useful to fix some of the function's arguments at certain values, and leave the rest of arguments for when the function is actually called. The act of fixing some of the function's arguments is called @dfn{partial application} of the function@footnote{ This is related to, but different from @dfn{currying}, which transforms a function that takes multiple arguments in such a way that it can be called as a chain of functions, each one with a single argument.}. The result is a new function that accepts the rest of arguments and calls the original function with all the arguments combined. Here's how to do partial application in Emacs Lisp: @defun apply-partially func &rest args This function returns a new function which, when called, will call @var{func} with the list of arguments composed from @var{args} and additional arguments specified at the time of the call. If @var{func} accepts @var{n} arguments, then a call to @code{apply-partially} with @w{@code{@var{m} < @var{n}}} arguments will produce a new function of @w{@code{@var{n} - @var{m}}} arguments. Here's how we could define the built-in function @code{1+}, if it didn't exist, using @code{apply-partially} and @code{+}, another built-in function: @example @group (defalias '1+ (apply-partially '+ 1) "Increment argument by one.") @end group @group (1+ 10) @result{} 11 @end group @end example @end defun @cindex functionals It is common for Lisp functions to accept functions as arguments or find them in data structures (especially in hook variables and property lists) and call them using @code{funcall} or @code{apply}. Functions that accept function arguments are often called @dfn{functionals}. Sometimes, when you call a functional, it is useful to supply a no-op function as the argument. Here are two different kinds of no-op function: @defun identity arg This function returns @var{arg} and has no side effects. @end defun @defun ignore &rest args This function ignores any arguments and returns @code{nil}. @end defun Some functions are user-visible @dfn{commands}, which can be called interactively (usually by a key sequence). It is possible to invoke such a command exactly as though it was called interactively, by using the @code{call-interactively} function. @xref{Interactive Call}. @node Mapping Functions @section Mapping Functions @cindex mapping functions A @dfn{mapping function} applies a given function (@emph{not} a special form or macro) to each element of a list or other collection. Emacs Lisp has several such functions; this section describes @code{mapcar}, @code{mapc}, @code{mapconcat}, and @code{mapcan}, which map over a list. @xref{Definition of mapatoms}, for the function @code{mapatoms} which maps over the symbols in an obarray. @xref{Definition of maphash}, for the function @code{maphash} which maps over key/value associations in a hash table. These mapping functions do not allow char-tables because a char-table is a sparse array whose nominal range of indices is very large. To map over a char-table in a way that deals properly with its sparse nature, use the function @code{map-char-table} (@pxref{Char-Tables}). @defun mapcar function sequence @anchor{Definition of mapcar} @code{mapcar} applies @var{function} to each element of @var{sequence} in turn, and returns a list of the results. The argument @var{sequence} can be any kind of sequence except a char-table; that is, a list, a vector, a bool-vector, or a string. The result is always a list. The length of the result is the same as the length of @var{sequence}. For example: @example @group (mapcar 'car '((a b) (c d) (e f))) @result{} (a c e) (mapcar '1+ [1 2 3]) @result{} (2 3 4) (mapcar 'string "abc") @result{} ("a" "b" "c") @end group @group ;; @r{Call each function in @code{my-hooks}.} (mapcar 'funcall my-hooks) @end group @group (defun mapcar* (function &rest args) "Apply FUNCTION to successive cars of all ARGS. Return the list of results." ;; @r{If no list is exhausted,} (if (not (memq nil args)) ;; @r{apply function to @sc{car}s.} (cons (apply function (mapcar 'car args)) (apply 'mapcar* function ;; @r{Recurse for rest of elements.} (mapcar 'cdr args))))) @end group @group (mapcar* 'cons '(a b c) '(1 2 3 4)) @result{} ((a . 1) (b . 2) (c . 3)) @end group @end example @end defun @defun mapcan function sequence This function applies @var{function} to each element of @var{sequence}, like @code{mapcar}, but instead of collecting the results into a list, it returns a single list with all the elements of the results (which must be lists), by altering the results (using @code{nconc}; @pxref{Rearrangement}). Like with @code{mapcar}, @var{sequence} can be of any type except a char-table. @example @group ;; @r{Contrast this:} (mapcar 'list '(a b c d)) @result{} ((a) (b) (c) (d)) ;; @r{with this:} (mapcan 'list '(a b c d)) @result{} (a b c d) @end group @end example @end defun @defun mapc function sequence @code{mapc} is like @code{mapcar} except that @var{function} is used for side-effects only---the values it returns are ignored, not collected into a list. @code{mapc} always returns @var{sequence}. @end defun @defun mapconcat function sequence separator @code{mapconcat} applies @var{function} to each element of @var{sequence}; the results, which must be sequences of characters (strings, vectors, or lists), are concatenated into a single string return value. Between each pair of result sequences, @code{mapconcat} inserts the characters from @var{separator}, which also must be a string, or a vector or list of characters. @xref{Sequences Arrays Vectors}. The argument @var{function} must be a function that can take one argument and returns a sequence of characters: a string, a vector, or a list. The argument @var{sequence} can be any kind of sequence except a char-table; that is, a list, a vector, a bool-vector, or a string. @example @group (mapconcat 'symbol-name '(The cat in the hat) " ") @result{} "The cat in the hat" @end group @group (mapconcat (function (lambda (x) (format "%c" (1+ x)))) "HAL-8000" "") @result{} "IBM.9111" @end group @end example @end defun @node Anonymous Functions @section Anonymous Functions @cindex anonymous function Although functions are usually defined with @code{defun} and given names at the same time, it is sometimes convenient to use an explicit lambda expression---an @dfn{anonymous function}. Anonymous functions are valid wherever function names are. They are often assigned as variable values, or as arguments to functions; for instance, you might pass one as the @var{function} argument to @code{mapcar}, which applies that function to each element of a list (@pxref{Mapping Functions}). @xref{describe-symbols example}, for a realistic example of this. When defining a lambda expression that is to be used as an anonymous function, you can in principle use any method to construct the list. But typically you should use the @code{lambda} macro, or the @code{function} special form, or the @code{#'} read syntax: @defmac lambda args [doc] [interactive] body@dots{} This macro returns an anonymous function with argument list @var{args}, documentation string @var{doc} (if any), interactive spec @var{interactive} (if any), and body forms given by @var{body}. Under dynamic binding, this macro effectively makes @code{lambda} forms self-quoting: evaluating a form whose @sc{car} is @code{lambda} yields the form itself: @example (lambda (x) (* x x)) @result{} (lambda (x) (* x x)) @end example Note that when evaluating under lexical binding the result is a closure object (@pxref{Closures}). The @code{lambda} form has one other effect: it tells the Emacs evaluator and byte-compiler that its argument is a function, by using @code{function} as a subroutine (see below). @end defmac @defspec function function-object @cindex function quoting This special form returns @var{function-object} without evaluating it. In this, it is similar to @code{quote} (@pxref{Quoting}). But unlike @code{quote}, it also serves as a note to the Emacs evaluator and byte-compiler that @var{function-object} is intended to be used as a function. Assuming @var{function-object} is a valid lambda expression, this has two effects: @itemize @item When the code is byte-compiled, @var{function-object} is compiled into a byte-code function object (@pxref{Byte Compilation}). @item When lexical binding is enabled, @var{function-object} is converted into a closure. @xref{Closures}. @end itemize When @var{function-object} is a symbol and the code is byte compiled, the byte-compiler will warn if that function is not defined or might not be known at run time. @end defspec @cindex @samp{#'} syntax The read syntax @code{#'} is a short-hand for using @code{function}. The following forms are all equivalent: @example (lambda (x) (* x x)) (function (lambda (x) (* x x))) #'(lambda (x) (* x x)) @end example In the following example, we define a @code{change-property} function that takes a function as its third argument, followed by a @code{double-property} function that makes use of @code{change-property} by passing it an anonymous function: @example @group (defun change-property (symbol prop function) (let ((value (get symbol prop))) (put symbol prop (funcall function value)))) @end group @group (defun double-property (symbol prop) (change-property symbol prop (lambda (x) (* 2 x)))) @end group @end example @noindent Note that we do not quote the @code{lambda} form. If you compile the above code, the anonymous function is also compiled. This would not happen if, say, you had constructed the anonymous function by quoting it as a list: @c Do not unquote this lambda! @example @group (defun double-property (symbol prop) (change-property symbol prop '(lambda (x) (* 2 x)))) @end group @end example @noindent In that case, the anonymous function is kept as a lambda expression in the compiled code. The byte-compiler cannot assume this list is a function, even though it looks like one, since it does not know that @code{change-property} intends to use it as a function. @node Generic Functions @section Generic Functions @cindex generic functions @cindex polymorphism Functions defined using @code{defun} have a hard-coded set of assumptions about the types and expected values of their arguments. For example, a function that was designed to handle values of its argument that are either numbers or lists of numbers will fail or signal an error if called with a value of any other type, such as a vector or a string. This happens because the implementation of the function is not prepared to deal with types other than those assumed during the design. By contrast, object-oriented programs use @dfn{polymorphic functions}: a set of specialized functions having the same name, each one of which was written for a certain specific set of argument types. Which of the functions is actually called is decided at run time based on the types of the actual arguments. @cindex CLOS Emacs provides support for polymorphism. Like other Lisp environments, notably Common Lisp and its Common Lisp Object System (@acronym{CLOS}), this support is based on @dfn{generic functions}. The Emacs generic functions closely follow @acronym{CLOS}, including use of similar names, so if you have experience with @acronym{CLOS}, the rest of this section will sound very familiar. A generic function specifies an abstract operation, by defining its name and list of arguments, but (usually) no implementation. The actual implementation for several specific classes of arguments is provided by @dfn{methods}, which should be defined separately. Each method that implements a generic function has the same name as the generic function, but the method's definition indicates what kinds of arguments it can handle by @dfn{specializing} the arguments defined by the generic function. These @dfn{argument specializers} can be more or less specific; for example, a @code{string} type is more specific than a more general type, such as @code{sequence}. Note that, unlike in message-based OO languages, such as C@t{++} and Simula, methods that implement generic functions don't belong to a class, they belong to the generic function they implement. When a generic function is invoked, it selects the applicable methods by comparing the actual arguments passed by the caller with the argument specializers of each method. A method is applicable if the actual arguments of the call are compatible with the method's specializers. If more than one method is applicable, they are combined using certain rules, described below, and the combination then handles the call. @defmac cl-defgeneric name arguments [documentation] [options-and-methods@dots{}] &rest body This macro defines a generic function with the specified @var{name} and @var{arguments}. If @var{body} is present, it provides the default implementation. If @var{documentation} is present (it should always be), it specifies the documentation string for the generic function, in the form @code{(:documentation @var{docstring})}. The optional @var{options-and-methods} can be one of the following forms: @table @code @item (declare @var{declarations}) A declare form, as described in @ref{Declare Form}. @item (:argument-precedence-order &rest @var{args}) This form affects the sorting order for combining applicable methods. Normally, when two methods are compared during combination, method arguments are examined left to right, and the first method whose argument specializer is more specific will come before the other one. The order defined by this form overrides that, and the arguments are examined according to their order in this form, and not left to right. @item (:method [@var{qualifiers}@dots{}] args &rest body) This form defines a method like @code{cl-defmethod} does. @end table @end defmac @defmac cl-defmethod name [qualifier] arguments [&context (expr spec)@dots{}] &rest [docstring] body This macro defines a particular implementation for the generic function called @var{name}. The implementation code is given by @var{body}. If present, @var{docstring} is the documentation string for the method. The @var{arguments} list, which must be identical in all the methods that implement a generic function, and must match the argument list of that function, provides argument specializers of the form @code{(@var{arg} @var{spec})}, where @var{arg} is the argument name as specified in the @code{cl-defgeneric} call, and @var{spec} is one of the following specializer forms: @table @code @item @var{type} This specializer requires the argument to be of the given @var{type}, one of the types from the type hierarchy described below. @item (eql @var{object}) This specializer requires the argument be @code{eql} to the given @var{object}. @item (head @var{object}) The argument must be a cons cell whose @code{car} is @code{eql} to @var{object}. @item @var{struct-type} The argument must be an instance of a class named @var{struct-type} defined with @code{cl-defstruct} (@pxref{Structures,,, cl, Common Lisp Extensions for GNU Emacs Lisp}), or of one of its child classes. @end table Method definitions can make use of a new argument-list keyword, @code{&context}, which introduces extra specializers that test the environment at the time the method is run. This keyword should appear after the list of required arguments, but before any @code{&rest} or @code{&optional} keywords. The @code{&context} specializers look much like regular argument specializers---(@var{expr} @var{spec})---except that @var{expr} is an expression to be evaluated in the current context, and the @var{spec} is a value to compare against. For example, @code{&context (overwrite-mode (eql t))} will make the method applicable only when @code{overwrite-mode} is turned on. The @code{&context} keyword can be followed by any number of context specializers. Because the context specializers are not part of the generic function's argument signature, they may be omitted in methods that don't require them. The type specializer, @code{(@var{arg} @var{type})}, can specify one of the @dfn{system types} in the following list. When a parent type is specified, an argument whose type is any of its more specific child types, as well as grand-children, grand-grand-children, etc. will also be compatible. @table @code @item integer Parent type: @code{number}. @item number @item null Parent type: @code{symbol} @item symbol @item string Parent type: @code{array}. @item array Parent type: @code{sequence}. @item cons Parent type: @code{list}. @item list Parent type: @code{sequence}. @item marker @item overlay @item float Parent type: @code{number}. @item window-configuration @item process @item window @item subr @item compiled-function @item buffer @item char-table Parent type: @code{array}. @item bool-vector Parent type: @code{array}. @item vector Parent type: @code{array}. @item frame @item hash-table @item font-spec @item font-entity @item font-object @end table The optional @var{qualifier} allows combining several applicable methods. If it is not present, the defined method is a @dfn{primary} method, responsible for providing the primary implementation of the generic function for the specialized arguments. You can also define @dfn{auxiliary methods}, by using one of the following values as @var{qualifier}: @table @code @item :before This auxiliary method will run before the primary method. More accurately, all the @code{:before} methods will run before the primary, in the most-specific-first order. @item :after This auxiliary method will run after the primary method. More accurately, all such methods will run after the primary, in the most-specific-last order. @item :around This auxiliary method will run @emph{instead} of the primary method. The most specific of such methods will be run before any other method. Such methods normally use @code{cl-call-next-method}, described below, to invoke the other auxiliary or primary methods. @item :extra @var{string} This allows you to add more methods, distinguished by @var{string}, for the same specializers and qualifiers. @end table Functions defined using @code{cl-defmethod} cannot be made interactive, i.e.@: commands (@pxref{Defining Commands}), by adding the @code{interactive} form to them. If you need a polymorphic command, we recommend defining a normal command that calls a polymorphic function defined via @code{cl-defgeneric} and @code{cl-defmethod}. @end defmac @cindex dispatch of methods for generic function @cindex multiple-dispatch methods Each time a generic function is called, it builds the @dfn{effective method} which will handle this invocation by combining the applicable methods defined for the function. The process of finding the applicable methods and producing the effective method is called @dfn{dispatch}. The applicable methods are those all of whose specializers are compatible with the actual arguments of the call. Since all of the arguments must be compatible with the specializers, they all determine whether a method is applicable. Methods that explicitly specialize more than one argument are called @dfn{multiple-dispatch methods}. The applicable methods are sorted into the order in which they will be combined. The method whose left-most argument specializer is the most specific one will come first in the order. (Specifying @code{:argument-precedence-order} as part of @code{cl-defmethod} overrides that, as described above.) If the method body calls @code{cl-call-next-method}, the next most-specific method will run. If there are applicable @code{:around} methods, the most-specific of them will run first; it should call @code{cl-call-next-method} to run any of the less specific @code{:around} methods. Next, the @code{:before} methods run in the order of their specificity, followed by the primary method, and lastly the @code{:after} methods in the reverse order of their specificity. @defun cl-call-next-method &rest args When invoked from within the lexical body of a primary or an @code{:around} auxiliary method, call the next applicable method for the same generic function. Normally, it is called with no arguments, which means to call the next applicable method with the same arguments that the calling method was invoked. Otherwise, the specified arguments are used instead. @end defun @defun cl-next-method-p This function, when called from within the lexical body of a primary or an @code{:around} auxiliary method, returns non-@code{nil} if there is a next method to call. @end defun @node Function Cells @section Accessing Function Cell Contents The @dfn{function definition} of a symbol is the object stored in the function cell of the symbol. The functions described here access, test, and set the function cell of symbols. See also the function @code{indirect-function}. @xref{Definition of indirect-function}. @defun symbol-function symbol @kindex void-function This returns the object in the function cell of @var{symbol}. It does not check that the returned object is a legitimate function. If the function cell is void, the return value is @code{nil}. To distinguish between a function cell that is void and one set to @code{nil}, use @code{fboundp} (see below). @example @group (defun bar (n) (+ n 2)) (symbol-function 'bar) @result{} (lambda (n) (+ n 2)) @end group @group (fset 'baz 'bar) @result{} bar @end group @group (symbol-function 'baz) @result{} bar @end group @end example @end defun @cindex void function cell If you have never given a symbol any function definition, we say that that symbol's function cell is @dfn{void}. In other words, the function cell does not have any Lisp object in it. If you try to call the symbol as a function, Emacs signals a @code{void-function} error. Note that void is not the same as @code{nil} or the symbol @code{void}. The symbols @code{nil} and @code{void} are Lisp objects, and can be stored into a function cell just as any other object can be (and they can be valid functions if you define them in turn with @code{defun}). A void function cell contains no object whatsoever. You can test the voidness of a symbol's function definition with @code{fboundp}. After you have given a symbol a function definition, you can make it void once more using @code{fmakunbound}. @defun fboundp symbol This function returns @code{t} if the symbol has an object in its function cell, @code{nil} otherwise. It does not check that the object is a legitimate function. @end defun @defun fmakunbound symbol This function makes @var{symbol}'s function cell void, so that a subsequent attempt to access this cell will cause a @code{void-function} error. It returns @var{symbol}. (See also @code{makunbound}, in @ref{Void Variables}.) @example @group (defun foo (x) x) (foo 1) @result{}1 @end group @group (fmakunbound 'foo) @result{} foo @end group @group (foo 1) @error{} Symbol's function definition is void: foo @end group @end example @end defun @defun fset symbol definition This function stores @var{definition} in the function cell of @var{symbol}. The result is @var{definition}. Normally @var{definition} should be a function or the name of a function, but this is not checked. The argument @var{symbol} is an ordinary evaluated argument. The primary use of this function is as a subroutine by constructs that define or alter functions, like @code{defun} or @code{advice-add} (@pxref{Advising Functions}). You can also use it to give a symbol a function definition that is not a function, e.g., a keyboard macro (@pxref{Keyboard Macros}): @example ;; @r{Define a named keyboard macro.} (fset 'kill-two-lines "\^u2\^k") @result{} "\^u2\^k" @end example It you wish to use @code{fset} to make an alternate name for a function, consider using @code{defalias} instead. @xref{Definition of defalias}. @end defun @node Closures @section Closures As explained in @ref{Variable Scoping}, Emacs can optionally enable lexical binding of variables. When lexical binding is enabled, any named function that you create (e.g., with @code{defun}), as well as any anonymous function that you create using the @code{lambda} macro or the @code{function} special form or the @code{#'} syntax (@pxref{Anonymous Functions}), is automatically converted into a @dfn{closure}. @cindex closure A closure is a function that also carries a record of the lexical environment that existed when the function was defined. When it is invoked, any lexical variable references within its definition use the retained lexical environment. In all other respects, closures behave much like ordinary functions; in particular, they can be called in the same way as ordinary functions. @xref{Lexical Binding}, for an example of using a closure. Currently, an Emacs Lisp closure object is represented by a list with the symbol @code{closure} as the first element, a list representing the lexical environment as the second element, and the argument list and body forms as the remaining elements: @example ;; @r{lexical binding is enabled.} (lambda (x) (* x x)) @result{} (closure (t) (x) (* x x)) @end example @noindent However, the fact that the internal structure of a closure is exposed to the rest of the Lisp world is considered an internal implementation detail. For this reason, we recommend against directly examining or altering the structure of closure objects. @node Advising Functions @section Advising Emacs Lisp Functions @cindex advising functions @cindex piece of advice When you need to modify a function defined in another library, or when you need to modify a hook like @code{@var{foo}-function}, a process filter, or basically any variable or object field which holds a function value, you can use the appropriate setter function, such as @code{fset} or @code{defun} for named functions, @code{setq} for hook variables, or @code{set-process-filter} for process filters, but those are often too blunt, completely throwing away the previous value. The @dfn{advice} feature lets you add to the existing definition of a function, by @dfn{advising the function}. This is a cleaner method than redefining the whole function. Emacs's advice system provides two sets of primitives for that: the core set, for function values held in variables and object fields (with the corresponding primitives being @code{add-function} and @code{remove-function}) and another set layered on top of it for named functions (with the main primitives being @code{advice-add} and @code{advice-remove}). As a trivial example, here's how to add advice that'll modify the return value of a function every time it's called: @example (defun my-double (x) (* x 2)) (defun my-increase (x) (+ x 1)) (advice-add 'my-double :filter-return #'my-increase) @end example After adding this advice, if you call @code{my-double} with @samp{3}, the return value will be @samp{7}. To remove this advice, say @example (advice-remove 'my-double #'my-increase) @end example A more advanced example would be to trace the calls to the process filter of a process @var{proc}: @example (defun my-tracing-function (proc string) (message "Proc %S received %S" proc string)) (add-function :before (process-filter @var{proc}) #'my-tracing-function) @end example This will cause the process's output to be passed to @code{my-tracing-function} before being passed to the original process filter. @code{my-tracing-function} receives the same arguments as the original function. When you're done with it, you can revert to the untraced behavior with: @example (remove-function (process-filter @var{proc}) #'my-tracing-function) @end example Similarly, if you want to trace the execution of the function named @code{display-buffer}, you could use: @example (defun his-tracing-function (orig-fun &rest args) (message "display-buffer called with args %S" args) (let ((res (apply orig-fun args))) (message "display-buffer returned %S" res) res)) (advice-add 'display-buffer :around #'his-tracing-function) @end example Here, @code{his-tracing-function} is called instead of the original function and receives the original function (additionally to that function's arguments) as argument, so it can call it if and when it needs to. When you're tired of seeing this output, you can revert to the untraced behavior with: @example (advice-remove 'display-buffer #'his-tracing-function) @end example The arguments @code{:before} and @code{:around} used in the above examples specify how the two functions are composed, since there are many different ways to do it. The added function is also called a piece of @emph{advice}. @menu * Core Advising Primitives:: Primitives to manipulate advice. * Advising Named Functions:: Advising named functions. * Advice Combinators:: Ways to compose advice. * Porting Old Advice:: Adapting code using the old defadvice. @end menu @node Core Advising Primitives @subsection Primitives to manipulate advices @cindex advice, add and remove @defmac add-function where place function &optional props This macro is the handy way to add the advice @var{function} to the function stored in @var{place} (@pxref{Generalized Variables}). @var{where} determines how @var{function} is composed with the existing function, e.g., whether @var{function} should be called before, or after the original function. @xref{Advice Combinators}, for the list of available ways to compose the two functions. When modifying a variable (whose name will usually end with @code{-function}), you can choose whether @var{function} is used globally or only in the current buffer: if @var{place} is just a symbol, then @var{function} is added to the global value of @var{place}. Whereas if @var{place} is of the form @code{(local @var{symbol})}, where @var{symbol} is an expression which returns the variable name, then @var{function} will only be added in the current buffer. Finally, if you want to modify a lexical variable, you will have to use @code{(var @var{variable})}. Every function added with @code{add-function} can be accompanied by an association list of properties @var{props}. Currently only two of those properties have a special meaning: @table @code @item name This gives a name to the advice, which @code{remove-function} can use to identify which function to remove. Typically used when @var{function} is an anonymous function. @item depth This specifies how to order the advice, should several pieces of advice be present. By default, the depth is 0. A depth of 100 indicates that this piece of advice should be kept as deep as possible, whereas a depth of @minus{}100 indicates that it should stay as the outermost piece. When two pieces of advice specify the same depth, the most recently added one will be outermost. For @code{:before} advice, being outermost means that this advice will be run first, before any other advice, whereas being innermost means that it will run right before the original function, with no other advice run between itself and the original function. Similarly, for @code{:after} advice innermost means that it will run right after the original function, with no other advice run in between, whereas outermost means that it will be run right at the end after all other advice. An innermost @code{:override} piece of advice will only override the original function and other pieces of advice will apply to it, whereas an outermost @code{:override} piece of advice will override not only the original function but all other advice applied to it as well. @end table If @var{function} is not interactive, then the combined function will inherit the interactive spec, if any, of the original function. Else, the combined function will be interactive and will use the interactive spec of @var{function}. One exception: if the interactive spec of @var{function} is a function (i.e., a @code{lambda} expression or an @code{fbound} symbol rather than an expression or a string), then the interactive spec of the combined function will be a call to that function with as sole argument the interactive spec of the original function. To interpret the spec received as argument, use @code{advice-eval-interactive-spec}. Note: The interactive spec of @var{function} will apply to the combined function and should hence obey the calling convention of the combined function rather than that of @var{function}. In many cases, it makes no difference since they are identical, but it does matter for @code{:around}, @code{:filter-args}, and @code{:filter-return}, where @var{function} receives different arguments than the original function stored in @var{place}. @end defmac @defmac remove-function place function This macro removes @var{function} from the function stored in @var{place}. This only works if @var{function} was added to @var{place} using @code{add-function}. @var{function} is compared with functions added to @var{place} using @code{equal}, to try and make it work also with lambda expressions. It is additionally compared also with the @code{name} property of the functions added to @var{place}, which can be more reliable than comparing lambda expressions using @code{equal}. @end defmac @defun advice-function-member-p advice function-def Return non-@code{nil} if @var{advice} is already in @var{function-def}. Like for @code{remove-function} above, instead of @var{advice} being the actual function, it can also be the @code{name} of the piece of advice. @end defun @defun advice-function-mapc f function-def Call the function @var{f} for every piece of advice that was added to @var{function-def}. @var{f} is called with two arguments: the advice function and its properties. @end defun @defun advice-eval-interactive-spec spec Evaluate the interactive @var{spec} just like an interactive call to a function with such a spec would, and then return the corresponding list of arguments that was built. E.g., @code{(advice-eval-interactive-spec "r\nP")} will return a list of three elements, containing the boundaries of the region and the current prefix argument. For instance, if you want to make the @kbd{C-x m} (@code{compose-mail}) command prompt for a @samp{From:} header, you could say something like this: @example (defun my-compose-mail-advice (orig &rest args) "Read From: address interactively." (interactive (lambda (spec) (let* ((user-mail-address (completing-read "From: " '("one.address@@example.net" "alternative.address@@example.net"))) (from (message-make-from user-full-name user-mail-address)) (spec (advice-eval-interactive-spec spec))) ;; Put the From header into the OTHER-HEADERS argument. (push (cons 'From from) (nth 2 spec)) spec))) (apply orig args)) (advice-add 'compose-mail :around #'my-compose-mail-advice) @end example @end defun @node Advising Named Functions @subsection Advising Named Functions @cindex advising named functions A common use of advice is for named functions and macros. You could just use @code{add-function} as in: @example (add-function :around (symbol-function '@var{fun}) #'his-tracing-function) @end example But you should use @code{advice-add} and @code{advice-remove} for that instead. This separate set of functions to manipulate pieces of advice applied to named functions, offers the following extra features compared to @code{add-function}: they know how to deal with macros and autoloaded functions, they let @code{describe-function} preserve the original docstring as well as document the added advice, and they let you add and remove advice before a function is even defined. @code{advice-add} can be useful for altering the behavior of existing calls to an existing function without having to redefine the whole function. However, it can be a source of bugs, since existing callers to the function may assume the old behavior, and work incorrectly when the behavior is changed by advice. Advice can also cause confusion in debugging, if the person doing the debugging does not notice or remember that the function has been modified by advice. For these reasons, advice should be reserved for the cases where you cannot modify a function's behavior in any other way. If it is possible to do the same thing via a hook, that is preferable (@pxref{Hooks}). If you simply want to change what a particular key does, it may be better to write a new command, and remap the old command's key bindings to the new one (@pxref{Remapping Commands}). In particular, Emacs's own source files should not put advice on functions in Emacs. (There are currently a few exceptions to this convention, but we aim to correct them.) Special forms (@pxref{Special Forms}) cannot be advised, however macros can be advised, in much the same way as functions. Of course, this will not affect code that has already been macro-expanded, so you need to make sure the advice is installed before the macro is expanded. It is possible to advise a primitive (@pxref{What Is a Function}), but one should typically @emph{not} do so, for two reasons. Firstly, some primitives are used by the advice mechanism, and advising them could cause an infinite recursion. Secondly, many primitives are called directly from C, and such calls ignore advice; hence, one ends up in a confusing situation where some calls (occurring from Lisp code) obey the advice and other calls (from C code) do not. @defmac define-advice symbol (where lambda-list &optional name depth) &rest body This macro defines a piece of advice and adds it to the function named @var{symbol}. The advice is an anonymous function if @var{name} is @code{nil} or a function named @code{symbol@@name}. See @code{advice-add} for explanation of other arguments. @end defmac @defun advice-add symbol where function &optional props Add the advice @var{function} to the named function @var{symbol}. @var{where} and @var{props} have the same meaning as for @code{add-function} (@pxref{Core Advising Primitives}). @end defun @defun advice-remove symbol function Remove the advice @var{function} from the named function @var{symbol}. @var{function} can also be the @code{name} of a piece of advice. @end defun @defun advice-member-p function symbol Return non-@code{nil} if the advice @var{function} is already in the named function @var{symbol}. @var{function} can also be the @code{name} of a piece of advice. @end defun @defun advice-mapc function symbol Call @var{function} for every piece of advice that was added to the named function @var{symbol}. @var{function} is called with two arguments: the advice function and its properties. @end defun @node Advice Combinators @subsection Ways to compose advice Here are the different possible values for the @var{where} argument of @code{add-function} and @code{advice-add}, specifying how the advice @var{function} and the original function should be composed. @table @code @item :before Call @var{function} before the old function. Both functions receive the same arguments, and the return value of the composition is the return value of the old function. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (apply @var{function} r) (apply @var{oldfun} r)) @end example @code{(add-function :before @var{funvar} @var{function})} is comparable for single-function hooks to @code{(add-hook '@var{hookvar} @var{function})} for normal hooks. @item :after Call @var{function} after the old function. Both functions receive the same arguments, and the return value of the composition is the return value of the old function. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (prog1 (apply @var{oldfun} r) (apply @var{function} r))) @end example @code{(add-function :after @var{funvar} @var{function})} is comparable for single-function hooks to @code{(add-hook '@var{hookvar} @var{function} 'append)} for normal hooks. @item :override This completely replaces the old function with the new one. The old function can of course be recovered if you later call @code{remove-function}. @item :around Call @var{function} instead of the old function, but provide the old function as an extra argument to @var{function}. This is the most flexible composition. For example, it lets you call the old function with different arguments, or many times, or within a let-binding, or you can sometimes delegate the work to the old function and sometimes override it completely. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (apply @var{function} @var{oldfun} r)) @end example @item :before-while Call @var{function} before the old function and don't call the old function if @var{function} returns @code{nil}. Both functions receive the same arguments, and the return value of the composition is the return value of the old function. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (and (apply @var{function} r) (apply @var{oldfun} r))) @end example @code{(add-function :before-while @var{funvar} @var{function})} is comparable for single-function hooks to @code{(add-hook '@var{hookvar} @var{function})} when @var{hookvar} is run via @code{run-hook-with-args-until-failure}. @item :before-until Call @var{function} before the old function and only call the old function if @var{function} returns @code{nil}. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (or (apply @var{function} r) (apply @var{oldfun} r))) @end example @code{(add-function :before-until @var{funvar} @var{function})} is comparable for single-function hooks to @code{(add-hook '@var{hookvar} @var{function})} when @var{hookvar} is run via @code{run-hook-with-args-until-success}. @item :after-while Call @var{function} after the old function and only if the old function returned non-@code{nil}. Both functions receive the same arguments, and the return value of the composition is the return value of @var{function}. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (and (apply @var{oldfun} r) (apply @var{function} r))) @end example @code{(add-function :after-while @var{funvar} @var{function})} is comparable for single-function hooks to @code{(add-hook '@var{hookvar} @var{function} 'append)} when @var{hookvar} is run via @code{run-hook-with-args-until-failure}. @item :after-until Call @var{function} after the old function and only if the old function returned @code{nil}. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (or (apply @var{oldfun} r) (apply @var{function} r))) @end example @code{(add-function :after-until @var{funvar} @var{function})} is comparable for single-function hooks to @code{(add-hook '@var{hookvar} @var{function} 'append)} when @var{hookvar} is run via @code{run-hook-with-args-until-success}. @item :filter-args Call @var{function} first and use the result (which should be a list) as the new arguments to pass to the old function. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (apply @var{oldfun} (funcall @var{function} r))) @end example @item :filter-return Call the old function first and pass the result to @var{function}. More specifically, the composition of the two functions behaves like: @example (lambda (&rest r) (funcall @var{function} (apply @var{oldfun} r))) @end example @end table @node Porting Old Advice @subsection Adapting code using the old defadvice @cindex old advices, porting @c NB: The following index entries deliberately avoid ``old'', @c an adjective that does not come to mind for those who grew up @c on ‘defadvice’ et al. For those folks, that way is ``current''. @c They discover its oldness reading this node. @cindex advices, porting from @code{defadvice} @findex defadvice @findex ad-activate A lot of code uses the old @code{defadvice} mechanism, which is largely made obsolete by the new @code{advice-add}, whose implementation and semantics is significantly simpler. An old piece of advice such as: @example (defadvice previous-line (before next-line-at-end (&optional arg try-vscroll)) "Insert an empty line when moving up from the top line." (if (and next-line-add-newlines (= arg 1) (save-excursion (beginning-of-line) (bobp))) (progn (beginning-of-line) (newline)))) @end example could be translated in the new advice mechanism into a plain function: @example (defun previous-line--next-line-at-end (&optional arg try-vscroll) "Insert an empty line when moving up from the top line." (if (and next-line-add-newlines (= arg 1) (save-excursion (beginning-of-line) (bobp))) (progn (beginning-of-line) (newline)))) @end example Obviously, this does not actually modify @code{previous-line}. For that the old advice needed: @example (ad-activate 'previous-line) @end example whereas the new advice mechanism needs: @example (advice-add 'previous-line :before #'previous-line--next-line-at-end) @end example Note that @code{ad-activate} had a global effect: it activated all pieces of advice enabled for that specified function. If you wanted to only activate or deactivate a particular piece, you needed to @emph{enable} or @emph{disable} it with @code{ad-enable-advice} and @code{ad-disable-advice}. The new mechanism does away with this distinction. Around advice such as: @example (defadvice foo (around foo-around) "Ignore case in `foo'." (let ((case-fold-search t)) ad-do-it)) (ad-activate 'foo) @end example could translate into: @example (defun foo--foo-around (orig-fun &rest args) "Ignore case in `foo'." (let ((case-fold-search t)) (apply orig-fun args))) (advice-add 'foo :around #'foo--foo-around) @end example Regarding the advice's @emph{class}, note that the new @code{:before} is not quite equivalent to the old @code{before}, because in the old advice you could modify the function's arguments (e.g., with @code{ad-set-arg}), and that would affect the argument values seen by the original function, whereas in the new @code{:before}, modifying an argument via @code{setq} in the advice has no effect on the arguments seen by the original function. When porting @code{before} advice which relied on this behavior, you'll need to turn it into new @code{:around} or @code{:filter-args} advice instead. Similarly old @code{after} advice could modify the returned value by changing @code{ad-return-value}, whereas new @code{:after} advice cannot, so when porting such old @code{after} advice, you'll need to turn it into new @code{:around} or @code{:filter-return} advice instead. @node Obsolete Functions @section Declaring Functions Obsolete @cindex obsolete functions You can mark a named function as @dfn{obsolete}, meaning that it may be removed at some point in the future. This causes Emacs to warn that the function is obsolete whenever it byte-compiles code containing that function, and whenever it displays the documentation for that function. In all other respects, an obsolete function behaves like any other function. The easiest way to mark a function as obsolete is to put a @code{(declare (obsolete @dots{}))} form in the function's @code{defun} definition. @xref{Declare Form}. Alternatively, you can use the @code{make-obsolete} function, described below. A macro (@pxref{Macros}) can also be marked obsolete with @code{make-obsolete}; this has the same effects as for a function. An alias for a function or macro can also be marked as obsolete; this makes the alias itself obsolete, not the function or macro which it resolves to. @defun make-obsolete obsolete-name current-name &optional when This function marks @var{obsolete-name} as obsolete. @var{obsolete-name} should be a symbol naming a function or macro, or an alias for a function or macro. If @var{current-name} is a symbol, the warning message says to use @var{current-name} instead of @var{obsolete-name}. @var{current-name} does not need to be an alias for @var{obsolete-name}; it can be a different function with similar functionality. @var{current-name} can also be a string, which serves as the warning message. The message should begin in lower case, and end with a period. It can also be @code{nil}, in which case the warning message provides no additional details. If provided, @var{when} should be a string indicating when the function was first made obsolete---for example, a date or a release number. @end defun @defmac define-obsolete-function-alias obsolete-name current-name &optional when doc This convenience macro marks the function @var{obsolete-name} obsolete and also defines it as an alias for the function @var{current-name}. It is equivalent to the following: @example (defalias @var{obsolete-name} @var{current-name} @var{doc}) (make-obsolete @var{obsolete-name} @var{current-name} @var{when}) @end example @end defmac In addition, you can mark a particular calling convention for a function as obsolete: @defun set-advertised-calling-convention function signature when This function specifies the argument list @var{signature} as the correct way to call @var{function}. This causes the Emacs byte compiler to issue a warning whenever it comes across an Emacs Lisp program that calls @var{function} any other way (however, it will still allow the code to be byte compiled). @var{when} should be a string indicating when the variable was first made obsolete (usually a version number string). For instance, in old versions of Emacs the @code{sit-for} function accepted three arguments, like this @example (sit-for seconds milliseconds nodisp) @end example However, calling @code{sit-for} this way is considered obsolete (@pxref{Waiting}). The old calling convention is deprecated like this: @example (set-advertised-calling-convention 'sit-for '(seconds &optional nodisp) "22.1") @end example @end defun @node Inline Functions @section Inline Functions @cindex inline functions An @dfn{inline function} is a function that works just like an ordinary function, except for one thing: when you byte-compile a call to the function (@pxref{Byte Compilation}), the function's definition is expanded into the caller. To define an inline function, use @code{defsubst} instead of @code{defun}. @defmac defsubst name args [doc] [declare] [interactive] body@dots{} This macro defines an inline function. Its syntax is exactly the same as @code{defun} (@pxref{Defining Functions}). @end defmac Making a function inline often makes its function calls run faster. But it also has disadvantages. For one thing, it reduces flexibility; if you change the definition of the function, calls already inlined still use the old definition until you recompile them. Another disadvantage is that making a large function inline can increase the size of compiled code both in files and in memory. Since the speed advantage of inline functions is greatest for small functions, you generally should not make large functions inline. Also, inline functions do not behave well with respect to debugging, tracing, and advising (@pxref{Advising Functions}). Since ease of debugging and the flexibility of redefining functions are important features of Emacs, you should not make a function inline, even if it's small, unless its speed is really crucial, and you've timed the code to verify that using @code{defun} actually has performance problems. After an inline function is defined, its inline expansion can be performed later on in the same file, just like macros. It's possible to use @code{defmacro} to define a macro to expand into the same code that an inline function would execute (@pxref{Macros}). But the macro would be limited to direct use in expressions---a macro cannot be called with @code{apply}, @code{mapcar} and so on. Also, it takes some work to convert an ordinary function into a macro. To convert it into an inline function is easy; just replace @code{defun} with @code{defsubst}. Since each argument of an inline function is evaluated exactly once, you needn't worry about how many times the body uses the arguments, as you do for macros. As an alternative to @code{defsubst}, you can use @code{define-inline} to define functions via their exhaustive compiler macro. @xref{Defining Functions, define-inline}. @node Declare Form @section The @code{declare} Form @findex declare @code{declare} is a special macro which can be used to add meta properties to a function or macro: for example, marking it as obsolete, or giving its forms a special @key{TAB} indentation convention in Emacs Lisp mode. @anchor{Definition of declare} @defmac declare specs@dots{} This macro ignores its arguments and evaluates to @code{nil}; it has no run-time effect. However, when a @code{declare} form occurs in the @var{declare} argument of a @code{defun} or @code{defsubst} function definition (@pxref{Defining Functions}) or a @code{defmacro} macro definition (@pxref{Defining Macros}), it appends the properties specified by @var{specs} to the function or macro. This work is specially performed by @code{defun}, @code{defsubst}, and @code{defmacro}. Each element in @var{specs} should have the form @code{(@var{property} @var{args}@dots{})}, which should not be quoted. These have the following effects: @table @code @item (advertised-calling-convention @var{signature} @var{when}) This acts like a call to @code{set-advertised-calling-convention} (@pxref{Obsolete Functions}); @var{signature} specifies the correct argument list for calling the function or macro, and @var{when} should be a string indicating when the old argument list was first made obsolete. @item (debug @var{edebug-form-spec}) This is valid for macros only. When stepping through the macro with Edebug, use @var{edebug-form-spec}. @xref{Instrumenting Macro Calls}. @item (doc-string @var{n}) This is used when defining a function or macro which itself will be used to define entities like functions, macros, or variables. It indicates that the @var{n}th argument, if any, should be considered as a documentation string. @item (indent @var{indent-spec}) Indent calls to this function or macro according to @var{indent-spec}. This is typically used for macros, though it works for functions too. @xref{Indenting Macros}. @item (interactive-only @var{value}) Set the function's @code{interactive-only} property to @var{value}. @xref{The interactive-only property}. @item (obsolete @var{current-name} @var{when}) Mark the function or macro as obsolete, similar to a call to @code{make-obsolete} (@pxref{Obsolete Functions}). @var{current-name} should be a symbol (in which case the warning message says to use that instead), a string (specifying the warning message), or @code{nil} (in which case the warning message gives no extra details). @var{when} should be a string indicating when the function or macro was first made obsolete. @item (compiler-macro @var{expander}) This can only be used for functions, and tells the compiler to use @var{expander} as an optimization function. When encountering a call to the function, of the form @code{(@var{function} @var{args}@dots{})}, the macro expander will call @var{expander} with that form as well as with @var{args}@dots{}, and @var{expander} can either return a new expression to use instead of the function call, or it can return just the form unchanged, to indicate that the function call should be left alone. @var{expander} can be a symbol, or it can be a form @code{(lambda (@var{arg}) @var{body})} in which case @var{arg} will hold the original function call expression, and the (unevaluated) arguments to the function can be accessed using the function's formal arguments. @item (gv-expander @var{expander}) Declare @var{expander} to be the function to handle calls to the macro (or function) as a generalized variable, similarly to @code{gv-define-expander}. @var{expander} can be a symbol or it can be of the form @code{(lambda (@var{arg}) @var{body})} in which case that function will additionally have access to the macro (or function)'s arguments. @item (gv-setter @var{setter}) Declare @var{setter} to be the function to handle calls to the macro (or function) as a generalized variable. @var{setter} can be a symbol in which case it will be passed to @code{gv-define-simple-setter}, or it can be of the form @code{(lambda (@var{arg}) @var{body})} in which case that function will additionally have access to the macro (or function)'s arguments and it will passed to @code{gv-define-setter}. @end table @end defmac @node Declaring Functions @section Telling the Compiler that a Function is Defined @cindex function declaration @cindex declaring functions @findex declare-function Byte-compiling a file often produces warnings about functions that the compiler doesn't know about (@pxref{Compiler Errors}). Sometimes this indicates a real problem, but usually the functions in question are defined in other files which would be loaded if that code is run. For example, byte-compiling @file{simple.el} used to warn: @example simple.el:8727:1:Warning: the function ‘shell-mode’ is not known to be defined. @end example In fact, @code{shell-mode} is used only in a function that executes @code{(require 'shell)} before calling @code{shell-mode}, so @code{shell-mode} will be defined properly at run-time. When you know that such a warning does not indicate a real problem, it is good to suppress the warning. That makes new warnings which might mean real problems more visible. You do that with @code{declare-function}. All you need to do is add a @code{declare-function} statement before the first use of the function in question: @example (declare-function shell-mode "shell" ()) @end example This says that @code{shell-mode} is defined in @file{shell.el} (the @samp{.el} can be omitted). The compiler takes for granted that that file really defines the function, and does not check. The optional third argument specifies the argument list of @code{shell-mode}. In this case, it takes no arguments (@code{nil} is different from not specifying a value). In other cases, this might be something like @code{(file &optional overwrite)}. You don't have to specify the argument list, but if you do the byte compiler can check that the calls match the declaration. @defmac declare-function function file &optional arglist fileonly Tell the byte compiler to assume that @var{function} is defined in the file @var{file}. The optional third argument @var{arglist} is either @code{t}, meaning the argument list is unspecified, or a list of formal parameters in the same style as @code{defun}. An omitted @var{arglist} defaults to @code{t}, not @code{nil}; this is atypical behavior for omitted arguments, and it means that to supply a fourth but not third argument one must specify @code{t} for the third-argument placeholder instead of the usual @code{nil}. The optional fourth argument @var{fileonly} non-@code{nil} means check only that @var{file} exists, not that it actually defines @var{function}. @end defmac To verify that these functions really are declared where @code{declare-function} says they are, use @code{check-declare-file} to check all @code{declare-function} calls in one source file, or use @code{check-declare-directory} check all the files in and under a certain directory. These commands find the file that ought to contain a function's definition using @code{locate-library}; if that finds no file, they expand the definition file name relative to the directory of the file that contains the @code{declare-function} call. You can also say that a function is a primitive by specifying a file name ending in @samp{.c} or @samp{.m}. This is useful only when you call a primitive that is defined only on certain systems. Most primitives are always defined, so they will never give you a warning. Sometimes a file will optionally use functions from an external package. If you prefix the filename in the @code{declare-function} statement with @samp{ext:}, then it will be checked if it is found, otherwise skipped without error. There are some function definitions that @samp{check-declare} does not understand (e.g., @code{defstruct} and some other macros). In such cases, you can pass a non-@code{nil} @var{fileonly} argument to @code{declare-function}, meaning to only check that the file exists, not that it actually defines the function. Note that to do this without having to specify an argument list, you should set the @var{arglist} argument to @code{t} (because @code{nil} means an empty argument list, as opposed to an unspecified one). @node Function Safety @section Determining whether a Function is Safe to Call @cindex function safety @cindex safety of functions Some major modes, such as SES, call functions that are stored in user files. (@inforef{Top, ,ses}, for more information on SES@.) User files sometimes have poor pedigrees---you can get a spreadsheet from someone you've just met, or you can get one through email from someone you've never met. So it is risky to call a function whose source code is stored in a user file until you have determined that it is safe. @defun unsafep form &optional unsafep-vars Returns @code{nil} if @var{form} is a @dfn{safe} Lisp expression, or returns a list that describes why it might be unsafe. The argument @var{unsafep-vars} is a list of symbols known to have temporary bindings at this point; it is mainly used for internal recursive calls. The current buffer is an implicit argument, which provides a list of buffer-local bindings. @end defun Being quick and simple, @code{unsafep} does a very light analysis and rejects many Lisp expressions that are actually safe. There are no known cases where @code{unsafep} returns @code{nil} for an unsafe expression. However, a safe Lisp expression can return a string with a @code{display} property, containing an associated Lisp expression to be executed after the string is inserted into a buffer. This associated expression can be a virus. In order to be safe, you must delete properties from all strings calculated by user code before inserting them into buffers. @ignore What is a safe Lisp expression? Basically, it's an expression that calls only built-in functions with no side effects (or only innocuous ones). Innocuous side effects include displaying messages and altering non-risky buffer-local variables (but not global variables). @table @dfn @item Safe expression @itemize @item An atom or quoted thing. @item A call to a safe function (see below), if all its arguments are safe expressions. @item One of the special forms @code{and}, @code{catch}, @code{cond}, @code{if}, @code{or}, @code{prog1}, @code{prog2}, @code{progn}, @code{while}, and @code{unwind-protect}], if all its arguments are safe. @item A form that creates temporary bindings (@code{condition-case}, @code{dolist}, @code{dotimes}, @code{lambda}, @code{let}, or @code{let*}), if all args are safe and the symbols to be bound are not explicitly risky (@pxref{File Local Variables}). @item An assignment using @code{add-to-list}, @code{setq}, @code{push}, or @code{pop}, if all args are safe and the symbols to be assigned are not explicitly risky and they already have temporary or buffer-local bindings. @item One of [apply, mapc, mapcar, mapconcat] if the first argument is a safe explicit lambda and the other args are safe expressions. @end itemize @item Safe function @itemize @item A lambda containing safe expressions. @item A symbol on the list @code{safe-functions}, so the user says it's safe. @item A symbol with a non-@code{nil} @code{side-effect-free} property. @item A symbol with a non-@code{nil} @code{safe-function} property. The value @code{t} indicates a function that is safe but has innocuous side effects. Other values will someday indicate functions with classes of side effects that are not always safe. @end itemize The @code{side-effect-free} and @code{safe-function} properties are provided for built-in functions and for low-level functions and macros defined in @file{subr.el}. You can assign these properties for the functions you write. @end table @end ignore @node Related Topics @section Other Topics Related to Functions Here is a table of several functions that do things related to function calling and function definitions. They are documented elsewhere, but we provide cross references here. @table @code @item apply See @ref{Calling Functions}. @item autoload See @ref{Autoload}. @item call-interactively See @ref{Interactive Call}. @item called-interactively-p See @ref{Distinguish Interactive}. @item commandp See @ref{Interactive Call}. @item documentation See @ref{Accessing Documentation}. @item eval See @ref{Eval}. @item funcall See @ref{Calling Functions}. @item function See @ref{Anonymous Functions}. @item ignore See @ref{Calling Functions}. @item indirect-function See @ref{Function Indirection}. @item interactive See @ref{Using Interactive}. @item interactive-p See @ref{Distinguish Interactive}. @item mapatoms See @ref{Creating Symbols}. @item mapcar See @ref{Mapping Functions}. @item map-char-table See @ref{Char-Tables}. @item mapconcat See @ref{Mapping Functions}. @item undefined See @ref{Functions for Key Lookup}. @end table