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author | Lars Ingebrigtsen <larsi@gnus.org> | 2021-08-21 16:50:16 +0200 |
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committer | Lars Ingebrigtsen <larsi@gnus.org> | 2021-08-21 16:50:20 +0200 |
commit | a0023661a480bee27521981f7324e8670c7906c7 (patch) | |
tree | 2d2feaea5c091521db33f6c243d89caf82718a94 /doc/misc/cl.texi | |
parent | 69637fe7a612733177b72479269930562d4ba386 (diff) | |
download | emacs-a0023661a480bee27521981f7324e8670c7906c7.tar.gz emacs-a0023661a480bee27521981f7324e8670c7906c7.tar.bz2 emacs-a0023661a480bee27521981f7324e8670c7906c7.zip |
Clarify cl-defstruct doc string and manual entry somewhat
* doc/misc/cl.texi (Structures): Rename the slot "name" in the
examples to "first-name", since we're talking about the names of
slots a lot here, and having a slot with the name "name" makes the
examples somewhat confusing.
* lisp/emacs-lisp/cl-macs.el (cl-defstruct): Clarify certain
things about slots (bug#14278).
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/misc/cl.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/misc/cl.texi | 60 |
1 files changed, 30 insertions, 30 deletions
diff --git a/doc/misc/cl.texi b/doc/misc/cl.texi index c89e0e75f85..a6c3c32c0eb 100644 --- a/doc/misc/cl.texi +++ b/doc/misc/cl.texi @@ -3962,22 +3962,22 @@ In the simplest case, @var{name} and each of the @var{slots} are symbols. For example, @example -(cl-defstruct person name age sex) +(cl-defstruct person first-name age sex) @end example @noindent -defines a struct type called @code{person} that contains three -slots. Given a @code{person} object @var{p}, you can access those -slots by calling @code{(person-name @var{p})}, @code{(person-age @var{p})}, -and @code{(person-sex @var{p})}. You can also change these slots by -using @code{setf} on any of these place forms, for example: +defines a struct type called @code{person} that contains three slots. +Given a @code{person} object @var{p}, you can access those slots by +calling @code{(person-first-name @var{p})}, @code{(person-age +@var{p})}, and @code{(person-sex @var{p})}. You can also change these +slots by using @code{setf} on any of these place forms, for example: @example (cl-incf (person-age birthday-boy)) @end example You can create a new @code{person} by calling @code{make-person}, -which takes keyword arguments @code{:name}, @code{:age}, and +which takes keyword arguments @code{:first-name}, @code{:age}, and @code{:sex} to specify the initial values of these slots in the new object. (Omitting any of these arguments leaves the corresponding slot ``undefined'', according to the Common Lisp standard; in Emacs @@ -3989,7 +3989,7 @@ object of the same type whose slots are @code{eq} to those of @var{p}. Given any Lisp object @var{x}, @code{(person-p @var{x})} returns true if @var{x} is a @code{person}, and false otherwise. -Accessors like @code{person-name} normally check their arguments +Accessors like @code{person-first-name} normally check their arguments (effectively using @code{person-p}) and signal an error if the argument is the wrong type. This check is affected by @code{(optimize (safety @dots{}))} declarations. Safety level 1, @@ -4002,13 +4002,13 @@ always print a descriptive error message for incorrect inputs. @xref{Declarations}. @example -(setq dave (make-person :name "Dave" :sex 'male)) +(setq dave (make-person :first-name "Dave" :sex 'male)) @result{} [cl-struct-person "Dave" nil male] (setq other (copy-person dave)) @result{} [cl-struct-person "Dave" nil male] (eq dave other) @result{} nil -(eq (person-name dave) (person-name other)) +(eq (person-first-name dave) (person-first-name other)) @result{} t (person-p dave) @result{} t @@ -4021,7 +4021,7 @@ always print a descriptive error message for incorrect inputs. @end example In general, @var{name} is either a name symbol or a list of a name -symbol followed by any number of @dfn{struct options}; each @var{slot} +symbol followed by any number of @dfn{structure options}; each @var{slot} is either a slot symbol or a list of the form @samp{(@var{slot-name} @var{default-value} @var{slot-options}@dots{})}. The @var{default-value} is a Lisp form that is evaluated any time an instance of the @@ -4029,7 +4029,7 @@ structure type is created without specifying that slot's value. @example (cl-defstruct person - (name nil :read-only t) + (first-name nil :read-only t) age (sex 'unknown)) @end example @@ -4062,7 +4062,7 @@ enclosed in lists.) (cl-defstruct (person (:constructor create-person) (:type list) :named) - name age sex) + first-name age sex) @end example The following structure options are recognized. @@ -4108,12 +4108,12 @@ option. (person (:constructor nil) ; no default constructor (:constructor new-person - (name sex &optional (age 0))) - (:constructor new-hound (&key (name "Rover") + (first-name sex &optional (age 0))) + (:constructor new-hound (&key (first-name "Rover") (dog-years 0) &aux (age (* 7 dog-years)) (sex 'canine)))) - name age sex) + first-name age sex) @end example The first constructor here takes its arguments positionally rather @@ -4165,16 +4165,16 @@ slot descriptors for slots in the included structure, possibly with modified default values. Borrowing an example from Steele: @example -(cl-defstruct person name (age 0) sex) +(cl-defstruct person first-name (age 0) sex) @result{} person (cl-defstruct (astronaut (:include person (age 45))) helmet-size (favorite-beverage 'tang)) @result{} astronaut -(setq joe (make-person :name "Joe")) +(setq joe (make-person :first-name "Joe")) @result{} [cl-struct-person "Joe" 0 nil] -(setq buzz (make-astronaut :name "Buzz")) +(setq buzz (make-astronaut :first-name "Buzz")) @result{} [cl-struct-astronaut "Buzz" 45 nil nil tang] (list (person-p joe) (person-p buzz)) @@ -4182,17 +4182,17 @@ modified default values. Borrowing an example from Steele: (list (astronaut-p joe) (astronaut-p buzz)) @result{} (nil t) -(person-name buzz) +(person-first-name buzz) @result{} "Buzz" -(astronaut-name joe) - @result{} error: "astronaut-name accessing a non-astronaut" +(astronaut-first-name joe) + @result{} error: "astronaut-first-name accessing a non-astronaut" @end example Thus, if @code{astronaut} is a specialization of @code{person}, then every @code{astronaut} is also a @code{person} (but not the other way around). Every @code{astronaut} includes all the slots of a @code{person}, plus extra slots that are specific to -astronauts. Operations that work on people (like @code{person-name}) +astronauts. Operations that work on people (like @code{person-first-name}) work on astronauts just like other people. @item :noinline @@ -4230,10 +4230,10 @@ records, which are always tagged. Therefore, @code{:named} is only useful in conjunction with @code{:type}. @example -(cl-defstruct (person1) name age sex) -(cl-defstruct (person2 (:type list) :named) name age sex) -(cl-defstruct (person3 (:type list)) name age sex) -(cl-defstruct (person4 (:type vector)) name age sex) +(cl-defstruct (person1) first-name age sex) +(cl-defstruct (person2 (:type list) :named) first-name age sex) +(cl-defstruct (person3 (:type list)) first-name age sex) +(cl-defstruct (person4 (:type vector)) first-name age sex) (setq p1 (make-person1)) @result{} #s(person1 nil nil nil) @@ -4254,10 +4254,10 @@ useful in conjunction with @code{:type}. Since unnamed structures don't have tags, @code{cl-defstruct} is not able to make a useful predicate for recognizing them. Also, -accessors like @code{person3-name} will be generated but they -will not be able to do any type checking. The @code{person3-name} +accessors like @code{person3-first-name} will be generated but they +will not be able to do any type checking. The @code{person3-first-name} function, for example, will simply be a synonym for @code{car} in -this case. By contrast, @code{person2-name} is able to verify +this case. By contrast, @code{person2-first-name} is able to verify that its argument is indeed a @code{person2} object before proceeding. |