A generalized reference is the use of a form, sometimes called a place , as if it were a variable that could be read and written. The value of a place is the object to which the place form evaluates. The value of a place can be changed by using setf. The concept of binding a place is not defined in Common Lisp, but an implementation is permitted to extend the language by defining this concept.
Figure 5--1 contains examples of the use of setf. Note that the values returned by evaluating the forms in column two are not necessarily the same as those obtained by evaluating the forms in column three. In general, the exact macro expansion of a setf form is not guaranteed and can even be implementation-dependent; all that is guaranteed is that the expansion is an update form that works for that particular implementation, that the left-to-right evaluation of subforms is preserved, and that the ultimate result of evaluating setf is the value or values being stored.
Access function Update Function Update using setf x (setq x datum) (setf x datum) (car x) (rplaca x datum) (setf (car x) datum) (symbol-value x) (set x datum) (setf (symbol-value x) datum)
Figure 5--1: Examples of setf
Figure 5--2 shows operators relating to places and generalized reference.
assert defsetf push ccase get-setf-expansion remf ctypecase getf rotatef decf incf setf define-modify-macro pop shiftf define-setf-expander psetf
Figure 5--2: Operators relating to places and generalized reference.
Some of the operators above manipulate places and some manipulate setf expanders. A setf expansion can be derived from any place.
New setf expanders can be defined by using defsetf and define-setf-expander.
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