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If recursive-p is supplied and not nil, it specifies that
this function call is not an outermost call to read but an
embedded call, typically from a reader macro function.
It is important to distinguish such recursive calls for three reasons.
- 1.
-
An outermost call establishes the context within which the
#n= and #n# syntax is scoped. Consider, for example,
the expression
(cons '#3=(p q r) '(x y . #3#))
If the single-quote reader macro were defined in this way:
(set-macro-character #\' ;incorrect
#'(lambda (stream char)
(declare (ignore char))
(list 'quote (read stream))))
then each call to the single-quote reader macro function would establish
independent contexts for the scope of read information, including the scope of
identifications between markers like "#3=" and "#3#". However, for
this expression, the scope was clearly intended to be determined by the outer set
of parentheses, so such a definition would be incorrect.
The correct way to define the single-quote
reader macro uses recursive-p:
(set-macro-character #\' ;correct
#'(lambda (stream char)
(declare (ignore char))
(list 'quote (read stream t nil t))))
- 2.
-
A recursive call does not alter whether the reading process
is to preserve whitespace_2 or not (as determined by whether the
outermost call was to read or read-preserving-whitespace).
Suppose again that single-quote
were to be defined as shown above in the incorrect definition.
Then a call to read-preserving-whitespace
that read the expression 'foo<Space> would fail to preserve the space
character following the symbol foo because the single-quote
reader macro function calls read,
not read-preserving-whitespace,
to read the following expression (in this case foo).
The correct definition, which passes the value true for recursive-p
to read, allows the outermost call to determine
whether whitespace_2 is preserved.
- 3.
-
When end-of-file is encountered and the eof-error-p argument
is not nil, the kind of error that is signaled may depend on the value
of recursive-p. If recursive-p
is true, then the end-of-file
is deemed to have occurred within the middle of a printed representation;
if recursive-p is false, then the end-of-file may be deemed to have
occurred between objects rather than within the middle of one.
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