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This chapter describes no additional features of Emacs Lisp. Instead
it gives advice on making effective use of the features described in the
previous chapters, and describes conventions Emacs Lisp programmers
should follow.
Here are conventions that you should follow when writing Emacs Lisp
code intended for widespread use:
-
Since all global variables share the same name space, and all functions
share another name space, you should choose a short word to distinguish
your program from other Lisp programs. Then take care to begin the
names of all global variables, constants, and functions with the chosen
prefix. This helps avoid name conflicts.
This recommendation applies even to names for traditional Lisp
primitives that are not primitives in Emacs Lisp--even to
copy-list
. Believe it or not, there is more than one plausible
way to define copy-list
. Play it safe; append your name prefix
to produce a name like foo-copy-list
or mylib-copy-list
instead.
If you write a function that you think ought to be added to Emacs under
a certain name, such as twiddle-files
, don't call it by that name
in your program. Call it mylib-twiddle-files
in your program,
and send mail to `[email protected]' suggesting we add
it to Emacs. If and when we do, we can change the name easily enough.
If one prefix is insufficient, your package may use two or three
alternative common prefixes, so long as they make sense.
Separate the prefix from the rest of the symbol name with a hyphen,
`-'. This will be consistent with Emacs itself and with most Emacs
Lisp programs.
-
It is often useful to put a call to
provide
in each separate
library program, at least if there is more than one entry point to the
program.
-
If a file requires certain other library programs to be loaded
beforehand, then the comments at the beginning of the file should say
so. Also, use
require
to make sure they are loaded.
-
If one file foo uses a macro defined in another file bar,
foo should contain this expression before the first use of the
macro:
(eval-when-compile (require 'bar))
(And the library bar should contain (provide 'bar)
,
to make the require
work.) This will cause bar to be
loaded when you byte-compile foo. Otherwise, you risk compiling
foo without the necessary macro loaded, and that would produce
compiled code that won't work right. See section Macros and Byte Compilation.
Using eval-when-compile
avoids loading bar when
the compiled version of foo is used.
-
When defining a major mode, please follow the major mode
conventions. See section Major Mode Conventions.
-
When defining a minor mode, please follow the minor mode
conventions. See section Conventions for Writing Minor Modes.
-
If the purpose of a function is to tell you whether a certain condition
is true or false, give the function a name that ends in `p'. If
the name is one word, add just `p'; if the name is multiple words,
add `-p'. Examples are
framep
and frame-live-p
.
-
If a user option variable records a true-or-false condition, give it a
name that ends in `-flag'.
-
Please do not define C-c letter as a key in your major
modes. These sequences are reserved for users; they are the
only sequences reserved for users, so do not block them.
Instead, define sequences consisting of C-c followed by a control
character, a digit, or certain punctuation characters. These sequences
are reserved for major modes.
Changing all the Emacs major modes to follow this convention was a lot
of work. Abandoning this convention would make that work go to waste,
and inconvenience users.
-
Sequences consisting of C-c followed by {, },
<, >, : or ; are also reserved for major modes.
-
Sequences consisting of C-c followed by any other punctuation
character are allocated for minor modes. Using them in a major mode is
not absolutely prohibited, but if you do that, the major mode binding
may be shadowed from time to time by minor modes.
-
Function keys F5 through F9 without modifier keys are
reserved for users to define.
-
Do not bind C-h following any prefix character (including
C-c). If you don't bind C-h, it is automatically available
as a help character for listing the subcommands of the prefix character.
-
Do not bind a key sequence ending in ESC except following
another ESC. (That is, it is OK to bind a sequence ending in
ESC ESC.)
The reason for this rule is that a non-prefix binding for ESC in
any context prevents recognition of escape sequences as function keys in
that context.
-
Anything which acts like a temporary mode or state which the user can
enter and leave should define ESC ESC of
ESC ESC ESC as a way to escape.
For a state which accepts ordinary Emacs commands, or more generally any
kind of state in which ESC followed by a function key or arrow key
is potentially meaningful, then you must not define ESC
ESC, since that would preclude recognizing an escape sequence
after ESC. In these states, you should define ESC
ESC ESC as the way to escape. Otherwise, define
ESC ESC instead.
-
Applications should not bind mouse events based on button 1 with the
shift key held down. These events include S-mouse-1,
M-S-mouse-1, C-S-mouse-1, and so on. They are reserved for
users.
-
Special major modes used for read-only text should usually redefine
mouse-2 and RET to trace some sort of reference in the text.
Modes such as Dired, Info, Compilation, and Occur redefine it in this
way.
-
When a package provides a modification of ordinary Emacs behavior, it is
good to include a command to enable and disable the feature, Provide a
command named
whatever-mode
which turns the feature on or
off, and make it autoload (see section Autoload). Design the package so
that simply loading it has no visible effect--that should not enable
the feature. Users will request the feature by invoking the command.
-
It is a bad idea to define aliases for the Emacs primitives. Use the
standard names instead.
-
Redefining (or advising) an Emacs primitive is discouraged. It may do
the right thing for a particular program, but there is no telling what
other programs might break as a result.
-
If a file does replace any of the functions or library programs of
standard Emacs, prominent comments at the beginning of the file should
say which functions are replaced, and how the behavior of the
replacements differs from that of the originals.
-
Please keep the names of your Emacs Lisp source files to 13 characters
or less. This way, if the files are compiled, the compiled files' names
will be 14 characters or less, which is short enough to fit on all kinds
of Unix systems.
-
Don't use
next-line
or previous-line
in programs; nearly
always, forward-line
is more convenient as well as more
predictable and robust. See section Motion by Text Lines.
-
Don't call functions that set the mark, unless setting the mark is one
of the intended features of your program. The mark is a user-level
feature, so it is incorrect to change the mark except to supply a value
for the user's benefit. See section The Mark.
In particular, don't use any of these functions:
-
beginning-of-buffer
, end-of-buffer
-
replace-string
, replace-regexp
If you just want to move point, or replace a certain string, without any
of the other features intended for interactive users, you can replace
these functions with one or two lines of simple Lisp code.
-
Use lists rather than vectors, except when there is a particular reason
to use a vector. Lisp has more facilities for manipulating lists than
for vectors, and working with lists is usually more convenient.
Vectors are advantageous for tables that are substantial in size and are
accessed in random order (not searched front to back), provided there is
no need to insert or delete elements (only lists allow that).
-
The recommended way to print a message in the echo area is with
the
message
function, not princ
. See section The Echo Area.
-
When you encounter an error condition, call the function
error
(or signal
). The function error
does not return.
See section How to Signal an Error.
Do not use message
, throw
, sleep-for
,
or beep
to report errors.
-
An error message should start with a capital letter but should not end
with a period.
-
Many commands that take a long time to execute display a message that
says `Operating...' when they start, and change it to
`Operating...done' when they finish. Please keep the style of
these messages uniform: no space around the ellipsis, and
no period at the end.
-
Try to avoid using recursive edits. Instead, do what the Rmail e
command does: use a new local keymap that contains one command defined
to switch back to the old local keymap. Or do what the
edit-options
command does: switch to another buffer and let the
user switch back at will. See section Recursive Editing.
-
In some other systems there is a convention of choosing variable names
that begin and end with `*'. We don't use that convention in Emacs
Lisp, so please don't use it in your programs. (Emacs uses such names
only for special-purpose buffers.) The users will find Emacs more
coherent if all libraries use the same conventions.
-
Try to avoid compiler warnings about undefined free variables, by adding
defvar
definitions for these variables.
If you bind a variable in one function, and use it or set it in another
function, the compiler warns about the latter function unless the
variable has a definition. But often these variables have short names,
and it is not clean for Lisp packages to define such variable names.
Therefore, you should rename the variable to start with the name prefix
used for the other functions and variables in your package.
-
Indent each function with C-M-q (
indent-sexp
) using the
default indentation parameters.
-
Don't make a habit of putting close-parentheses on lines by themselves;
Lisp programmers find this disconcerting. Once in a while, when there
is a sequence of many consecutive close-parentheses, it may make sense
to split the sequence in one or two significant places.
-
Please put a copyright notice on the file if you give copies to anyone.
Use a message like this one:
;; Copyright (C) year name
;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
;; modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
;; published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
;; the License, or (at your option) any later version.
;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be
;; useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
;; warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
;; PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
;; License along with this program; if not, write to the Free
;; Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston,
;; MA 02111-1307 USA
If you have signed papers to assign the copyright to the Foundation,
then use `Free Software Foundation, Inc.' as name.
Otherwise, use your name.
Here are ways of improving the execution speed of byte-compiled
Lisp programs.
Here are some tips and conventions for the writing of documentation
strings. You can check many of these conventions by running the command
M-x checkdoc-minor-mode.
-
Every command, function, or variable intended for users to know about
should have a documentation string.
-
An internal variable or subroutine of a Lisp program might as well have
a documentation string. In earlier Emacs versions, you could save space
by using a comment instead of a documentation string, but that is no
longer the case.
-
The first line of the documentation string should consist of one or two
complete sentences that stand on their own as a summary. M-x
apropos displays just the first line, and if it doesn't stand on its
own, the result looks bad. In particular, start the first line with a
capital letter and end with a period.
The documentation string can have additional lines that expand on the
details of how to use the function or variable. The additional lines
should be made up of complete sentences also, but they may be filled if
that looks good.
-
For consistency, phrase the verb in the first sentence of a
function's documentation string as an infinitive with "to" omitted. For
instance, use "Return the cons of A and B." in preference to "Returns
the cons of A and B." Usually it looks good to do likewise for the
rest of the first paragraph. Subsequent paragraphs usually look better
if they have proper subjects.
-
Write documentation strings in the active voice, not the passive, and in
the present tense, not the future. For instance, use "Return a list
containing A and B." instead of "A list containing A and B will be
returned."
-
Avoid using the word "cause" (or its equivalents) unnecessarily.
Instead of, "Cause Emacs to display text in boldface," write just
"Display text in boldface."
-
Do not start or end a documentation string with whitespace.
-
Format the documentation string so that it fits in an Emacs window on an
80-column screen. It is a good idea for most lines to be no wider than
60 characters. The first line can be wider if necessary to fit the
information that ought to be there.
However, rather than simply filling the entire documentation string, you
can make it much more readable by choosing line breaks with care.
Use blank lines between topics if the documentation string is long.
-
Do not indent subsequent lines of a documentation string so
that the text is lined up in the source code with the text of the first
line. This looks nice in the source code, but looks bizarre when users
view the documentation. Remember that the indentation before the
starting double-quote is not part of the string!
-
When the user tries to use a disabled command, Emacs displays just the
first paragraph of its documentation string--everything through the
first blank line. If you wish, you can choose which information to
include before the first blank line so as to make this display useful.
-
A variable's documentation string should start with `*' if the
variable is one that users would often want to set interactively. If
the value is a long list, or a function, or if the variable would be set
only in init files, then don't start the documentation string with
`*'. See section Defining Global Variables.
-
The documentation string for a variable that is a yes-or-no flag should
start with words such as "Non-nil means...", to make it clear that
all non-
nil
values are equivalent and indicate explicitly what
nil
and non-nil
mean.
-
When a function's documentation string mentions the value of an argument
of the function, use the argument name in capital letters as if it were
a name for that value. Thus, the documentation string of the function
/
refers to its second argument as `DIVISOR', because the
actual argument name is divisor
.
Also use all caps for meta-syntactic variables, such as when you show
the decomposition of a list or vector into subunits, some of which may
vary.
-
When a documentation string refers to a Lisp symbol, write it as it
would be printed (which usually means in lower case), with single-quotes
around it. For example: ``lambda''. There are two exceptions:
write
t
and nil
without single-quotes.
Help mode automatically creates a hyperlink when a documentation string
uses a symbol name inside single quotes, if the symbol has either a
function or a variable definition. You do not need to do anything
special to make use of this feature. However, when a symbol has both a
function definition and a variable definition, and you want to refer to
just one of them, you can specify which one by writing one of the words
`variable', `option', `function', or `command',
immediately before the symbol name. (Case makes no difference in
recognizing these indicator words.) For example, if you write
This function sets the variable `buffer-file-name'.
then the hyperlink will refer only to the variable documentation of
buffer-file-name
, and not to its function documentation.
If a symbol has a function definition and/or a variable definition, but
those are irrelevant to the use of the symbol that you are documenting,
you can write the word `symbol' before the symbol name to prevent
making any hyperlink. For example,
If the argument KIND-OF-RESULT is the symbol `list',
this function returns a list of all the objects
that satisfy the criterion.
does not make a hyperlink to the documentation, irrelevant here, of the
function list
.
-
Don't write key sequences directly in documentation strings. Instead,
use the `\\[...]' construct to stand for them. For example,
instead of writing `C-f', write the construct
`\\[forward-char]'. When Emacs displays the documentation string,
it substitutes whatever key is currently bound to
forward-char
.
(This is normally `C-f', but it may be some other character if the
user has moved key bindings.) See section Substituting Key Bindings in Documentation.
-
In documentation strings for a major mode, you will want to refer to the
key bindings of that mode's local map, rather than global ones.
Therefore, use the construct `\\<...>' once in the
documentation string to specify which key map to use. Do this before
the first use of `\\[...]'. The text inside the
`\\<...>' should be the name of the variable containing the
local keymap for the major mode.
It is not practical to use `\\[...]' very many times, because
display of the documentation string will become slow. So use this to
describe the most important commands in your major mode, and then use
`\\{...}' to display the rest of the mode's keymap.
We recommend these conventions for where to put comments and how to
indent them:
- `;'
-
Comments that start with a single semicolon, `;', should all be
aligned to the same column on the right of the source code. Such
comments usually explain how the code on the same line does its job. In
Lisp mode and related modes, the M-; (
indent-for-comment
)
command automatically inserts such a `;' in the right place, or
aligns such a comment if it is already present.
This and following examples are taken from the Emacs sources.
(setq base-version-list ; there was a base
(assoc (substring fn 0 start-vn) ; version to which
file-version-assoc-list)) ; this looks like
; a subversion
- `;;'
-
Comments that start with two semicolons, `;;', should be aligned to
the same level of indentation as the code. Such comments usually
describe the purpose of the following lines or the state of the program
at that point. For example:
(prog1 (setq auto-fill-function
...
...
;; update mode line
(force-mode-line-update)))
Every function that has no documentation string (presumably one that is
used only internally within the package it belongs to), should have
instead a two-semicolon comment right before the function, explaining
what the function does and how to call it properly. Explain precisely
what each argument means and how the function interprets its possible
values.
- `;;;'
-
Comments that start with three semicolons, `;;;', should start at
the left margin. Such comments are used outside function definitions to
make general statements explaining the design principles of the program.
For example:
;;; This Lisp code is run in Emacs
;;; when it is to operate as a server
;;; for other processes.
Another use for triple-semicolon comments is for commenting out lines
within a function. We use triple-semicolons for this precisely so that
they remain at the left margin.
(defun foo (a)
;;; This is no longer necessary.
;;; (force-mode-line-update)
(message "Finished with %s" a))
- `;;;;'
-
Comments that start with four semicolons, `;;;;', should be aligned
to the left margin and are used for headings of major sections of a
program. For example:
;;;; The kill ring
The indentation commands of the Lisp modes in Emacs, such as M-;
(indent-for-comment
) and TAB (lisp-indent-line
),
automatically indent comments according to these conventions,
depending on the number of semicolons. See section `Manipulating Comments' in The GNU Emacs Manual.
Emacs has conventions for using special comments in Lisp libraries
to divide them into sections and give information such as who wrote
them. This section explains these conventions. First, an example:
;;; lisp-mnt.el --- minor mode for Emacs Lisp maintainers
;; Copyright (C) 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Eric S. Raymond <[email protected]>
;; Maintainer: Eric S. Raymond <[email protected]>
;; Created: 14 Jul 1992
;; Version: 1.2
;; Keywords: docs
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
...
;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
The very first line should have this format:
;;; filename --- description
The description should be complete in one line.
After the copyright notice come several header comment lines,
each beginning with `;; header-name:'. Here is a table of
the conventional possibilities for header-name:
- `Author'
-
This line states the name and net address of at least the principal
author of the library.
If there are multiple authors, you can list them on continuation lines
led by
;;
and a tab character, like this:
;; Author: Ashwin Ram <[email protected]>
;; Dave Sill <[email protected]>
;; Dave Brennan <[email protected]>
;; Eric Raymond <[email protected]>
- `Maintainer'
-
This line should contain a single name/address as in the Author line, or
an address only, or the string `FSF'. If there is no maintainer
line, the person(s) in the Author field are presumed to be the
maintainers. The example above is mildly bogus because the maintainer
line is redundant.
The idea behind the `Author' and `Maintainer' lines is to make
possible a Lisp function to "send mail to the maintainer" without
having to mine the name out by hand.
Be sure to surround the network address with `<...>' if
you include the person's full name as well as the network address.
- `Created'
-
This optional line gives the original creation date of the
file. For historical interest only.
- `Version'
-
If you wish to record version numbers for the individual Lisp program, put
them in this line.
- `Adapted-By'
-
In this header line, place the name of the person who adapted the
library for installation (to make it fit the style conventions, for
example).
- `Keywords'
-
This line lists keywords for the
finder-by-keyword
help command.
Please use that command to see a list of the meaningful keywords.
This field is important; it's how people will find your package when
they're looking for things by topic area. To separate the keywords, you
can use spaces, commas, or both.
Just about every Lisp library ought to have the `Author' and
`Keywords' header comment lines. Use the others if they are
appropriate. You can also put in header lines with other header
names--they have no standard meanings, so they can't do any harm.
We use additional stylized comments to subdivide the contents of the
library file. Here is a table of them:
- `;;; Commentary:'
-
This begins introductory comments that explain how the library works.
It should come right after the copying permissions, terminated by a
`Change Log', `History' or `Code' comment line. This
text is used by the Finder package, so it should make sense in that
context.
- `;;; Documentation'
-
This has been used in some files in place of `;;; Commentary:',
but `;;; Commentary:' is preferred.
- `;;; Change Log:'
-
This begins change log information stored in the library file (if you
store the change history there). For most of the Lisp
files distributed with Emacs, the change history is kept in the file
`ChangeLog' and not in the source file at all; these files do
not have a `;;; Change Log:' line.
- `;;; Code:'
-
This begins the actual code of the program.
- `;;; filename ends here'
-
This is the footer line; it appears at the very end of the file.
Its purpose is to enable people to detect truncated versions of the file
from the lack of a footer line.
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