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Syntax tables are implemented as char-tables (see Char-Tables), but most Lisp programs don’t work directly with their elements. Syntax tables do not store syntax data as syntax descriptors (see Syntax Descriptors); they use an internal format, which is documented in this section. This internal format can also be assigned as syntax properties (see Syntax Properties).
Each entry in a syntax table is a raw syntax
descriptor: a cons cell of the form
(syntax-code . matching-char).
syntax-code is an integer which encodes the syntax
class and syntax flags, according to the table below.
matching-char, if non-nil, specifies a
matching character (similar to the second character in a syntax
descriptor).
Here are the syntax codes corresponding to the various syntax classes:
| Code | Class | Code | Class |
| 0 | whitespace | 8 | paired delimiter |
| 1 | punctuation | 9 | escape |
| 2 | word | 10 | character quote |
| 3 | symbol | 11 | comment-start |
| 4 | open parenthesis | 12 | comment-end |
| 5 | close parenthesis | 13 | inherit |
| 6 | expression prefix | 14 | generic comment |
| 7 | string quote | 15 | generic string |
For example, in the standard syntax table, the entry for
‘(’ is (4 . 41). 41 is the
character code for ‘)’.
Syntax flags are encoded in higher order bits, starting 16 bits from the least significant bit. This table gives the power of two which corresponds to each syntax flag.
| Prefix | Flag | Prefix | Flag |
| ‘1’ | (lsh 1 16) |
‘p’ | (lsh 1 20) |
| ‘2’ | (lsh 1 17) |
‘b’ | (lsh 1 21) |
| ‘3’ | (lsh 1 18) |
‘n’ | (lsh 1 22) |
| ‘4’ | (lsh 1 19) |
Given a syntax descriptor desc (a string), this function returns the corresponding raw syntax descriptor.
This function returns the raw syntax descriptor for the
character in the buffer after position pos, taking
account of syntax properties as well as the syntax table. If
pos is outside the buffer’s accessible
portion (see accessible
portion), the return value is nil.
This function returns the syntax code for the raw syntax descriptor syntax. More precisely, it takes the raw syntax descriptor’s syntax-code component, masks off the high 16 bits which record the syntax flags, and returns the resulting integer.
If syntax is nil, the return value
is returns nil. This is so that the
expression
(syntax-class (syntax-after pos))
evaluates to nil if pos is
outside the buffer’s accessible portion, without
throwing errors or returning an incorrect code.
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