Mercurial > emacs
changeset 72413:0e8b738d2b51
(Variable Definitions): Explain when the
standard value expression is evaluated.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 16 Aug 2006 05:10:55 +0000 |
parents | ec8109b4dd1d |
children | 4ed64476d54d |
files | lispref/customize.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 24 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lispref/customize.texi Wed Aug 16 05:09:18 2006 +0000 +++ b/lispref/customize.texi Wed Aug 16 05:10:55 2006 +0000 @@ -251,19 +251,30 @@ Use @code{defcustom} to declare user-editable variables. -@defmac defcustom option default doc [keyword value]@dots{} -Declare @var{option} as a customizable user option variable. Do not -quote @var{option}. The argument @var{doc} specifies the documentation -string for the variable. There is no need to start it with a @samp{*} -because @code{defcustom} automatically marks @var{option} as a -@dfn{user option} (@pxref{Defining Variables}). +@defmac defcustom option standard doc [keyword value]@dots{} +This construct declares @var{option} as a customizable user option +variable. You should not quote @var{option}. The argument @var{doc} +specifies the documentation string for the variable. There is no need +to start it with a @samp{*}, because @code{defcustom} automatically +marks @var{option} as a @dfn{user option} (@pxref{Defining +Variables}). -If @var{option} is void, @code{defcustom} initializes it to -@var{default}. @var{default} should be an expression to compute the -value; be careful in writing it, because it can be evaluated on more -than one occasion. You should normally avoid using backquotes in -@var{default} because they are not expanded when editing the value, -causing list values to appear to have the wrong structure. +The argument @var{standard} is an expression that specifies the +standard value for @var{option}. Evaluating the @code{defcustom} form +evaluates @var{standard}, but does not necessarily install the +standard value. If @var{option} already has a default value, +@code{defcustom} does not change it. If the user has saved a +customization for @var{option}, @code{defcustom} installs the user's +customized value as @var{option}'s default value. If neither of those +cases applies, @code{defcustom} installs the result of evaluating +@var{standard} as the default value. + +The expression @var{standard} can be evaluated at various other times, +too---whenever the customization facility needs to know @var{option}'s +standard value. So be sure to use an expression which is harmless to +evaluate at any time. We recommend avoiding backquotes in +@var{standard}, because they are not expanded when editing the value, +so list values will appear to have the wrong structure. If you specify the @code{:set} option, to make the variable take other special actions when set through the customization buffer, the @@ -406,7 +417,7 @@ @end defun Internally, @code{defcustom} uses the symbol property -@code{standard-value} to record the expression for the default value, +@code{standard-value} to record the expression for the standard value, and @code{saved-value} to record the value saved by the user with the customization buffer. Both properties are actually lists whose car is an expression which evaluates to the value.