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When a symbol is evaluated, it is treated as a variable. The result is the variable's value, if it has one. If it has none (if its value cell is void), an error is signaled. For more information on the use of variables, see Variables.
In the following example, we set the value of a symbol with setq
.
Then we evaluate the symbol, and get back the value that setq
stored.
(setq a 123) ⇒ 123 (eval 'a) ⇒ 123 a ⇒ 123 |
The symbols nil
and t
are treated specially, so that the value
of nil
is always nil
, and the value of t
is always
t
; you cannot set or bind them to any other values. Thus, these two
symbols act like self-evaluating forms, even though eval
treats them
like any other symbol. A symbol whose name starts with ‘:’ also
self-evaluates in the same way; likewise, its value ordinarily cannot be
changed. Voir la section Variables that Never Change.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.