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In the previous section, the definition of for was fixed as follows 
to make the expansion evaluate the macro arguments the proper number of 
times:
| (defmacro for (var from init to final do &rest body)
  "Execute a simple for loop: (for i from 1 to 10 do (print i))."
  `(let ((,var ,init)
         (max ,final))
     (while (<= ,var max)
       ,@body
       (inc ,var))))
 | 
The new definition of for has a new problem: it introduces a local 
variable named max which the user does not expect.  This causes 
trouble in examples such as the following:
| (let ((max 0))
  (for x from 0 to 10 do
    (let ((this (frob x)))
      (if (< max this)
          (setq max this)))))
 | 
The references to max inside the body of the for, which are 
supposed to refer to the user's binding of max, really access the 
binding made by for.
The way to correct this is to use an uninterned symbol instead of max 
(@pxref{Creating Symbols}).  The uninterned symbol can be bound and referred 
to just like any other symbol, but since it is created by for, we 
know that it cannot already appear in the user's program.  Since it is not 
interned, there is no way the user can put it into the program later.  It 
will never appear anywhere except where put by for.  Here is a 
definition of for that works this way:
| (defmacro for (var from init to final do &rest body)
  "Execute a simple for loop: (for i from 1 to 10 do (print i))."
  (let ((tempvar (make-symbol "max")))
    `(let ((,var ,init)
           (,tempvar ,final))
       (while (<= ,var ,tempvar)
         ,@body
         (inc ,var)))))
 | 
This creates an uninterned symbol named max and puts it in the 
expansion instead of the usual interned symbol max that appears in 
expressions ordinarily.
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  Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.