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To understand how symbols are created in GNU Emacs Lisp, you must know how Lisp reads them. Lisp must ensure that it finds the same symbol every time it reads the same set of characters. Failure to do so would cause complete confusion.
When the Lisp reader encounters a symbol, it reads all the characters of the name. Then it hashes those characters to find an index in a table called an obarray. Hashing is an efficient method of looking something up. For example, instead of searching a telephone book cover to cover when looking up Jan Jones, you start with the J’s and go from there. That is a simple version of hashing. Each element of the obarray is a bucket which holds all the symbols with a given hash code; to look for a given name, it is sufficient to look through all the symbols in the bucket for that name’s hash code. (The same idea is used for general Emacs hash tables, but they are a different data type; see Hash Tables.)
If a symbol with the desired name is found, the reader uses that symbol. If the obarray does not contain a symbol with that name, the reader makes a new symbol and adds it to the obarray. Finding or adding a symbol with a certain name is called interning it, and the symbol is then called an interned symbol.
Interning ensures that each obarray has just one symbol with any particular name. Other like-named symbols may exist, but not in the same obarray. Thus, the reader gets the same symbols for the same names, as long as you keep reading with the same obarray.
Interning usually happens automatically in the reader, but sometimes other programs need to do it. For example, after the M-x command obtains the command name as a string using the minibuffer, it then interns the string, to get the interned symbol with that name.
No obarray contains all symbols; in fact, some symbols are not in any obarray. They are called uninterned symbols. An uninterned symbol has the same four cells as other symbols; however, the only way to gain access to it is by finding it in some other object or as the value of a variable.
Creating an uninterned symbol is useful in generating Lisp code, because an uninterned symbol used as a variable in the code you generate cannot clash with any variables used in other Lisp programs.
In Emacs Lisp, an obarray is actually a vector. Each element
of the vector is a bucket; its value is either an interned symbol
whose name hashes to that bucket, or 0 if the bucket is empty.
Each interned symbol has an internal link (invisible to the user)
to the next symbol in the bucket. Because these links are
invisible, there is no way to find all the symbols in an obarray
except using mapatoms (below). The order of symbols
in a bucket is not significant.
In an empty obarray, every element is 0, so you can create an
obarray with (make-vector length 0).
This is the only valid way to create an obarray.
Prime numbers as lengths tend to result in good hashing; lengths
one less than a power of two are also good.
Do not try to put symbols in an obarray
yourself. This does not work—only
intern can enter a symbol in an obarray
properly.
Common Lisp note: Unlike Common Lisp, Emacs Lisp does not provide for interning a single symbol in several obarrays.
Most of the functions below take a name and sometimes an
obarray as arguments. A wrong-type-argument error is
signaled if the name is not a string, or if the obarray is not a
vector.
This function returns the string that is symbol’s name. For example:
(symbol-name 'foo)
⇒ "foo"
Warning: Changing the string by substituting characters does change the name of the symbol, but fails to update the obarray, so don’t do it!
This function returns a newly-allocated, uninterned symbol
whose name is name (which must be a string). Its
value and function definition are void, and its property list
is nil. In the example below, the value of
sym is not eq to foo
because it is a distinct uninterned symbol whose name is also
‘foo’.
(setq sym (make-symbol "foo"))
⇒ foo
(eq sym 'foo)
⇒ nil
This function returns the interned symbol whose name is
name. If there is no such symbol in the obarray
obarray, intern creates a new one,
adds it to the obarray, and returns it. If obarray
is omitted, the value of the global variable
obarray is used.
(setq sym (intern "foo"))
⇒ foo
(eq sym 'foo)
⇒ t
(setq sym1 (intern "foo" other-obarray))
⇒ foo
(eq sym1 'foo)
⇒ nil
Common Lisp note: In Common Lisp, you can intern an existing symbol in an obarray. In Emacs Lisp, you cannot do this, because the argument to
internmust be a string, not a symbol.
This function returns the symbol in obarray
whose name is name, or nil if
obarray has no symbol with that name. Therefore,
you can use intern-soft to test whether a symbol
with a given name is already interned. If obarray
is omitted, the value of the global variable
obarray is used.
The argument name may also be a symbol; in that
case, the function returns name if name
is interned in the specified obarray, and otherwise
nil.
(intern-soft "frazzle") ; No such symbol exists. ⇒ nil (make-symbol "frazzle") ; Create an uninterned one. ⇒ frazzle
(intern-soft "frazzle") ; That one cannot be found.
⇒ nil
(setq sym (intern "frazzle")) ; Create an interned one.
⇒ frazzle
(intern-soft "frazzle") ; That one can be found!
⇒ frazzle
(eq sym 'frazzle) ; And it is the same one.
⇒ t
This variable is the standard obarray for use by
intern and read.
This function calls function once with each
symbol in the obarray obarray. Then it returns
nil. If obarray is omitted, it
defaults to the value of obarray, the standard
obarray for ordinary symbols.
(setq count 0)
⇒ 0
(defun count-syms (s)
(setq count (1+ count)))
⇒ count-syms
(mapatoms 'count-syms)
⇒ nil
count
⇒ 1871
See documentation in Accessing
Documentation, for another example using
mapatoms.
This function deletes symbol from the obarray
obarray. If symbol is not actually in
the obarray, unintern does nothing. If
obarray is nil, the current obarray
is used.
If you provide a string instead of a symbol as
symbol, it stands for a symbol name. Then
unintern deletes the symbol (if any) in the
obarray which has that name. If there is no such symbol,
unintern does nothing.
If unintern does delete a symbol, it returns
t. Otherwise it returns nil.
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