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Some major modes, such as SES, call functions that are stored in user files. (See (ses)Top, for more information on SES.) User files sometimes have poor pedigrees—you can get a spreadsheet from someone you’ve just met, or you can get one through email from someone you’ve never met. So it is risky to call a function whose source code is stored in a user file until you have determined that it is safe.
Returns nil if form is a
safe Lisp expression, or returns a list that
describes why it might be unsafe. The argument
unsafep-vars is a list of symbols known to have
temporary bindings at this point; it is mainly used for
internal recursive calls. The current buffer is an implicit
argument, which provides a list of buffer-local bindings.
Being quick and simple, unsafep does a very light
analysis and rejects many Lisp expressions that are actually
safe. There are no known cases where unsafep returns
nil for an unsafe expression. However, a safe Lisp
expression can return a string with a display
property, containing an associated Lisp expression to be executed
after the string is inserted into a buffer. This associated
expression can be a virus. In order to be safe, you must delete
properties from all strings calculated by user code before
inserting them into buffers.