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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003,
4 @c 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @setfilename ../info/control
7 @node Control Structures, Variables, Evaluation, Top
8 @chapter Control Structures
9 @cindex special forms for control structures
10 @cindex control structures
11
12 A Lisp program consists of expressions or @dfn{forms} (@pxref{Forms}).
13 We control the order of execution of these forms by enclosing them in
14 @dfn{control structures}. Control structures are special forms which
15 control when, whether, or how many times to execute the forms they
16 contain.
17
18 The simplest order of execution is sequential execution: first form
19 @var{a}, then form @var{b}, and so on. This is what happens when you
20 write several forms in succession in the body of a function, or at top
21 level in a file of Lisp code---the forms are executed in the order
22 written. We call this @dfn{textual order}. For example, if a function
23 body consists of two forms @var{a} and @var{b}, evaluation of the
24 function evaluates first @var{a} and then @var{b}. The result of
25 evaluating @var{b} becomes the value of the function.
26
27 Explicit control structures make possible an order of execution other
28 than sequential.
29
30 Emacs Lisp provides several kinds of control structure, including
31 other varieties of sequencing, conditionals, iteration, and (controlled)
32 jumps---all discussed below. The built-in control structures are
33 special forms since their subforms are not necessarily evaluated or not
34 evaluated sequentially. You can use macros to define your own control
35 structure constructs (@pxref{Macros}).
36
37 @menu
38 * Sequencing:: Evaluation in textual order.
39 * Conditionals:: @code{if}, @code{cond}, @code{when}, @code{unless}.
40 * Combining Conditions:: @code{and}, @code{or}, @code{not}.
41 * Iteration:: @code{while} loops.
42 * Nonlocal Exits:: Jumping out of a sequence.
43 @end menu
44
45 @node Sequencing
46 @section Sequencing
47
48 Evaluating forms in the order they appear is the most common way
49 control passes from one form to another. In some contexts, such as in a
50 function body, this happens automatically. Elsewhere you must use a
51 control structure construct to do this: @code{progn}, the simplest
52 control construct of Lisp.
53
54 A @code{progn} special form looks like this:
55
56 @example
57 @group
58 (progn @var{a} @var{b} @var{c} @dots{})
59 @end group
60 @end example
61
62 @noindent
63 and it says to execute the forms @var{a}, @var{b}, @var{c}, and so on, in
64 that order. These forms are called the @dfn{body} of the @code{progn} form.
65 The value of the last form in the body becomes the value of the entire
66 @code{progn}. @code{(progn)} returns @code{nil}.
67
68 @cindex implicit @code{progn}
69 In the early days of Lisp, @code{progn} was the only way to execute
70 two or more forms in succession and use the value of the last of them.
71 But programmers found they often needed to use a @code{progn} in the
72 body of a function, where (at that time) only one form was allowed. So
73 the body of a function was made into an ``implicit @code{progn}'':
74 several forms are allowed just as in the body of an actual @code{progn}.
75 Many other control structures likewise contain an implicit @code{progn}.
76 As a result, @code{progn} is not used as much as it was many years ago.
77 It is needed now most often inside an @code{unwind-protect}, @code{and},
78 @code{or}, or in the @var{then}-part of an @code{if}.
79
80 @defspec progn forms@dots{}
81 This special form evaluates all of the @var{forms}, in textual
82 order, returning the result of the final form.
83
84 @example
85 @group
86 (progn (print "The first form")
87 (print "The second form")
88 (print "The third form"))
89 @print{} "The first form"
90 @print{} "The second form"
91 @print{} "The third form"
92 @result{} "The third form"
93 @end group
94 @end example
95 @end defspec
96
97 Two other control constructs likewise evaluate a series of forms but return
98 a different value:
99
100 @defspec prog1 form1 forms@dots{}
101 This special form evaluates @var{form1} and all of the @var{forms}, in
102 textual order, returning the result of @var{form1}.
103
104 @example
105 @group
106 (prog1 (print "The first form")
107 (print "The second form")
108 (print "The third form"))
109 @print{} "The first form"
110 @print{} "The second form"
111 @print{} "The third form"
112 @result{} "The first form"
113 @end group
114 @end example
115
116 Here is a way to remove the first element from a list in the variable
117 @code{x}, then return the value of that former element:
118
119 @example
120 (prog1 (car x) (setq x (cdr x)))
121 @end example
122 @end defspec
123
124 @defspec prog2 form1 form2 forms@dots{}
125 This special form evaluates @var{form1}, @var{form2}, and all of the
126 following @var{forms}, in textual order, returning the result of
127 @var{form2}.
128
129 @example
130 @group
131 (prog2 (print "The first form")
132 (print "The second form")
133 (print "The third form"))
134 @print{} "The first form"
135 @print{} "The second form"
136 @print{} "The third form"
137 @result{} "The second form"
138 @end group
139 @end example
140 @end defspec
141
142 @node Conditionals
143 @section Conditionals
144 @cindex conditional evaluation
145
146 Conditional control structures choose among alternatives. Emacs Lisp
147 has four conditional forms: @code{if}, which is much the same as in
148 other languages; @code{when} and @code{unless}, which are variants of
149 @code{if}; and @code{cond}, which is a generalized case statement.
150
151 @defspec if condition then-form else-forms@dots{}
152 @code{if} chooses between the @var{then-form} and the @var{else-forms}
153 based on the value of @var{condition}. If the evaluated @var{condition} is
154 non-@code{nil}, @var{then-form} is evaluated and the result returned.
155 Otherwise, the @var{else-forms} are evaluated in textual order, and the
156 value of the last one is returned. (The @var{else} part of @code{if} is
157 an example of an implicit @code{progn}. @xref{Sequencing}.)
158
159 If @var{condition} has the value @code{nil}, and no @var{else-forms} are
160 given, @code{if} returns @code{nil}.
161
162 @code{if} is a special form because the branch that is not selected is
163 never evaluated---it is ignored. Thus, in the example below,
164 @code{true} is not printed because @code{print} is never called.
165
166 @example
167 @group
168 (if nil
169 (print 'true)
170 'very-false)
171 @result{} very-false
172 @end group
173 @end example
174 @end defspec
175
176 @defmac when condition then-forms@dots{}
177 This is a variant of @code{if} where there are no @var{else-forms},
178 and possibly several @var{then-forms}. In particular,
179
180 @example
181 (when @var{condition} @var{a} @var{b} @var{c})
182 @end example
183
184 @noindent
185 is entirely equivalent to
186
187 @example
188 (if @var{condition} (progn @var{a} @var{b} @var{c}) nil)
189 @end example
190 @end defmac
191
192 @defmac unless condition forms@dots{}
193 This is a variant of @code{if} where there is no @var{then-form}:
194
195 @example
196 (unless @var{condition} @var{a} @var{b} @var{c})
197 @end example
198
199 @noindent
200 is entirely equivalent to
201
202 @example
203 (if @var{condition} nil
204 @var{a} @var{b} @var{c})
205 @end example
206 @end defmac
207
208 @defspec cond clause@dots{}
209 @code{cond} chooses among an arbitrary number of alternatives. Each
210 @var{clause} in the @code{cond} must be a list. The @sc{car} of this
211 list is the @var{condition}; the remaining elements, if any, the
212 @var{body-forms}. Thus, a clause looks like this:
213
214 @example
215 (@var{condition} @var{body-forms}@dots{})
216 @end example
217
218 @code{cond} tries the clauses in textual order, by evaluating the
219 @var{condition} of each clause. If the value of @var{condition} is
220 non-@code{nil}, the clause ``succeeds''; then @code{cond} evaluates its
221 @var{body-forms}, and the value of the last of @var{body-forms} becomes
222 the value of the @code{cond}. The remaining clauses are ignored.
223
224 If the value of @var{condition} is @code{nil}, the clause ``fails'', so
225 the @code{cond} moves on to the following clause, trying its
226 @var{condition}.
227
228 If every @var{condition} evaluates to @code{nil}, so that every clause
229 fails, @code{cond} returns @code{nil}.
230
231 A clause may also look like this:
232
233 @example
234 (@var{condition})
235 @end example
236
237 @noindent
238 Then, if @var{condition} is non-@code{nil} when tested, the value of
239 @var{condition} becomes the value of the @code{cond} form.
240
241 The following example has four clauses, which test for the cases where
242 the value of @code{x} is a number, string, buffer and symbol,
243 respectively:
244
245 @example
246 @group
247 (cond ((numberp x) x)
248 ((stringp x) x)
249 ((bufferp x)
250 (setq temporary-hack x) ; @r{multiple body-forms}
251 (buffer-name x)) ; @r{in one clause}
252 ((symbolp x) (symbol-value x)))
253 @end group
254 @end example
255
256 Often we want to execute the last clause whenever none of the previous
257 clauses was successful. To do this, we use @code{t} as the
258 @var{condition} of the last clause, like this: @code{(t
259 @var{body-forms})}. The form @code{t} evaluates to @code{t}, which is
260 never @code{nil}, so this clause never fails, provided the @code{cond}
261 gets to it at all.
262
263 For example,
264
265 @example
266 @group
267 (setq a 5)
268 (cond ((eq a 'hack) 'foo)
269 (t "default"))
270 @result{} "default"
271 @end group
272 @end example
273
274 @noindent
275 This @code{cond} expression returns @code{foo} if the value of @code{a}
276 is @code{hack}, and returns the string @code{"default"} otherwise.
277 @end defspec
278
279 Any conditional construct can be expressed with @code{cond} or with
280 @code{if}. Therefore, the choice between them is a matter of style.
281 For example:
282
283 @example
284 @group
285 (if @var{a} @var{b} @var{c})
286 @equiv{}
287 (cond (@var{a} @var{b}) (t @var{c}))
288 @end group
289 @end example
290
291 @node Combining Conditions
292 @section Constructs for Combining Conditions
293
294 This section describes three constructs that are often used together
295 with @code{if} and @code{cond} to express complicated conditions. The
296 constructs @code{and} and @code{or} can also be used individually as
297 kinds of multiple conditional constructs.
298
299 @defun not condition
300 This function tests for the falsehood of @var{condition}. It returns
301 @code{t} if @var{condition} is @code{nil}, and @code{nil} otherwise.
302 The function @code{not} is identical to @code{null}, and we recommend
303 using the name @code{null} if you are testing for an empty list.
304 @end defun
305
306 @defspec and conditions@dots{}
307 The @code{and} special form tests whether all the @var{conditions} are
308 true. It works by evaluating the @var{conditions} one by one in the
309 order written.
310
311 If any of the @var{conditions} evaluates to @code{nil}, then the result
312 of the @code{and} must be @code{nil} regardless of the remaining
313 @var{conditions}; so @code{and} returns @code{nil} right away, ignoring
314 the remaining @var{conditions}.
315
316 If all the @var{conditions} turn out non-@code{nil}, then the value of
317 the last of them becomes the value of the @code{and} form. Just
318 @code{(and)}, with no @var{conditions}, returns @code{t}, appropriate
319 because all the @var{conditions} turned out non-@code{nil}. (Think
320 about it; which one did not?)
321
322 Here is an example. The first condition returns the integer 1, which is
323 not @code{nil}. Similarly, the second condition returns the integer 2,
324 which is not @code{nil}. The third condition is @code{nil}, so the
325 remaining condition is never evaluated.
326
327 @example
328 @group
329 (and (print 1) (print 2) nil (print 3))
330 @print{} 1
331 @print{} 2
332 @result{} nil
333 @end group
334 @end example
335
336 Here is a more realistic example of using @code{and}:
337
338 @example
339 @group
340 (if (and (consp foo) (eq (car foo) 'x))
341 (message "foo is a list starting with x"))
342 @end group
343 @end example
344
345 @noindent
346 Note that @code{(car foo)} is not executed if @code{(consp foo)} returns
347 @code{nil}, thus avoiding an error.
348
349 @code{and} expressions can also be written using either @code{if} or
350 @code{cond}. Here's how:
351
352 @example
353 @group
354 (and @var{arg1} @var{arg2} @var{arg3})
355 @equiv{}
356 (if @var{arg1} (if @var{arg2} @var{arg3}))
357 @equiv{}
358 (cond (@var{arg1} (cond (@var{arg2} @var{arg3}))))
359 @end group
360 @end example
361 @end defspec
362
363 @defspec or conditions@dots{}
364 The @code{or} special form tests whether at least one of the
365 @var{conditions} is true. It works by evaluating all the
366 @var{conditions} one by one in the order written.
367
368 If any of the @var{conditions} evaluates to a non-@code{nil} value, then
369 the result of the @code{or} must be non-@code{nil}; so @code{or} returns
370 right away, ignoring the remaining @var{conditions}. The value it
371 returns is the non-@code{nil} value of the condition just evaluated.
372
373 If all the @var{conditions} turn out @code{nil}, then the @code{or}
374 expression returns @code{nil}. Just @code{(or)}, with no
375 @var{conditions}, returns @code{nil}, appropriate because all the
376 @var{conditions} turned out @code{nil}. (Think about it; which one
377 did not?)
378
379 For example, this expression tests whether @code{x} is either
380 @code{nil} or the integer zero:
381
382 @example
383 (or (eq x nil) (eq x 0))
384 @end example
385
386 Like the @code{and} construct, @code{or} can be written in terms of
387 @code{cond}. For example:
388
389 @example
390 @group
391 (or @var{arg1} @var{arg2} @var{arg3})
392 @equiv{}
393 (cond (@var{arg1})
394 (@var{arg2})
395 (@var{arg3}))
396 @end group
397 @end example
398
399 You could almost write @code{or} in terms of @code{if}, but not quite:
400
401 @example
402 @group
403 (if @var{arg1} @var{arg1}
404 (if @var{arg2} @var{arg2}
405 @var{arg3}))
406 @end group
407 @end example
408
409 @noindent
410 This is not completely equivalent because it can evaluate @var{arg1} or
411 @var{arg2} twice. By contrast, @code{(or @var{arg1} @var{arg2}
412 @var{arg3})} never evaluates any argument more than once.
413 @end defspec
414
415 @node Iteration
416 @section Iteration
417 @cindex iteration
418 @cindex recursion
419
420 Iteration means executing part of a program repetitively. For
421 example, you might want to repeat some computation once for each element
422 of a list, or once for each integer from 0 to @var{n}. You can do this
423 in Emacs Lisp with the special form @code{while}:
424
425 @defspec while condition forms@dots{}
426 @code{while} first evaluates @var{condition}. If the result is
427 non-@code{nil}, it evaluates @var{forms} in textual order. Then it
428 reevaluates @var{condition}, and if the result is non-@code{nil}, it
429 evaluates @var{forms} again. This process repeats until @var{condition}
430 evaluates to @code{nil}.
431
432 There is no limit on the number of iterations that may occur. The loop
433 will continue until either @var{condition} evaluates to @code{nil} or
434 until an error or @code{throw} jumps out of it (@pxref{Nonlocal Exits}).
435
436 The value of a @code{while} form is always @code{nil}.
437
438 @example
439 @group
440 (setq num 0)
441 @result{} 0
442 @end group
443 @group
444 (while (< num 4)
445 (princ (format "Iteration %d." num))
446 (setq num (1+ num)))
447 @print{} Iteration 0.
448 @print{} Iteration 1.
449 @print{} Iteration 2.
450 @print{} Iteration 3.
451 @result{} nil
452 @end group
453 @end example
454
455 To write a ``repeat...until'' loop, which will execute something on each
456 iteration and then do the end-test, put the body followed by the
457 end-test in a @code{progn} as the first argument of @code{while}, as
458 shown here:
459
460 @example
461 @group
462 (while (progn
463 (forward-line 1)
464 (not (looking-at "^$"))))
465 @end group
466 @end example
467
468 @noindent
469 This moves forward one line and continues moving by lines until it
470 reaches an empty line. It is peculiar in that the @code{while} has no
471 body, just the end test (which also does the real work of moving point).
472 @end defspec
473
474 The @code{dolist} and @code{dotimes} macros provide convenient ways to
475 write two common kinds of loops.
476
477 @defmac dolist (var list [result]) body@dots{}
478 This construct executes @var{body} once for each element of
479 @var{list}, binding the variable @var{var} locally to hold the current
480 element. Then it returns the value of evaluating @var{result}, or
481 @code{nil} if @var{result} is omitted. For example, here is how you
482 could use @code{dolist} to define the @code{reverse} function:
483
484 @example
485 (defun reverse (list)
486 (let (value)
487 (dolist (elt list value)
488 (setq value (cons elt value)))))
489 @end example
490 @end defmac
491
492 @defmac dotimes (var count [result]) body@dots{}
493 This construct executes @var{body} once for each integer from 0
494 (inclusive) to @var{count} (exclusive), binding the variable @var{var}
495 to the integer for the current iteration. Then it returns the value
496 of evaluating @var{result}, or @code{nil} if @var{result} is omitted.
497 Here is an example of using @code{dotimes} to do something 100 times:
498
499 @example
500 (dotimes (i 100)
501 (insert "I will not obey absurd orders\n"))
502 @end example
503 @end defmac
504
505 @node Nonlocal Exits
506 @section Nonlocal Exits
507 @cindex nonlocal exits
508
509 A @dfn{nonlocal exit} is a transfer of control from one point in a
510 program to another remote point. Nonlocal exits can occur in Emacs Lisp
511 as a result of errors; you can also use them under explicit control.
512 Nonlocal exits unbind all variable bindings made by the constructs being
513 exited.
514
515 @menu
516 * Catch and Throw:: Nonlocal exits for the program's own purposes.
517 * Examples of Catch:: Showing how such nonlocal exits can be written.
518 * Errors:: How errors are signaled and handled.
519 * Cleanups:: Arranging to run a cleanup form if an error happens.
520 @end menu
521
522 @node Catch and Throw
523 @subsection Explicit Nonlocal Exits: @code{catch} and @code{throw}
524
525 Most control constructs affect only the flow of control within the
526 construct itself. The function @code{throw} is the exception to this
527 rule of normal program execution: it performs a nonlocal exit on
528 request. (There are other exceptions, but they are for error handling
529 only.) @code{throw} is used inside a @code{catch}, and jumps back to
530 that @code{catch}. For example:
531
532 @example
533 @group
534 (defun foo-outer ()
535 (catch 'foo
536 (foo-inner)))
537
538 (defun foo-inner ()
539 @dots{}
540 (if x
541 (throw 'foo t))
542 @dots{})
543 @end group
544 @end example
545
546 @noindent
547 The @code{throw} form, if executed, transfers control straight back to
548 the corresponding @code{catch}, which returns immediately. The code
549 following the @code{throw} is not executed. The second argument of
550 @code{throw} is used as the return value of the @code{catch}.
551
552 The function @code{throw} finds the matching @code{catch} based on the
553 first argument: it searches for a @code{catch} whose first argument is
554 @code{eq} to the one specified in the @code{throw}. If there is more
555 than one applicable @code{catch}, the innermost one takes precedence.
556 Thus, in the above example, the @code{throw} specifies @code{foo}, and
557 the @code{catch} in @code{foo-outer} specifies the same symbol, so that
558 @code{catch} is the applicable one (assuming there is no other matching
559 @code{catch} in between).
560
561 Executing @code{throw} exits all Lisp constructs up to the matching
562 @code{catch}, including function calls. When binding constructs such as
563 @code{let} or function calls are exited in this way, the bindings are
564 unbound, just as they are when these constructs exit normally
565 (@pxref{Local Variables}). Likewise, @code{throw} restores the buffer
566 and position saved by @code{save-excursion} (@pxref{Excursions}), and
567 the narrowing status saved by @code{save-restriction} and the window
568 selection saved by @code{save-window-excursion} (@pxref{Window
569 Configurations}). It also runs any cleanups established with the
570 @code{unwind-protect} special form when it exits that form
571 (@pxref{Cleanups}).
572
573 The @code{throw} need not appear lexically within the @code{catch}
574 that it jumps to. It can equally well be called from another function
575 called within the @code{catch}. As long as the @code{throw} takes place
576 chronologically after entry to the @code{catch}, and chronologically
577 before exit from it, it has access to that @code{catch}. This is why
578 @code{throw} can be used in commands such as @code{exit-recursive-edit}
579 that throw back to the editor command loop (@pxref{Recursive Editing}).
580
581 @cindex CL note---only @code{throw} in Emacs
582 @quotation
583 @b{Common Lisp note:} Most other versions of Lisp, including Common Lisp,
584 have several ways of transferring control nonsequentially: @code{return},
585 @code{return-from}, and @code{go}, for example. Emacs Lisp has only
586 @code{throw}.
587 @end quotation
588
589 @defspec catch tag body@dots{}
590 @cindex tag on run time stack
591 @code{catch} establishes a return point for the @code{throw} function.
592 The return point is distinguished from other such return points by
593 @var{tag}, which may be any Lisp object except @code{nil}. The argument
594 @var{tag} is evaluated normally before the return point is established.
595
596 With the return point in effect, @code{catch} evaluates the forms of the
597 @var{body} in textual order. If the forms execute normally (without
598 error or nonlocal exit) the value of the last body form is returned from
599 the @code{catch}.
600
601 If a @code{throw} is executed during the execution of @var{body},
602 specifying the same value @var{tag}, the @code{catch} form exits
603 immediately; the value it returns is whatever was specified as the
604 second argument of @code{throw}.
605 @end defspec
606
607 @defun throw tag value
608 The purpose of @code{throw} is to return from a return point previously
609 established with @code{catch}. The argument @var{tag} is used to choose
610 among the various existing return points; it must be @code{eq} to the value
611 specified in the @code{catch}. If multiple return points match @var{tag},
612 the innermost one is used.
613
614 The argument @var{value} is used as the value to return from that
615 @code{catch}.
616
617 @kindex no-catch
618 If no return point is in effect with tag @var{tag}, then a @code{no-catch}
619 error is signaled with data @code{(@var{tag} @var{value})}.
620 @end defun
621
622 @node Examples of Catch
623 @subsection Examples of @code{catch} and @code{throw}
624
625 One way to use @code{catch} and @code{throw} is to exit from a doubly
626 nested loop. (In most languages, this would be done with a ``go to''.)
627 Here we compute @code{(foo @var{i} @var{j})} for @var{i} and @var{j}
628 varying from 0 to 9:
629
630 @example
631 @group
632 (defun search-foo ()
633 (catch 'loop
634 (let ((i 0))
635 (while (< i 10)
636 (let ((j 0))
637 (while (< j 10)
638 (if (foo i j)
639 (throw 'loop (list i j)))
640 (setq j (1+ j))))
641 (setq i (1+ i))))))
642 @end group
643 @end example
644
645 @noindent
646 If @code{foo} ever returns non-@code{nil}, we stop immediately and return a
647 list of @var{i} and @var{j}. If @code{foo} always returns @code{nil}, the
648 @code{catch} returns normally, and the value is @code{nil}, since that
649 is the result of the @code{while}.
650
651 Here are two tricky examples, slightly different, showing two
652 return points at once. First, two return points with the same tag,
653 @code{hack}:
654
655 @example
656 @group
657 (defun catch2 (tag)
658 (catch tag
659 (throw 'hack 'yes)))
660 @result{} catch2
661 @end group
662
663 @group
664 (catch 'hack
665 (print (catch2 'hack))
666 'no)
667 @print{} yes
668 @result{} no
669 @end group
670 @end example
671
672 @noindent
673 Since both return points have tags that match the @code{throw}, it goes to
674 the inner one, the one established in @code{catch2}. Therefore,
675 @code{catch2} returns normally with value @code{yes}, and this value is
676 printed. Finally the second body form in the outer @code{catch}, which is
677 @code{'no}, is evaluated and returned from the outer @code{catch}.
678
679 Now let's change the argument given to @code{catch2}:
680
681 @example
682 @group
683 (catch 'hack
684 (print (catch2 'quux))
685 'no)
686 @result{} yes
687 @end group
688 @end example
689
690 @noindent
691 We still have two return points, but this time only the outer one has
692 the tag @code{hack}; the inner one has the tag @code{quux} instead.
693 Therefore, @code{throw} makes the outer @code{catch} return the value
694 @code{yes}. The function @code{print} is never called, and the
695 body-form @code{'no} is never evaluated.
696
697 @node Errors
698 @subsection Errors
699 @cindex errors
700
701 When Emacs Lisp attempts to evaluate a form that, for some reason,
702 cannot be evaluated, it @dfn{signals} an @dfn{error}.
703
704 When an error is signaled, Emacs's default reaction is to print an
705 error message and terminate execution of the current command. This is
706 the right thing to do in most cases, such as if you type @kbd{C-f} at
707 the end of the buffer.
708
709 In complicated programs, simple termination may not be what you want.
710 For example, the program may have made temporary changes in data
711 structures, or created temporary buffers that should be deleted before
712 the program is finished. In such cases, you would use
713 @code{unwind-protect} to establish @dfn{cleanup expressions} to be
714 evaluated in case of error. (@xref{Cleanups}.) Occasionally, you may
715 wish the program to continue execution despite an error in a subroutine.
716 In these cases, you would use @code{condition-case} to establish
717 @dfn{error handlers} to recover control in case of error.
718
719 Resist the temptation to use error handling to transfer control from
720 one part of the program to another; use @code{catch} and @code{throw}
721 instead. @xref{Catch and Throw}.
722
723 @menu
724 * Signaling Errors:: How to report an error.
725 * Processing of Errors:: What Emacs does when you report an error.
726 * Handling Errors:: How you can trap errors and continue execution.
727 * Error Symbols:: How errors are classified for trapping them.
728 @end menu
729
730 @node Signaling Errors
731 @subsubsection How to Signal an Error
732 @cindex signaling errors
733
734 @dfn{Signaling} an error means beginning error processing. Error
735 processing normally aborts all or part of the running program and
736 returns to a point that is set up to handle the error
737 (@pxref{Processing of Errors}). Here we describe how to signal an
738 error.
739
740 Most errors are signaled ``automatically'' within Lisp primitives
741 which you call for other purposes, such as if you try to take the
742 @sc{car} of an integer or move forward a character at the end of the
743 buffer. You can also signal errors explicitly with the functions
744 @code{error} and @code{signal}.
745
746 Quitting, which happens when the user types @kbd{C-g}, is not
747 considered an error, but it is handled almost like an error.
748 @xref{Quitting}.
749
750 Every error specifies an error message, one way or another. The
751 message should state what is wrong (``File does not exist''), not how
752 things ought to be (``File must exist''). The convention in Emacs
753 Lisp is that error messages should start with a capital letter, but
754 should not end with any sort of punctuation.
755
756 @defun error format-string &rest args
757 This function signals an error with an error message constructed by
758 applying @code{format} (@pxref{Formatting Strings}) to
759 @var{format-string} and @var{args}.
760
761 These examples show typical uses of @code{error}:
762
763 @example
764 @group
765 (error "That is an error -- try something else")
766 @error{} That is an error -- try something else
767 @end group
768
769 @group
770 (error "You have committed %d errors" 10)
771 @error{} You have committed 10 errors
772 @end group
773 @end example
774
775 @code{error} works by calling @code{signal} with two arguments: the
776 error symbol @code{error}, and a list containing the string returned by
777 @code{format}.
778
779 @strong{Warning:} If you want to use your own string as an error message
780 verbatim, don't just write @code{(error @var{string})}. If @var{string}
781 contains @samp{%}, it will be interpreted as a format specifier, with
782 undesirable results. Instead, use @code{(error "%s" @var{string})}.
783 @end defun
784
785 @defun signal error-symbol data
786 @anchor{Definition of signal}
787 This function signals an error named by @var{error-symbol}. The
788 argument @var{data} is a list of additional Lisp objects relevant to the
789 circumstances of the error.
790
791 The argument @var{error-symbol} must be an @dfn{error symbol}---a symbol
792 bearing a property @code{error-conditions} whose value is a list of
793 condition names. This is how Emacs Lisp classifies different sorts of
794 errors. @xref{Error Symbols}, for a description of error symbols,
795 error conditions and condition names.
796
797 If the error is not handled, the two arguments are used in printing
798 the error message. Normally, this error message is provided by the
799 @code{error-message} property of @var{error-symbol}. If @var{data} is
800 non-@code{nil}, this is followed by a colon and a comma separated list
801 of the unevaluated elements of @var{data}. For @code{error}, the
802 error message is the @sc{car} of @var{data} (that must be a string).
803 Subcategories of @code{file-error} are handled specially.
804
805 The number and significance of the objects in @var{data} depends on
806 @var{error-symbol}. For example, with a @code{wrong-type-arg} error,
807 there should be two objects in the list: a predicate that describes the type
808 that was expected, and the object that failed to fit that type.
809
810 Both @var{error-symbol} and @var{data} are available to any error
811 handlers that handle the error: @code{condition-case} binds a local
812 variable to a list of the form @code{(@var{error-symbol} .@:
813 @var{data})} (@pxref{Handling Errors}).
814
815 The function @code{signal} never returns (though in older Emacs versions
816 it could sometimes return).
817
818 @smallexample
819 @group
820 (signal 'wrong-number-of-arguments '(x y))
821 @error{} Wrong number of arguments: x, y
822 @end group
823
824 @group
825 (signal 'no-such-error '("My unknown error condition"))
826 @error{} peculiar error: "My unknown error condition"
827 @end group
828 @end smallexample
829 @end defun
830
831 @cindex CL note---no continuable errors
832 @quotation
833 @b{Common Lisp note:} Emacs Lisp has nothing like the Common Lisp
834 concept of continuable errors.
835 @end quotation
836
837 @node Processing of Errors
838 @subsubsection How Emacs Processes Errors
839
840 When an error is signaled, @code{signal} searches for an active
841 @dfn{handler} for the error. A handler is a sequence of Lisp
842 expressions designated to be executed if an error happens in part of the
843 Lisp program. If the error has an applicable handler, the handler is
844 executed, and control resumes following the handler. The handler
845 executes in the environment of the @code{condition-case} that
846 established it; all functions called within that @code{condition-case}
847 have already been exited, and the handler cannot return to them.
848
849 If there is no applicable handler for the error, the current command is
850 terminated and control returns to the editor command loop, because the
851 command loop has an implicit handler for all kinds of errors. The
852 command loop's handler uses the error symbol and associated data to
853 print an error message.
854
855 @cindex @code{debug-on-error} use
856 An error that has no explicit handler may call the Lisp debugger. The
857 debugger is enabled if the variable @code{debug-on-error} (@pxref{Error
858 Debugging}) is non-@code{nil}. Unlike error handlers, the debugger runs
859 in the environment of the error, so that you can examine values of
860 variables precisely as they were at the time of the error.
861
862 @node Handling Errors
863 @subsubsection Writing Code to Handle Errors
864 @cindex error handler
865 @cindex handling errors
866
867 The usual effect of signaling an error is to terminate the command
868 that is running and return immediately to the Emacs editor command loop.
869 You can arrange to trap errors occurring in a part of your program by
870 establishing an error handler, with the special form
871 @code{condition-case}. A simple example looks like this:
872
873 @example
874 @group
875 (condition-case nil
876 (delete-file filename)
877 (error nil))
878 @end group
879 @end example
880
881 @noindent
882 This deletes the file named @var{filename}, catching any error and
883 returning @code{nil} if an error occurs.
884
885 The second argument of @code{condition-case} is called the
886 @dfn{protected form}. (In the example above, the protected form is a
887 call to @code{delete-file}.) The error handlers go into effect when
888 this form begins execution and are deactivated when this form returns.
889 They remain in effect for all the intervening time. In particular, they
890 are in effect during the execution of functions called by this form, in
891 their subroutines, and so on. This is a good thing, since, strictly
892 speaking, errors can be signaled only by Lisp primitives (including
893 @code{signal} and @code{error}) called by the protected form, not by the
894 protected form itself.
895
896 The arguments after the protected form are handlers. Each handler
897 lists one or more @dfn{condition names} (which are symbols) to specify
898 which errors it will handle. The error symbol specified when an error
899 is signaled also defines a list of condition names. A handler applies
900 to an error if they have any condition names in common. In the example
901 above, there is one handler, and it specifies one condition name,
902 @code{error}, which covers all errors.
903
904 The search for an applicable handler checks all the established handlers
905 starting with the most recently established one. Thus, if two nested
906 @code{condition-case} forms offer to handle the same error, the inner of
907 the two gets to handle it.
908
909 If an error is handled by some @code{condition-case} form, this
910 ordinarily prevents the debugger from being run, even if
911 @code{debug-on-error} says this error should invoke the debugger.
912 @xref{Error Debugging}. If you want to be able to debug errors that are
913 caught by a @code{condition-case}, set the variable
914 @code{debug-on-signal} to a non-@code{nil} value.
915
916 When an error is handled, control returns to the handler. Before this
917 happens, Emacs unbinds all variable bindings made by binding constructs
918 that are being exited and executes the cleanups of all
919 @code{unwind-protect} forms that are exited. Once control arrives at
920 the handler, the body of the handler is executed.
921
922 After execution of the handler body, execution returns from the
923 @code{condition-case} form. Because the protected form is exited
924 completely before execution of the handler, the handler cannot resume
925 execution at the point of the error, nor can it examine variable
926 bindings that were made within the protected form. All it can do is
927 clean up and proceed.
928
929 The @code{condition-case} construct is often used to trap errors that
930 are predictable, such as failure to open a file in a call to
931 @code{insert-file-contents}. It is also used to trap errors that are
932 totally unpredictable, such as when the program evaluates an expression
933 read from the user.
934
935 Error signaling and handling have some resemblance to @code{throw} and
936 @code{catch} (@pxref{Catch and Throw}), but they are entirely separate
937 facilities. An error cannot be caught by a @code{catch}, and a
938 @code{throw} cannot be handled by an error handler (though using
939 @code{throw} when there is no suitable @code{catch} signals an error
940 that can be handled).
941
942 @defspec condition-case var protected-form handlers@dots{}
943 This special form establishes the error handlers @var{handlers} around
944 the execution of @var{protected-form}. If @var{protected-form} executes
945 without error, the value it returns becomes the value of the
946 @code{condition-case} form; in this case, the @code{condition-case} has
947 no effect. The @code{condition-case} form makes a difference when an
948 error occurs during @var{protected-form}.
949
950 Each of the @var{handlers} is a list of the form @code{(@var{conditions}
951 @var{body}@dots{})}. Here @var{conditions} is an error condition name
952 to be handled, or a list of condition names; @var{body} is one or more
953 Lisp expressions to be executed when this handler handles an error.
954 Here are examples of handlers:
955
956 @smallexample
957 @group
958 (error nil)
959
960 (arith-error (message "Division by zero"))
961
962 ((arith-error file-error)
963 (message
964 "Either division by zero or failure to open a file"))
965 @end group
966 @end smallexample
967
968 Each error that occurs has an @dfn{error symbol} that describes what
969 kind of error it is. The @code{error-conditions} property of this
970 symbol is a list of condition names (@pxref{Error Symbols}). Emacs
971 searches all the active @code{condition-case} forms for a handler that
972 specifies one or more of these condition names; the innermost matching
973 @code{condition-case} handles the error. Within this
974 @code{condition-case}, the first applicable handler handles the error.
975
976 After executing the body of the handler, the @code{condition-case}
977 returns normally, using the value of the last form in the handler body
978 as the overall value.
979
980 @cindex error description
981 The argument @var{var} is a variable. @code{condition-case} does not
982 bind this variable when executing the @var{protected-form}, only when it
983 handles an error. At that time, it binds @var{var} locally to an
984 @dfn{error description}, which is a list giving the particulars of the
985 error. The error description has the form @code{(@var{error-symbol}
986 . @var{data})}. The handler can refer to this list to decide what to
987 do. For example, if the error is for failure opening a file, the file
988 name is the second element of @var{data}---the third element of the
989 error description.
990
991 If @var{var} is @code{nil}, that means no variable is bound. Then the
992 error symbol and associated data are not available to the handler.
993 @end defspec
994
995 @defun error-message-string error-description
996 This function returns the error message string for a given error
997 descriptor. It is useful if you want to handle an error by printing the
998 usual error message for that error. @xref{Definition of signal}.
999 @end defun
1000
1001 @cindex @code{arith-error} example
1002 Here is an example of using @code{condition-case} to handle the error
1003 that results from dividing by zero. The handler displays the error
1004 message (but without a beep), then returns a very large number.
1005
1006 @smallexample
1007 @group
1008 (defun safe-divide (dividend divisor)
1009 (condition-case err
1010 ;; @r{Protected form.}
1011 (/ dividend divisor)
1012 @end group
1013 @group
1014 ;; @r{The handler.}
1015 (arith-error ; @r{Condition.}
1016 ;; @r{Display the usual message for this error.}
1017 (message "%s" (error-message-string err))
1018 1000000)))
1019 @result{} safe-divide
1020 @end group
1021
1022 @group
1023 (safe-divide 5 0)
1024 @print{} Arithmetic error: (arith-error)
1025 @result{} 1000000
1026 @end group
1027 @end smallexample
1028
1029 @noindent
1030 The handler specifies condition name @code{arith-error} so that it will handle only division-by-zero errors. Other kinds of errors will not be handled, at least not by this @code{condition-case}. Thus,
1031
1032 @smallexample
1033 @group
1034 (safe-divide nil 3)
1035 @error{} Wrong type argument: number-or-marker-p, nil
1036 @end group
1037 @end smallexample
1038
1039 Here is a @code{condition-case} that catches all kinds of errors,
1040 including those signaled with @code{error}:
1041
1042 @smallexample
1043 @group
1044 (setq baz 34)
1045 @result{} 34
1046 @end group
1047
1048 @group
1049 (condition-case err
1050 (if (eq baz 35)
1051 t
1052 ;; @r{This is a call to the function @code{error}.}
1053 (error "Rats! The variable %s was %s, not 35" 'baz baz))
1054 ;; @r{This is the handler; it is not a form.}
1055 (error (princ (format "The error was: %s" err))
1056 2))
1057 @print{} The error was: (error "Rats! The variable baz was 34, not 35")
1058 @result{} 2
1059 @end group
1060 @end smallexample
1061
1062 @node Error Symbols
1063 @subsubsection Error Symbols and Condition Names
1064 @cindex error symbol
1065 @cindex error name
1066 @cindex condition name
1067 @cindex user-defined error
1068 @kindex error-conditions
1069
1070 When you signal an error, you specify an @dfn{error symbol} to specify
1071 the kind of error you have in mind. Each error has one and only one
1072 error symbol to categorize it. This is the finest classification of
1073 errors defined by the Emacs Lisp language.
1074
1075 These narrow classifications are grouped into a hierarchy of wider
1076 classes called @dfn{error conditions}, identified by @dfn{condition
1077 names}. The narrowest such classes belong to the error symbols
1078 themselves: each error symbol is also a condition name. There are also
1079 condition names for more extensive classes, up to the condition name
1080 @code{error} which takes in all kinds of errors (but not @code{quit}).
1081 Thus, each error has one or more condition names: @code{error}, the
1082 error symbol if that is distinct from @code{error}, and perhaps some
1083 intermediate classifications.
1084
1085 In order for a symbol to be an error symbol, it must have an
1086 @code{error-conditions} property which gives a list of condition names.
1087 This list defines the conditions that this kind of error belongs to.
1088 (The error symbol itself, and the symbol @code{error}, should always be
1089 members of this list.) Thus, the hierarchy of condition names is
1090 defined by the @code{error-conditions} properties of the error symbols.
1091 Because quitting is not considered an error, the value of the
1092 @code{error-conditions} property of @code{quit} is just @code{(quit)}.
1093
1094 @cindex peculiar error
1095 In addition to the @code{error-conditions} list, the error symbol
1096 should have an @code{error-message} property whose value is a string to
1097 be printed when that error is signaled but not handled. If the
1098 error symbol has no @code{error-message} property or if the
1099 @code{error-message} property exists, but is not a string, the error
1100 message @samp{peculiar error} is used. @xref{Definition of signal}.
1101
1102 Here is how we define a new error symbol, @code{new-error}:
1103
1104 @example
1105 @group
1106 (put 'new-error
1107 'error-conditions
1108 '(error my-own-errors new-error))
1109 @result{} (error my-own-errors new-error)
1110 @end group
1111 @group
1112 (put 'new-error 'error-message "A new error")
1113 @result{} "A new error"
1114 @end group
1115 @end example
1116
1117 @noindent
1118 This error has three condition names: @code{new-error}, the narrowest
1119 classification; @code{my-own-errors}, which we imagine is a wider
1120 classification; and @code{error}, which is the widest of all.
1121
1122 The error string should start with a capital letter but it should
1123 not end with a period. This is for consistency with the rest of Emacs.
1124
1125 Naturally, Emacs will never signal @code{new-error} on its own; only
1126 an explicit call to @code{signal} (@pxref{Definition of signal}) in
1127 your code can do this:
1128
1129 @example
1130 @group
1131 (signal 'new-error '(x y))
1132 @error{} A new error: x, y
1133 @end group
1134 @end example
1135
1136 This error can be handled through any of the three condition names.
1137 This example handles @code{new-error} and any other errors in the class
1138 @code{my-own-errors}:
1139
1140 @example
1141 @group
1142 (condition-case foo
1143 (bar nil t)
1144 (my-own-errors nil))
1145 @end group
1146 @end example
1147
1148 The significant way that errors are classified is by their condition
1149 names---the names used to match errors with handlers. An error symbol
1150 serves only as a convenient way to specify the intended error message
1151 and list of condition names. It would be cumbersome to give
1152 @code{signal} a list of condition names rather than one error symbol.
1153
1154 By contrast, using only error symbols without condition names would
1155 seriously decrease the power of @code{condition-case}. Condition names
1156 make it possible to categorize errors at various levels of generality
1157 when you write an error handler. Using error symbols alone would
1158 eliminate all but the narrowest level of classification.
1159
1160 @xref{Standard Errors}, for a list of all the standard error symbols
1161 and their conditions.
1162
1163 @node Cleanups
1164 @subsection Cleaning Up from Nonlocal Exits
1165
1166 The @code{unwind-protect} construct is essential whenever you
1167 temporarily put a data structure in an inconsistent state; it permits
1168 you to make the data consistent again in the event of an error or
1169 throw. (Another more specific cleanup construct that is used only for
1170 changes in buffer contents is the atomic change group; @ref{Atomic
1171 Changes}.)
1172
1173 @defspec unwind-protect body-form cleanup-forms@dots{}
1174 @cindex cleanup forms
1175 @cindex protected forms
1176 @cindex error cleanup
1177 @cindex unwinding
1178 @code{unwind-protect} executes @var{body-form} with a guarantee that
1179 the @var{cleanup-forms} will be evaluated if control leaves
1180 @var{body-form}, no matter how that happens. @var{body-form} may
1181 complete normally, or execute a @code{throw} out of the
1182 @code{unwind-protect}, or cause an error; in all cases, the
1183 @var{cleanup-forms} will be evaluated.
1184
1185 If @var{body-form} finishes normally, @code{unwind-protect} returns the
1186 value of @var{body-form}, after it evaluates the @var{cleanup-forms}.
1187 If @var{body-form} does not finish, @code{unwind-protect} does not
1188 return any value in the normal sense.
1189
1190 Only @var{body-form} is protected by the @code{unwind-protect}. If any
1191 of the @var{cleanup-forms} themselves exits nonlocally (via a
1192 @code{throw} or an error), @code{unwind-protect} is @emph{not}
1193 guaranteed to evaluate the rest of them. If the failure of one of the
1194 @var{cleanup-forms} has the potential to cause trouble, then protect
1195 it with another @code{unwind-protect} around that form.
1196
1197 The number of currently active @code{unwind-protect} forms counts,
1198 together with the number of local variable bindings, against the limit
1199 @code{max-specpdl-size} (@pxref{Definition of max-specpdl-size,, Local
1200 Variables}).
1201 @end defspec
1202
1203 For example, here we make an invisible buffer for temporary use, and
1204 make sure to kill it before finishing:
1205
1206 @smallexample
1207 @group
1208 (save-excursion
1209 (let ((buffer (get-buffer-create " *temp*")))
1210 (set-buffer buffer)
1211 (unwind-protect
1212 @var{body-form}
1213 (kill-buffer buffer))))
1214 @end group
1215 @end smallexample
1216
1217 @noindent
1218 You might think that we could just as well write @code{(kill-buffer
1219 (current-buffer))} and dispense with the variable @code{buffer}.
1220 However, the way shown above is safer, if @var{body-form} happens to
1221 get an error after switching to a different buffer! (Alternatively,
1222 you could write another @code{save-excursion} around @var{body-form},
1223 to ensure that the temporary buffer becomes current again in time to
1224 kill it.)
1225
1226 Emacs includes a standard macro called @code{with-temp-buffer} which
1227 expands into more or less the code shown above (@pxref{Definition of
1228 with-temp-buffer,, Current Buffer}). Several of the macros defined in
1229 this manual use @code{unwind-protect} in this way.
1230
1231 @findex ftp-login
1232 Here is an actual example derived from an FTP package. It creates a
1233 process (@pxref{Processes}) to try to establish a connection to a remote
1234 machine. As the function @code{ftp-login} is highly susceptible to
1235 numerous problems that the writer of the function cannot anticipate, it
1236 is protected with a form that guarantees deletion of the process in the
1237 event of failure. Otherwise, Emacs might fill up with useless
1238 subprocesses.
1239
1240 @smallexample
1241 @group
1242 (let ((win nil))
1243 (unwind-protect
1244 (progn
1245 (setq process (ftp-setup-buffer host file))
1246 (if (setq win (ftp-login process host user password))
1247 (message "Logged in")
1248 (error "Ftp login failed")))
1249 (or win (and process (delete-process process)))))
1250 @end group
1251 @end smallexample
1252
1253 This example has a small bug: if the user types @kbd{C-g} to
1254 quit, and the quit happens immediately after the function
1255 @code{ftp-setup-buffer} returns but before the variable @code{process} is
1256 set, the process will not be killed. There is no easy way to fix this bug,
1257 but at least it is very unlikely.
1258
1259 @ignore
1260 arch-tag: 8abc30d4-4d3a-47f9-b908-e9e971c18c6d
1261 @end ignore