Mercurial > emacs
changeset 33295:d66d9f108b83
Remove obsolete warnings about use of memq for keyword args.
author | Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 08 Nov 2000 14:31:51 +0000 |
parents | 66666ed75041 |
children | acb605e6da0e |
files | man/cl.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/cl.texi Wed Nov 08 14:07:12 2000 +0000 +++ b/man/cl.texi Wed Nov 08 14:31:51 2000 +0000 @@ -498,19 +498,6 @@ keep both @code{find-thing} and @code{member*} from complaining about each others' keywords in the arguments. -As a (significant) performance optimization, this package -implements the scan for keyword arguments by calling @code{memq} -to search for keywords in a ``rest'' argument. Technically -speaking, this is incorrect, since @code{memq} looks at the -odd-numbered values as well as the even-numbered keywords. -The net effect is that if you happen to pass a keyword symbol -as the @emph{value} of another keyword argument, where that -keyword symbol happens to equal the name of a valid keyword -argument of the same function, then the keyword parser will -become confused. This minor bug can only affect you if you -use keyword symbols as general-purpose data in your program; -this practice is strongly discouraged in Emacs Lisp. - The fifth section of the argument list consists of @dfn{auxiliary variables}. These are not really arguments at all, but simply variables which are bound to @code{nil} or to the specified @@ -4991,13 +4978,7 @@ Common Lisp compliance has in general not been sacrificed for the sake of efficiency. A few exceptions have been made for cases where substantial gains were possible at the expense of marginal -incompatibility. One example is the use of @code{memq} (which is -treated very efficiently by the byte-compiler) to scan for keyword -arguments; this can become confused in rare cases when keyword -symbols are used as both keywords and data values at once. This -is extremely unlikely to occur in practical code, and the use of -@code{memq} allows functions with keyword arguments to be nearly -as fast as functions that use @code{&optional} arguments. +incompatibility. The Common Lisp standard (as embodied in Steele's book) uses the phrase ``it is an error if'' to indicate a situation which is not @@ -5057,13 +5038,6 @@ keyword does not work in @code{defmacro} argument lists (except inside recursive argument lists). -In order to allow an efficient implementation, keyword arguments use -a slightly cheesy parser which may be confused if a keyword symbol -is passed as the @emph{value} of another keyword argument. -(Specifically, @code{(memq :@var{keyword} @var{rest-of-arguments})} -is used to scan for @code{:@var{keyword}} among the supplied -keyword arguments.) - The @code{eql} and @code{equal} predicates do not distinguish between IEEE floating-point plus and minus zero. The @code{equalp} predicate has several differences with Common Lisp; @pxref{Predicates}.