| Lisp Standard Library |
| ===================== |
| |
| This provides documentation for every built-in function in the Lisp standard |
| library. It is not auto-generated, please update this documentation if you |
| change the API in any way. |
| |
| In general every user-facing API in the standard library should be documented |
| here. |
| |
| - ``(x ...)`` represents a list ``x``. |
| - ``& body`` means that the rest of the list is represented by ``body``. |
| - ``[something]`` means that ``something`` is optional. |
| |
| Top-level primitives |
| -------------------- |
| |
| These are "functions" that can only appear at the top-level of the program. This |
| means they can't be nested in any other expressions. |
| |
| .. function:: (defun function-name (args ...) & body) |
| |
| Defines a function ``function-name`` that takes ``args`` and evaluates |
| ``body``. ``function-name`` is quoted, not evaluated. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| (defun say-hi (name) |
| (print "Hi, ") |
| (print name)) |
| |
| (say-hi "Joe") |
| ; "Hi," |
| ; "Joe" |
| |
| .. function:: (defmacro macro-name (args ...) & body) |
| |
| ``defmacro`` is to macros as ``defun`` is to functions. When ``macro-name`` |
| is called, whatever it evaluates to will be compiled. |
| |
| Note that internally this compiles a function the same way all other |
| functions are compiled, meaning you can call **any** lisp function from a |
| macro definition and it will work as expected. |
| |
| .. code-block:: Lisp |
| |
| (defun double (n) |
| (+ n n)) |
| |
| (defmacro call-with-4 (whatever) |
| (print "this was run at **compile time**") |
| (print whatever) |
| ;; ``whatever`` expands to the form passed to this macro, in this case |
| ;; ``double``. |
| (list whatever 4)) |
| |
| (print (call-with-4 double)) |
| ; "this was run at **compile time**" |
| ; 'double |
| ; 8 |
| |
| Functions |
| --------- |
| |
| .. function:: (if condition true-condition [false-condition]) |
| |
| Evaluates ``condition``, if it is truthy (non-``nil``) ``true-condition`` is |
| evaluated. Otherwise ``false-condition`` is evaluated. If |
| ``false-condition`` is not provided and ``condition`` is ``nil``, ``if`` |
| will evaluate to ``nil``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| (print (if (= 2 3) |
| "2 = 3" |
| "2 /= 3")) |
| ; 2 /= 3 |
| |
| .. function:: (let1 (variable binding) & body) |
| |
| Evaluates ``binding`` and binds it to ``variable``, then evaluates ``body``. |
| After ``body`` is evaluated ``variable`` is unbound. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| (let1 (greeting (greet "John")) |
| (do-something greeting) |
| (print greeting)) |
| ; greeting is no longer bound |
| |
| .. function:: (gc) |
| |
| Force the garbage collector (GC) to run. |
| |
| .. function:: (car pair) |
| |
| Return the first item in ``pair``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| (car (cons 'a 'b)) ;=> 'a |
| |
| .. function:: (cdr pair) |
| |
| Return the second (last) item in ``pair``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| (cdr (cons 'a 'b)) ;=> 'b |
| |
| .. function:: (cons a b) |
| |
| Return a cons-pair containing ``a`` and ``b``. |
| |
| .. function:: (print val) |
| |
| Print out ``val`` to standard output. This will not be formatted as an |
| s-expression, but in a manner more similar to the internal representation. |
| |
| .. function:: (list & items) |
| |
| Returns a cons-list of items. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| (list 1 2 3) |
| ; is the same as |
| (cons 1 (cons 2 (cons 3 nil))) |
| |
| .. function:: (quote form) |
| |
| Returns form without evaluating it. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| '(cons a b) |
| ; or |
| (quote cons a b) |
| ; is the same as |
| (list 'cons 'a 'b) |
| |
| .. function:: (lambda (args ...) & body) |
| |
| Creates an anonymous function (closure). This function uses **lexical |
| scope** meaning that any free variables (variables bound outside this lambda |
| definition) are "captured" by the closure. You can call this function with |
| ``funcall`` (to be implemented) or ``apply``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: lisp |
| |
| (let1 (number 3) |
| (let1 (adds-number-to (lambda (n) |
| (+ n number))) |
| (print (apply adds-number-to '(5))))) |
| ; 8 |
| |
| .. function:: (apply function (args ...)) |
| |
| Call ``function`` with ``args`` and return the result. Note that since this |
| is a Lisp-2 (i.e. functions and variables do not share the same namespace) |
| you need to pass a **function object** (i.e. a lambda or quoted function). |