The s e
(calc-edit-variable) command edits the stored value
of a variable without ever putting that value on the stack or
simplifying or evaluating the value. It prompts for the name of
the variable to edit. If the variable has no stored value, the
editing buffer will start out empty. If the editing buffer is
empty when you press C-c C-c to finish, the variable
will be made void. See Editing Stack
Entries, for a general description of editing.
The s e command is especially useful for creating
and editing rewrite rules which are stored in variables.
Sometimes these rules contain formulas which must not be
evaluated until the rules are actually used. (For example, they
may refer to ‘deriv(x,y)’, where x will
someday become some expression involving y; if you
let Calc evaluate the rule while you are defining it, Calc will
replace ‘deriv(x,y)’ with 0 because the formula
x does not itself refer to y.) By
contrast, recalling the variable, editing with `, and
storing will evaluate the variable's value as a side effect of
putting the value on the stack.
There are several special-purpose variable-editing commands that use the s prefix followed by a shifted letter:
AlgSimpRules. See Algebraic
Simplifications.Decls. See Declarations.EvalRules. See Default
Simplifications.FitRules. See Curve
Fitting.GenCount. See Solving
Equations.Holidays. See Business
Days.IntegLimit. See Calculus.LineStyles. See Graphics.PointStyles. See Graphics.PlotRejects. See Graphics.TimeZone. See Time Zones.Units. See User-Defined
Units.ExtSimpRules. See Unsafe
Simplifications.These commands are just versions of s e that use fixed variable names rather than prompting for the variable name.
The s p
(calc-permanent-variable) command saves a variable's
value permanently in your Calc init file (the file given by the
variable calc-settings-file, typically
~/.emacs.d/calc.el), so
that its value will still be available in future Emacs sessions.
You can re-execute s p later on to
update the saved value, but the only way to remove a saved
variable is to edit your calc init file by hand. (See General Mode
Commands, for a way to tell Calc to use a different file for
the Calc init file.)
If you do not specify the name of a variable to save (i.e.,
s p <RET>), all Calc variables with defined
values are saved except for the special constants
pi, e, i,
phi, and gamma; the variables
TimeZone and PlotRejects;
FitRules, DistribRules, and other
built-in rewrite rules; and PlotDatan
variables generated by the graphics commands. (You can still save
these variables by explicitly naming them in an s p
command.)
The s i
(calc-insert-variables) command writes the values of
all Calc variables into a specified buffer. The variables are
written with the prefix var- in the form of Lisp
setq commands which store the values in string form.
You can place these commands in your Calc init file (or
.emacs) if you wish,
though in this case it would be easier to use s p
<RET>. (Note that s i omits the same set
of variables as s p <RET>;
the difference is that s i will store the variables in
any buffer, and it also stores in a more human-readable
format.)