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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998, 2001-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Macros
6 @chapter Macros
7 @cindex macros
8
9 @dfn{Macros} enable you to define new control constructs and other
10 language features. A macro is defined much like a function, but instead
11 of telling how to compute a value, it tells how to compute another Lisp
12 expression which will in turn compute the value. We call this
13 expression the @dfn{expansion} of the macro.
14
15 Macros can do this because they operate on the unevaluated expressions
16 for the arguments, not on the argument values as functions do. They can
17 therefore construct an expansion containing these argument expressions
18 or parts of them.
19
20 If you are using a macro to do something an ordinary function could
21 do, just for the sake of speed, consider using an inline function
22 instead. @xref{Inline Functions}.
23
24 @menu
25 * Simple Macro:: A basic example.
26 * Expansion:: How, when and why macros are expanded.
27 * Compiling Macros:: How macros are expanded by the compiler.
28 * Defining Macros:: How to write a macro definition.
29 * Problems with Macros:: Don't evaluate the macro arguments too many times.
30 Don't hide the user's variables.
31 * Indenting Macros:: Specifying how to indent macro calls.
32 @end menu
33
34 @node Simple Macro
35 @section A Simple Example of a Macro
36
37 Suppose we would like to define a Lisp construct to increment a
38 variable value, much like the @code{++} operator in C. We would like to
39 write @code{(inc x)} and have the effect of @code{(setq x (1+ x))}.
40 Here's a macro definition that does the job:
41
42 @findex inc
43 @example
44 @group
45 (defmacro inc (var)
46 (list 'setq var (list '1+ var)))
47 @end group
48 @end example
49
50 When this is called with @code{(inc x)}, the argument @var{var} is the
51 symbol @code{x}---@emph{not} the @emph{value} of @code{x}, as it would
52 be in a function. The body of the macro uses this to construct the
53 expansion, which is @code{(setq x (1+ x))}. Once the macro definition
54 returns this expansion, Lisp proceeds to evaluate it, thus incrementing
55 @code{x}.
56
57 @node Expansion
58 @section Expansion of a Macro Call
59 @cindex expansion of macros
60 @cindex macro call
61
62 A macro call looks just like a function call in that it is a list which
63 starts with the name of the macro. The rest of the elements of the list
64 are the arguments of the macro.
65
66 Evaluation of the macro call begins like evaluation of a function call
67 except for one crucial difference: the macro arguments are the actual
68 expressions appearing in the macro call. They are not evaluated before
69 they are given to the macro definition. By contrast, the arguments of a
70 function are results of evaluating the elements of the function call
71 list.
72
73 Having obtained the arguments, Lisp invokes the macro definition just
74 as a function is invoked. The argument variables of the macro are bound
75 to the argument values from the macro call, or to a list of them in the
76 case of a @code{&rest} argument. And the macro body executes and
77 returns its value just as a function body does.
78
79 The second crucial difference between macros and functions is that
80 the value returned by the macro body is an alternate Lisp expression,
81 also known as the @dfn{expansion} of the macro. The Lisp interpreter
82 proceeds to evaluate the expansion as soon as it comes back from the
83 macro.
84
85 Since the expansion is evaluated in the normal manner, it may contain
86 calls to other macros. It may even be a call to the same macro, though
87 this is unusual.
88
89 You can see the expansion of a given macro call by calling
90 @code{macroexpand}.
91
92 @defun macroexpand form &optional environment
93 @cindex macro expansion
94 This function expands @var{form}, if it is a macro call. If the result
95 is another macro call, it is expanded in turn, until something which is
96 not a macro call results. That is the value returned by
97 @code{macroexpand}. If @var{form} is not a macro call to begin with, it
98 is returned as given.
99
100 Note that @code{macroexpand} does not look at the subexpressions of
101 @var{form} (although some macro definitions may do so). Even if they
102 are macro calls themselves, @code{macroexpand} does not expand them.
103
104 The function @code{macroexpand} does not expand calls to inline functions.
105 Normally there is no need for that, since a call to an inline function is
106 no harder to understand than a call to an ordinary function.
107
108 If @var{environment} is provided, it specifies an alist of macro
109 definitions that shadow the currently defined macros. Byte compilation
110 uses this feature.
111
112 @example
113 @group
114 (defmacro inc (var)
115 (list 'setq var (list '1+ var)))
116 @end group
117
118 @group
119 (macroexpand '(inc r))
120 @result{} (setq r (1+ r))
121 @end group
122
123 @group
124 (defmacro inc2 (var1 var2)
125 (list 'progn (list 'inc var1) (list 'inc var2)))
126 @end group
127
128 @group
129 (macroexpand '(inc2 r s))
130 @result{} (progn (inc r) (inc s)) ; @r{@code{inc} not expanded here.}
131 @end group
132 @end example
133 @end defun
134
135
136 @defun macroexpand-all form &optional environment
137 @code{macroexpand-all} expands macros like @code{macroexpand}, but
138 will look for and expand all macros in @var{form}, not just at the
139 top-level. If no macros are expanded, the return value is @code{eq}
140 to @var{form}.
141
142 Repeating the example used for @code{macroexpand} above with
143 @code{macroexpand-all}, we see that @code{macroexpand-all} @emph{does}
144 expand the embedded calls to @code{inc}:
145
146 @example
147 (macroexpand-all '(inc2 r s))
148 @result{} (progn (setq r (1+ r)) (setq s (1+ s)))
149 @end example
150
151 @end defun
152
153 @node Compiling Macros
154 @section Macros and Byte Compilation
155 @cindex byte-compiling macros
156
157 You might ask why we take the trouble to compute an expansion for a
158 macro and then evaluate the expansion. Why not have the macro body
159 produce the desired results directly? The reason has to do with
160 compilation.
161
162 When a macro call appears in a Lisp program being compiled, the Lisp
163 compiler calls the macro definition just as the interpreter would, and
164 receives an expansion. But instead of evaluating this expansion, it
165 compiles the expansion as if it had appeared directly in the program.
166 As a result, the compiled code produces the value and side effects
167 intended for the macro, but executes at full compiled speed. This would
168 not work if the macro body computed the value and side effects
169 itself---they would be computed at compile time, which is not useful.
170
171 In order for compilation of macro calls to work, the macros must
172 already be defined in Lisp when the calls to them are compiled. The
173 compiler has a special feature to help you do this: if a file being
174 compiled contains a @code{defmacro} form, the macro is defined
175 temporarily for the rest of the compilation of that file.
176
177 Byte-compiling a file also executes any @code{require} calls at
178 top-level in the file, so you can ensure that necessary macro
179 definitions are available during compilation by requiring the files
180 that define them (@pxref{Named Features}). To avoid loading the macro
181 definition files when someone @emph{runs} the compiled program, write
182 @code{eval-when-compile} around the @code{require} calls (@pxref{Eval
183 During Compile}).
184
185 @node Defining Macros
186 @section Defining Macros
187
188 A Lisp macro object is a list whose @sc{car} is @code{macro}, and
189 whose @sc{cdr} is a lambda expression. Expansion of the macro works
190 by applying the lambda expression (with @code{apply}) to the list of
191 @emph{unevaluated} arguments from the macro call.
192
193 It is possible to use an anonymous Lisp macro just like an anonymous
194 function, but this is never done, because it does not make sense to
195 pass an anonymous macro to functionals such as @code{mapcar}. In
196 practice, all Lisp macros have names, and they are almost always
197 defined with the @code{defmacro} macro.
198
199 @defmac defmacro name args [doc] [declare] body@dots{}
200 @code{defmacro} defines the symbol @var{name} (which should not be
201 quoted) as a macro that looks like this:
202
203 @example
204 (macro lambda @var{args} . @var{body})
205 @end example
206
207 (Note that the @sc{cdr} of this list is a lambda expression.) This
208 macro object is stored in the function cell of @var{name}. The
209 meaning of @var{args} is the same as in a function, and the keywords
210 @code{&rest} and @code{&optional} may be used (@pxref{Argument List}).
211 Neither @var{name} nor @var{args} should be quoted. The return value
212 of @code{defmacro} is undefined.
213
214 @var{doc}, if present, should be a string specifying the macro's
215 documentation string. @var{declare}, if present, should be a
216 @code{declare} form specifying metadata for the macro (@pxref{Declare
217 Form}). Note that macros cannot have interactive declarations, since
218 they cannot be called interactively.
219 @end defmac
220
221 Macros often need to construct large list structures from a mixture
222 of constants and nonconstant parts. To make this easier, use the
223 @samp{`} syntax (@pxref{Backquote}). For example:
224
225 @example
226 @example
227 @group
228 (defmacro t-becomes-nil (variable)
229 `(if (eq ,variable t)
230 (setq ,variable nil)))
231 @end group
232
233 @group
234 (t-becomes-nil foo)
235 @equiv{} (if (eq foo t) (setq foo nil))
236 @end group
237 @end example
238 @end example
239
240 The body of a macro definition can include a @code{declare} form,
241 which specifies additional properties about the macro. @xref{Declare
242 Form}.
243
244 @node Problems with Macros
245 @section Common Problems Using Macros
246
247 Macro expansion can have counterintuitive consequences. This
248 section describes some important consequences that can lead to
249 trouble, and rules to follow to avoid trouble.
250
251 @menu
252 * Wrong Time:: Do the work in the expansion, not in the macro.
253 * Argument Evaluation:: The expansion should evaluate each macro arg once.
254 * Surprising Local Vars:: Local variable bindings in the expansion
255 require special care.
256 * Eval During Expansion:: Don't evaluate them; put them in the expansion.
257 * Repeated Expansion:: Avoid depending on how many times expansion is done.
258 @end menu
259
260 @node Wrong Time
261 @subsection Wrong Time
262
263 The most common problem in writing macros is doing some of the
264 real work prematurely---while expanding the macro, rather than in the
265 expansion itself. For instance, one real package had this macro
266 definition:
267
268 @example
269 (defmacro my-set-buffer-multibyte (arg)
270 (if (fboundp 'set-buffer-multibyte)
271 (set-buffer-multibyte arg)))
272 @end example
273
274 With this erroneous macro definition, the program worked fine when
275 interpreted but failed when compiled. This macro definition called
276 @code{set-buffer-multibyte} during compilation, which was wrong, and
277 then did nothing when the compiled package was run. The definition
278 that the programmer really wanted was this:
279
280 @example
281 (defmacro my-set-buffer-multibyte (arg)
282 (if (fboundp 'set-buffer-multibyte)
283 `(set-buffer-multibyte ,arg)))
284 @end example
285
286 @noindent
287 This macro expands, if appropriate, into a call to
288 @code{set-buffer-multibyte} that will be executed when the compiled
289 program is actually run.
290
291 @node Argument Evaluation
292 @subsection Evaluating Macro Arguments Repeatedly
293
294 When defining a macro you must pay attention to the number of times
295 the arguments will be evaluated when the expansion is executed. The
296 following macro (used to facilitate iteration) illustrates the
297 problem. This macro allows us to write a ``for'' loop construct.
298
299 @findex for
300 @example
301 @group
302 (defmacro for (var from init to final do &rest body)
303 "Execute a simple \"for\" loop.
304 For example, (for i from 1 to 10 do (print i))."
305 (list 'let (list (list var init))
306 (cons 'while
307 (cons (list '<= var final)
308 (append body (list (list 'inc var)))))))
309 @end group
310
311 @group
312 (for i from 1 to 3 do
313 (setq square (* i i))
314 (princ (format "\n%d %d" i square)))
315 @expansion{}
316 @end group
317 @group
318 (let ((i 1))
319 (while (<= i 3)
320 (setq square (* i i))
321 (princ (format "\n%d %d" i square))
322 (inc i)))
323 @end group
324 @group
325
326 @print{}1 1
327 @print{}2 4
328 @print{}3 9
329 @result{} nil
330 @end group
331 @end example
332
333 @noindent
334 The arguments @code{from}, @code{to}, and @code{do} in this macro are
335 ``syntactic sugar''; they are entirely ignored. The idea is that you
336 will write noise words (such as @code{from}, @code{to}, and @code{do})
337 in those positions in the macro call.
338
339 Here's an equivalent definition simplified through use of backquote:
340
341 @example
342 @group
343 (defmacro for (var from init to final do &rest body)
344 "Execute a simple \"for\" loop.
345 For example, (for i from 1 to 10 do (print i))."
346 `(let ((,var ,init))
347 (while (<= ,var ,final)
348 ,@@body
349 (inc ,var))))
350 @end group
351 @end example
352
353 Both forms of this definition (with backquote and without) suffer from
354 the defect that @var{final} is evaluated on every iteration. If
355 @var{final} is a constant, this is not a problem. If it is a more
356 complex form, say @code{(long-complex-calculation x)}, this can slow
357 down the execution significantly. If @var{final} has side effects,
358 executing it more than once is probably incorrect.
359
360 @cindex macro argument evaluation
361 A well-designed macro definition takes steps to avoid this problem by
362 producing an expansion that evaluates the argument expressions exactly
363 once unless repeated evaluation is part of the intended purpose of the
364 macro. Here is a correct expansion for the @code{for} macro:
365
366 @example
367 @group
368 (let ((i 1)
369 (max 3))
370 (while (<= i max)
371 (setq square (* i i))
372 (princ (format "%d %d" i square))
373 (inc i)))
374 @end group
375 @end example
376
377 Here is a macro definition that creates this expansion:
378
379 @example
380 @group
381 (defmacro for (var from init to final do &rest body)
382 "Execute a simple for loop: (for i from 1 to 10 do (print i))."
383 `(let ((,var ,init)
384 (max ,final))
385 (while (<= ,var max)
386 ,@@body
387 (inc ,var))))
388 @end group
389 @end example
390
391 Unfortunately, this fix introduces another problem,
392 described in the following section.
393
394 @node Surprising Local Vars
395 @subsection Local Variables in Macro Expansions
396
397 @ifnottex
398 In the previous section, the definition of @code{for} was fixed as
399 follows to make the expansion evaluate the macro arguments the proper
400 number of times:
401
402 @example
403 @group
404 (defmacro for (var from init to final do &rest body)
405 "Execute a simple for loop: (for i from 1 to 10 do (print i))."
406 @end group
407 @group
408 `(let ((,var ,init)
409 (max ,final))
410 (while (<= ,var max)
411 ,@@body
412 (inc ,var))))
413 @end group
414 @end example
415 @end ifnottex
416
417 The new definition of @code{for} has a new problem: it introduces a
418 local variable named @code{max} which the user does not expect. This
419 causes trouble in examples such as the following:
420
421 @example
422 @group
423 (let ((max 0))
424 (for x from 0 to 10 do
425 (let ((this (frob x)))
426 (if (< max this)
427 (setq max this)))))
428 @end group
429 @end example
430
431 @noindent
432 The references to @code{max} inside the body of the @code{for}, which
433 are supposed to refer to the user's binding of @code{max}, really access
434 the binding made by @code{for}.
435
436 The way to correct this is to use an uninterned symbol instead of
437 @code{max} (@pxref{Creating Symbols}). The uninterned symbol can be
438 bound and referred to just like any other symbol, but since it is
439 created by @code{for}, we know that it cannot already appear in the
440 user's program. Since it is not interned, there is no way the user can
441 put it into the program later. It will never appear anywhere except
442 where put by @code{for}. Here is a definition of @code{for} that works
443 this way:
444
445 @example
446 @group
447 (defmacro for (var from init to final do &rest body)
448 "Execute a simple for loop: (for i from 1 to 10 do (print i))."
449 (let ((tempvar (make-symbol "max")))
450 `(let ((,var ,init)
451 (,tempvar ,final))
452 (while (<= ,var ,tempvar)
453 ,@@body
454 (inc ,var)))))
455 @end group
456 @end example
457
458 @noindent
459 This creates an uninterned symbol named @code{max} and puts it in the
460 expansion instead of the usual interned symbol @code{max} that appears
461 in expressions ordinarily.
462
463 @node Eval During Expansion
464 @subsection Evaluating Macro Arguments in Expansion
465
466 Another problem can happen if the macro definition itself
467 evaluates any of the macro argument expressions, such as by calling
468 @code{eval} (@pxref{Eval}). If the argument is supposed to refer to the
469 user's variables, you may have trouble if the user happens to use a
470 variable with the same name as one of the macro arguments. Inside the
471 macro body, the macro argument binding is the most local binding of this
472 variable, so any references inside the form being evaluated do refer to
473 it. Here is an example:
474
475 @example
476 @group
477 (defmacro foo (a)
478 (list 'setq (eval a) t))
479 @end group
480 @group
481 (setq x 'b)
482 (foo x) @expansion{} (setq b t)
483 @result{} t ; @r{and @code{b} has been set.}
484 ;; @r{but}
485 (setq a 'c)
486 (foo a) @expansion{} (setq a t)
487 @result{} t ; @r{but this set @code{a}, not @code{c}.}
488
489 @end group
490 @end example
491
492 It makes a difference whether the user's variable is named @code{a} or
493 @code{x}, because @code{a} conflicts with the macro argument variable
494 @code{a}.
495
496 Another problem with calling @code{eval} in a macro definition is that
497 it probably won't do what you intend in a compiled program. The
498 byte compiler runs macro definitions while compiling the program, when
499 the program's own computations (which you might have wished to access
500 with @code{eval}) don't occur and its local variable bindings don't
501 exist.
502
503 To avoid these problems, @strong{don't evaluate an argument expression
504 while computing the macro expansion}. Instead, substitute the
505 expression into the macro expansion, so that its value will be computed
506 as part of executing the expansion. This is how the other examples in
507 this chapter work.
508
509 @node Repeated Expansion
510 @subsection How Many Times is the Macro Expanded?
511
512 Occasionally problems result from the fact that a macro call is
513 expanded each time it is evaluated in an interpreted function, but is
514 expanded only once (during compilation) for a compiled function. If the
515 macro definition has side effects, they will work differently depending
516 on how many times the macro is expanded.
517
518 Therefore, you should avoid side effects in computation of the
519 macro expansion, unless you really know what you are doing.
520
521 One special kind of side effect can't be avoided: constructing Lisp
522 objects. Almost all macro expansions include constructed lists; that is
523 the whole point of most macros. This is usually safe; there is just one
524 case where you must be careful: when the object you construct is part of a
525 quoted constant in the macro expansion.
526
527 If the macro is expanded just once, in compilation, then the object is
528 constructed just once, during compilation. But in interpreted
529 execution, the macro is expanded each time the macro call runs, and this
530 means a new object is constructed each time.
531
532 In most clean Lisp code, this difference won't matter. It can matter
533 only if you perform side-effects on the objects constructed by the macro
534 definition. Thus, to avoid trouble, @strong{avoid side effects on
535 objects constructed by macro definitions}. Here is an example of how
536 such side effects can get you into trouble:
537
538 @lisp
539 @group
540 (defmacro empty-object ()
541 (list 'quote (cons nil nil)))
542 @end group
543
544 @group
545 (defun initialize (condition)
546 (let ((object (empty-object)))
547 (if condition
548 (setcar object condition))
549 object))
550 @end group
551 @end lisp
552
553 @noindent
554 If @code{initialize} is interpreted, a new list @code{(nil)} is
555 constructed each time @code{initialize} is called. Thus, no side effect
556 survives between calls. If @code{initialize} is compiled, then the
557 macro @code{empty-object} is expanded during compilation, producing a
558 single ``constant'' @code{(nil)} that is reused and altered each time
559 @code{initialize} is called.
560
561 One way to avoid pathological cases like this is to think of
562 @code{empty-object} as a funny kind of constant, not as a memory
563 allocation construct. You wouldn't use @code{setcar} on a constant such
564 as @code{'(nil)}, so naturally you won't use it on @code{(empty-object)}
565 either.
566
567 @node Indenting Macros
568 @section Indenting Macros
569
570 Within a macro definition, you can use the @code{declare} form
571 (@pxref{Defining Macros}) to specify how @key{TAB} should indent
572 calls to the macro. An indentation specification is written like this:
573
574 @example
575 (declare (indent @var{indent-spec}))
576 @end example
577
578 @noindent
579 Here are the possibilities for @var{indent-spec}:
580
581 @table @asis
582 @item @code{nil}
583 This is the same as no property---use the standard indentation pattern.
584 @item @code{defun}
585 Handle this function like a @samp{def} construct: treat the second
586 line as the start of a @dfn{body}.
587 @item an integer, @var{number}
588 The first @var{number} arguments of the function are
589 @dfn{distinguished} arguments; the rest are considered the body
590 of the expression. A line in the expression is indented according to
591 whether the first argument on it is distinguished or not. If the
592 argument is part of the body, the line is indented @code{lisp-body-indent}
593 more columns than the open-parenthesis starting the containing
594 expression. If the argument is distinguished and is either the first
595 or second argument, it is indented @emph{twice} that many extra columns.
596 If the argument is distinguished and not the first or second argument,
597 the line uses the standard pattern.
598 @item a symbol, @var{symbol}
599 @var{symbol} should be a function name; that function is called to
600 calculate the indentation of a line within this expression. The
601 function receives two arguments:
602
603 @table @asis
604 @item @var{state}
605 The value returned by @code{parse-partial-sexp} (a Lisp primitive for
606 indentation and nesting computation) when it parses up to the
607 beginning of this line.
608 @item @var{pos}
609 The position at which the line being indented begins.
610 @end table
611
612 @noindent
613 It should return either a number, which is the number of columns of
614 indentation for that line, or a list whose car is such a number. The
615 difference between returning a number and returning a list is that a
616 number says that all following lines at the same nesting level should
617 be indented just like this one; a list says that following lines might
618 call for different indentations. This makes a difference when the
619 indentation is being computed by @kbd{C-M-q}; if the value is a
620 number, @kbd{C-M-q} need not recalculate indentation for the following
621 lines until the end of the list.
622 @end table