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The value of this variable is the default output stream—the stream that
print functions use when the stream argument is nil
. The
default is t
, meaning display in the echo area.
If this is non-nil
, that means to print quoted forms using
abbreviated reader syntax. (quote foo)
prints as 'foo
,
(function foo)
as #'foo
, and backquoted forms print using
modern backquote syntax.
If this variable is non-nil
, then newline characters in strings are
printed as ‘\n’ and formfeeds are printed as ‘\f’. Normally these
characters are printed as actual newlines and formfeeds.
This variable affects the print functions prin1
and print
that
print with quoting. It does not affect princ
. Here is an example
using prin1
:
(prin1 "a\nb") -| "a -| b" ⇒ "a b" (let ((print-escape-newlines t)) (prin1 "a\nb")) -| "a\nb" ⇒ "a b" |
In the second expression, the local binding of print-escape-newlines
is in effect during the call to prin1
, but not during the printing of
the result.
If this variable is non-nil
, then unibyte non-ASCII
characters in strings are unconditionally printed as backslash sequences by
the print functions prin1
and print
that print with quoting.
Those functions also use backslash sequences for unibyte non-ASCII characters, regardless of the value of this variable, when the output stream is a multibyte buffer or a marker pointing into one.
If this variable is non-nil
, then multibyte non-ASCII
characters in strings are unconditionally printed as backslash sequences by
the print functions prin1
and print
that print with quoting.
Those functions also use backslash sequences for multibyte non-ASCII characters, regardless of the value of this variable, when the output stream is a unibyte buffer or a marker pointing into one.
The value of this variable is the maximum number of elements to print in any list, vector or bool-vector. If an object being printed has more than this many elements, it is abbreviated with an ellipsis.
If the value is nil
(the default), then there is no limit.
(setq print-length 2) ⇒ 2 (print '(1 2 3 4 5)) -| (1 2 ...) ⇒ (1 2 ...) |
The value of this variable is the maximum depth of nesting of parentheses
and brackets when printed. Any list or vector at a depth exceeding this
limit is abbreviated with an ellipsis. A value of nil
(which is the
default) means no limit.
These are the values for print-length
and print-level
used by
eval-expression
, and thus, indirectly, by many interactive evaluation
commands (voir (emacs)Lisp Eval section `Evaluating Emacs-Lisp Expressions' dans The GNU Emacs Manual).
These variables are used for detecting and reporting circular and shared structure:
If non-nil
, this variable enables detection of circular and shared
structure in printing.
If non-nil
, this variable enables detection of uninterned symbols
(@pxref{Creating Symbols}) in printing. When this is enabled, uninterned
symbols print with the prefix ‘#:’, which tells the Lisp reader to
produce an uninterned symbol.
If non-nil
, that means number continuously across print calls. This
affects the numbers printed for ‘#n=’ labels and ‘#m#’
references.
Don't set this variable with setq
; you should only bind it
temporarily to t
with let
. When you do that, you should also
bind print-number-table
to nil
.
This variable holds a vector used internally by printing to implement the
print-circle
feature. You should not use it except to bind it to
nil
when you bind print-continuous-numbering
.
This variable specifies how to print floating point numbers. Its default
value is nil
, meaning use the shortest output that represents the
number without losing information.
To control output format more precisely, you can put a string in this
variable. The string should hold a ‘%’-specification to be used in the
C function sprintf
. For further restrictions on what you can use,
see the variable's documentation string.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.