Archived
1
0
Fork 0
This repository has been archived on 2024-10-19. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues or pull requests.
emacs/elpa/compat-28.1.2.2/compat.info

2071 lines
86 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters

This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

This is compat.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.7 from compat.texi.
Copyright © 2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts
being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a)
below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
“GNU Free Documentation License.”
(a) The FSFs Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and
modify this GNU manual.”
INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Compat: (compat). Compatibility Library for Emacs Lisp.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY

File: compat.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir)
"Compat" Manual
***************
This manual documents the usage of the "Compat" Emacs lisp library, the
forward-compatibility library for Emacs Lisp, corresponding to version
28.1.2.2.
Copyright © 2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts
being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a)
below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
“GNU Free Documentation License.”
(a) The FSFs Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and
modify this GNU manual.”
* Menu:
* Introduction::
* Support::
* Development::
* Function Index::
* Variable Index::
— The Detailed Node Listing —
Introduction
* Overview::
* Usage::
* Intentions::
Usage
* Additional libraries::
Support
* Emacs 24.4:: Compatibility support for Emacs 24.4
* Emacs 25.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 25.1
* Emacs 26.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 26.1
* Emacs 27.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 27.1
* Emacs 28.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 28.1

File: compat.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Support, Prev: Top, Up: Top
1 Introduction
**************
* Menu:
* Overview::
* Usage::
* Intentions::

File: compat.info, Node: Overview, Next: Usage, Up: Introduction
1.1 Overview
============
The objective of Compat is to provide "forwards compatibility" library
for Emacs Lisp. That is to say by using Compat, an Elisp package does
not have to make the decision to either use new and useful functionality
or support old versions of Emacs.
Version 24.3 is chosen as the oldest version, because this is the
newest version on CentOS 7. It is intended to preserve compatibility
for at least as the Centos 7 reaches EOL
(https://wiki.centos.org/About/Product), 2024.
If you are developing a package with Compat in mind, consider loading
compat-help (on your system, not in a package) to get relevant notes
inserted into the help buffers of functions that are implemented or
advised in Compat.
Note that Compat provides a few prefixed function, ie. functions
with a compat- prefix. These are used to provide extended
functionality for commands that are already defined (sort, assoc,
seq, ...). It might be possible to transform these into advised
functions later on, so that the modified functionality is accessible
without a prefix. Feedback on this point is appreciated.

File: compat.info, Node: Usage, Next: Intentions, Prev: Overview, Up: Introduction
1.2 Usage
=========
The intended use-case for this library is for package developers to add
as a dependency in the header:
;; Package-Requires: ((emacs "24.3") (compat "28.1.2.2"))
There is no need to depend on emacs 24.3 specifically. One can
choose to any newer version, if features not provided by Compat
necessitate it.
In any file where compatibility forms are used, a
(require 'compat)
should be added early on.
This will load all non-prefixed definitions (functions and macros
with a leading compat-). To load these, an additional
(require 'compat-XY) ; e.g. 26
will be necessary, to load compatibility code for Emacs version XY.
It is recommended to subscribe to the compat-announce
(https://lists.sr.ht/~pkal/compat-announce) mailing list to be notified
when new versions are released or relevant changes are made.
* Menu:
* Additional libraries::

File: compat.info, Node: Additional libraries, Up: Usage
1.2.1 Additional libraries
--------------------------
These libraries are packages with Compat, but are disabled by default.
To use them you can use M-x load-library:
compat-help
Add notes to *Help* buffer, if a compatibility definition has
something to warn you about.
compat-font-lock
Highlight functions that are implemented as compatibility
definitions.

File: compat.info, Node: Intentions, Prev: Usage, Up: Introduction
1.3 Intentions
==============
The library intends to provide support back until Emacs 24.3. The
intended audience are package developers that are interested in using
newer developments, without having to break compatibility.
Sadly, total backwards compatibility cannot be provided for technical
reasons. These might include:
• An existing function or macro was extended by some new
functionality. To support these cases, the function or macro would
have to be advised. As this is usually regarded as invasive and is
shown to be a significant overhead, even when the new feature is
not used, this approach is not used.
As a compromise, prefixed functions and macros (starting with a
compat- prefix) can be provided.
• New functionality was implemented in the core, and depends on
external libraries that cannot be reasonably duplicated in the
scope of a compatibility library.
• New functionality depends on an entire new, non-trivial library.
Sometimes these are provided via ELPA (xref, project, ...), but
other times it would be infeasible to duplicate an entire library
within Compat while also providing the necessary backwards
compatibility.
• It just wasnt added, and there is no good reason (though good
excuses might exist). If you happen to find such a function, *note
reporting: Development. it would be much appreciated.
Always begin by assuming that this might be the case, unless proven
otherwise.

File: compat.info, Node: Support, Next: Development, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top
2 Support
*********
This section goes into the features that Compat manages and doesnt
manage to provide for each Emacs version.
* Menu:
* Emacs 24.4:: Compatibility support for Emacs 24.4
* Emacs 25.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 25.1
* Emacs 26.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 26.1
* Emacs 27.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 27.1
* Emacs 28.1:: Compatibility support for Emacs 28.1

File: compat.info, Node: Emacs 24.4, Next: Emacs 25.1, Up: Support
2.1 Emacs 24.4
==============
2.1.1 Unprefixed Definitions
----------------------------
The following functions and macros implemented in 24.4, and are provided
by Compat by default:
-- Macro: with-eval-after-load library body...
This macro arranges to evaluate BODY at the end of loading the file
LIBRARY, each time LIBRARY is loaded. If LIBRARY is already
loaded, it evaluates BODY right away.
You dont need to give a directory or extension in the file name
LIBRARY. Normally, you just give a bare file name, like this:
(with-eval-after-load "js" (keymap-set js-mode-map "C-c C-c" 'js-eval))
To restrict which files can trigger the evaluation, include a
directory or an extension or both in LIBRARY. Only a file whose
absolute true name (i.e., the name with all symbolic links chased
out) matches all the given name components will match. In the
following example, my_inst.elc or my_inst.elc.gz in some
directory ..../foo/bar will trigger the evaluation, but not
my_inst.el:
(with-eval-after-load "foo/bar/my_inst.elc" ...)
LIBRARY can also be a feature (i.e., a symbol), in which case BODY
is evaluated at the end of any file where (provide LIBRARY) is
called.
An error in BODY does not undo the load, but does prevent execution
of the rest of BODY.
*Note (elisp)Hooks for Loading::.
-- Function: special-form-p object
This predicate tests whether its argument is a special form, and
returns t if so, nil otherwise.
*Note (elisp)Special Forms::.
-- Function: macrop object
This predicate tests whether its argument is a macro, and returns
t if so, nil otherwise.
*Note (elisp)Simple Macro::.
-- Function: string-suffix-p suffix string &optional ignore-case
This function returns non-nil if SUFFIX is a suffix of STRING;
i.e., if STRING ends with SUFFIX. If the optional argument
IGNORE-CASE is non-nil, the comparison ignores case differences.
*Note (elisp)Text Comparison::.
-- Function: delete-consecutive-dups list &optional circular
Destructively remove equal consecutive duplicates from LIST.
First and last elements are considered consecutive if CIRCULAR is
non-nil.
-- Function: define-error name message &optional parent
In order for a symbol to be an error symbol, it must be defined
with define-error which takes a parent condition (defaults to
error). This parent defines the conditions that this kind of
error belongs to. The transitive set of parents always includes
the error symbol itself, and the symbol error. Because quitting
is not considered an error, the set of parents of quit is just
(quit).
*Note (elisp)Error Symbols::.
-- Function: bool-vector-exclusive-or a b &optional c
Return “bitwise exclusive or” of bool vectors A and B. If optional
argument C is given, the result of this operation is stored into C.
All arguments should be bool vectors of the same length.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: bool-vector-union a b &optional c
Return “bitwise or” of bool vectors A and B. If optional argument
C is given, the result of this operation is stored into C. All
arguments should be bool vectors of the same length.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: bool-vector-intersection a b &optional c
Return “bitwise and” of bool vectors A and B. If optional argument
C is given, the result of this operation is stored into C. All
arguments should be bool vectors of the same length.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: bool-vector-set-difference a b &optional c
Return “set difference” of bool vectors A and B. If optional
argument C is given, the result of this operation is stored into C.
All arguments should be bool vectors of the same length.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: bool-vector-not a &optional b
Return “set complement” of bool vector A. If optional argument B
is given, the result of this operation is stored into B. All
arguments should be bool vectors of the same length.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: bool-vector-subsetp a b
Return t if every t value in A is also t in B, nil
otherwise. All arguments should be bool vectors of the same
length.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: bool-vector-count-consecutive a b i
Return the number of consecutive elements in A equal B starting at
I. a is a bool vector, B is t or nil, and I is an index into
a.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: bool-vector-count-population a
Return the number of elements that are t in bool vector A.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
-- Function: completion-table-with-cache function &optional ignore-case
This is a wrapper for completion-table-dynamic that saves the
last argument-result pair. This means that multiple lookups with
the same argument only need to call FUNCTION once. This can be
useful when a slow operation is involved, such as calling an
external process.
*Note (elisp)Programmed Completion::.
-- Function: face-spec-set face spec &optional spec-type
This function applies SPEC as a face spec for face. SPEC should
be a face spec, as described in the above documentation for
defface.
This function also defines FACE as a valid face name if it is not
already one, and (re)calculates its attributes on existing frames.
The optional argument SPEC-TYPE determines which spec to set. If
it is omitted or nil or face-override-spec, this function sets
the “override spec”, which overrides face specs on FACE of all the
other types mentioned below. This is useful when calling this
function outside of Custom code. If SPEC-TYPE is customized-face
or saved-face, this function sets the customized spec or the
saved custom spec, respectively. If it is face-defface-spec,
this function sets the default face spec (the same one set by
defface). If it is reset, this function clears out all
customization specs and override specs from FACE (in this case, the
value of SPEC is ignored). The effect of any other value of
SPEC-TYPE on the face specs is reserved for internal use, but the
function will still define FACE itself and recalculate its
attributes, as described above.
*Note (elisp)Defining Faces::.
2.1.2 Prefixed Definitions
--------------------------
These functions are prefixed with compat prefix, and are only loaded
when compat-24 is required:
-- Function: compat-= number-or-marker &rest number-or-markers
This function tests whether all its arguments are numerically
equal, and returns t if so, nil otherwise.
*Note (elisp)Comparison of Numbers::.
-- Function: compat-< number-or-marker &rest number-or-markers
This function tests whether each argument is strictly less than the
following argument. It returns t if so, nil otherwise.
*Note (elisp)Comparison of Numbers::.
-- Function: compat-> number-or-marker &rest number-or-markers
This function tests whether each argument is strictly greater than
the following argument. It returns t if so, nil otherwise.
*Note (elisp)Comparison of Numbers::.
-- Function: compat-<= number-or-marker &rest number-or-markers
This function tests whether each argument is less than or equal to
the following argument. It returns t if so, nil otherwise.
*Note (elisp)Comparison of Numbers::.
-- Function: compat->= number-or-marker &rest number-or-markers
This function tests whether each argument is greater than or equal
to the following argument. It returns t if so, nil otherwise.
*Note (elisp)Comparison of Numbers::.
These functions differ from the previous implementation in that they
allow for more than two argument to be compared.
-- Function: compat-split-string string &optional separators omit-nulls
trim
This function splits STRING into substrings based on the regular
expression SEPARATORS (*note (elisp)Regular Expressions::). Each
match for SEPARATORS defines a splitting point; the substrings
between splitting points are made into a list, which is returned.
*note (elisp)Creating Strings:: for more details.
This version handles the optional argument TRIM. If it is
non-nil, it should be a regular expression to match text to trim
from the beginning and end of each substring. If trimming makes
the substring empty, it is treated as null.
2.1.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------
Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 24.4:
• Allowing the second optional argument to eval to specify a
lexical environment.
• The define-alternatives macro.
• Support for the defalias-fset-function symbol property.
• The group-gid and groupd-read-gid functions.
• The pre-redisplay-function hook.
• Allowing for with-demoted-errors to take a additional argument
format.
• The add-face-text-property function.
• No tty-setup-hook hook.
• The get-pos-property function.
• The define-advice macro.
• Support for generators.
• The string-trim, string-trim-left and string-trim-right
functions. These are instead provided as prefixed function as part
of *note Emacs 26.1:: support.

File: compat.info, Node: Emacs 25.1, Next: Emacs 26.1, Prev: Emacs 24.4, Up: Support
2.2 Emacs 25.1
==============
2.2.1 Unprefixed Definitions
----------------------------
The following functions and macros implemented in 25.1, and are provided
by Compat by default:
-- Function: format-message string &rest objects
This function acts like format, except it also converts any grave
accents (`) and apostrophes (') in STRING as per the value of
text-quoting-style.
Typically grave accent and apostrophe in the format translate to
matching curved quotes, e.g., "Missing `%s'" might result in
"Missing foo". *Note (elisp)Text Quoting Style::, for how to
influence or inhibit this translation.
*note (elisp)Formatting Strings::.
-- Function: directory-name-p filename
This function returns non-nil if FILENAME ends with a directory
separator character. This is the forward slash / on GNU and
other POSIX-like systems; MS-Windows and MS-DOS recognize both the
forward slash and the backslash \ as directory separators.
*Note (elisp)Directory Names::.
-- Function: string-greaterp string1 string2
This function returns the result of comparing STRING1 and STRING2
in the opposite order, i.e., it is equivalent to calling
(string-lessp STRING2 STRING1).
*Note (elisp)Text Comparison::.
-- Macro: with-file-modes mode body...
This macro evaluates the BODY forms with the default permissions
for new files temporarily set to MODES (whose value is as for
set-file-modes above). When finished, it restores the original
default file permissions, and returns the value of the last form in
BODY.
This is useful for creating private files, for example.
*Note (elisp)Changing Files::.
-- Function: alist-get key alist &optional default remove testfn
This function is similar to assq. It finds the first association
(KEY . VALUE) by comparing KEY with ALIST elements, and, if
found, returns the VALUE of that association. If no association is
found, the function returns DEFAULT. Comparison of KEY against
ALIST elements uses the function specified by TESTFN, defaulting to
eq.
This is a generalized variable (*note (elisp)Generalized
Variables::) that can be used to change a value with setf. When
using it to set a value, optional argument REMOVE non-nil means
to remove KEYs association from ALIST if the new value is eql to
DEFAULT.
*note (elisp)Association Lists::.
-- Macro: if-let (bindings...) then &rest else...
As with let*, BINDINGS will consist of (SYMBOL VALUE-FORM)
entries that are evaluated and bound sequentially. If all
VALUE-FORM evaluate to non-nil values, then THEN is evaluated as
were the case with a regular let* expression, with all the
variables bound. If any VALUE-FORM evaluates to nil, ELSE is
evaluated, without any bound variables.
A binding may also optionally drop the SYMBOL, and simplify to
(VALUE-FORM) if only the test is of interest.
For the sake of backwards compatibility, it is possible to write a
single binding without a binding list:
(if-let* (SYMBOL (test)) foo bar)
(if-let* ((SYMBOL (test))) foo bar)
-- Macro: when-let (bindings...) &rest body
As with when, if one is only interested in the case where all
BINDINGS are non-nil. Otherwise BINDINGS are interpreted just as
they are by if-let*.
-- Macro: thread-first &rest forms
Combine FORMS into a single expression by “threading” each element
as the _first_ argument of their successor. Elements of FORMS can
either be an list of an atom.
For example, consider the threading expression and its equivalent
macro expansion:
(thread-first
5
(+ 20)
(/ 25)
-
(+ 40))
(+ (- (/ (+ 5 20) 25)) 40)
Note how the single - got converted into a list before threading.
This example uses arithmetic functions, but thread-first is not
restricted to arithmetic or side-effect free code.
-- Macro: thread-last &rest forms
Combine FORMS into a single expression by “threading” each element
as the _last_ argument of their successor. Elements of FORMS can
either be an list of an atom.
For example, consider the threading expression and its equivalent
macro expansion:
(thread-first
5
(+ 20)
(/ 25)
-
(+ 40))
(+ 40 (- (/ 25 (+ 20 5))))
Note how the single - got converted into a list before threading.
This example uses arithmetic functions, but thread-last is not
restricted to arithmetic or side-effect free code.
-- Function: macroexpand-1 form &optional environment
This function expands macros like macroexpand, but it only
performs one step of the expansion: if the result is another macro
call, macroexpand-1 will not expand it.
*Note Expansion: (elisp)Expansion.
-- Function: directory-files-recursively directory regexp &optional
include-directories predicate follow-symlinks
Return all files under DIRECTORY whose names match REGEXP. This
function searches the specified DIRECTORY and its sub-directories,
recursively, for files whose basenames (i.e., without the leading
directories) match the specified REGEXP, and returns a list of the
absolute file names of the matching files (*note absolute file
names: (elisp)Relative File Names.). The file names are returned
in depth-first order, meaning that files in some sub-directory are
returned before the files in its parent directory. In addition,
matching files found in each subdirectory are sorted alphabetically
by their basenames. By default, directories whose names match
REGEXP are omitted from the list, but if the optional argument
INCLUDE-DIRECTORIES is non-nil, they are included.
By default, all subdirectories are descended into. If PREDICATE is
t, errors when trying to descend into a subdirectory (for
instance, if its not readable by this user) are ignored. If its
neither nil nor t, it should be a function that takes one
parameter (the subdirectory name) and should return non-nil if
the directory is to be descended into.
Symbolic links to subdirectories are not followed by default, but
if FOLLOW-SYMLINKS is non-nil, they are followed.
*Note (elisp)Contents of Directories::.
-- Function: bool-vector &rest objects
This function creates and returns a bool-vector whose elements are
the arguments, OBJECTS.
*Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.
2.2.2 Prefixed Definitions
--------------------------
These functions are prefixed with compat prefix, and are only loaded
when compat-25 is required:
-- Function: compat-sort sequence predicate
This function sorts SEQUENCE stably. Note that this function
doesnt work for all sequences; it may be used only for lists and
vectors. If SEQUENCE is a list, it is modified destructively.
This functions returns the sorted SEQUENCE and compares elements
using PREDICATE. A stable sort is one in which elements with equal
sort keys maintain their relative order before and after the sort.
Stability is important when successive sorts are used to order
elements according to different criteria.
*Note (elisp)Sequence Functions::.
The compatibility version adds support for vectors to be sorted,
not just lists.
2.2.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------
Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 25.1:
• New pcase patterns.
• The hook prefix-command-echo-keystrokes-functions and
prefix-command-preserve-state-hook.
• The hook pre-redisplay-functions.
• The function make-process.
• Support for the variable inhibit-message.
• The define-inline functionality.
• The functions string-collate-lessp and string-collate-equalp.
• The function funcall-interactivly.
• The function buffer-substring-with-bidi-context.
• The function font-info.
• The function default-font-width.
• The function window-font-height and window-font-width.
• The function window-max-chars-per-line.
• The function set-binary-mode.
• The functions bufferpos-to-filepos and filepos-to-bufferpos.

File: compat.info, Node: Emacs 26.1, Next: Emacs 27.1, Prev: Emacs 25.1, Up: Support
2.3 Emacs 26.1
==============
2.3.1 Unprefixed Definitions
----------------------------
The following functions and macros implemented in 26.1, and are provided
by Compat by default:
-- Function: func-arity function
This function provides information about the argument list of the
specified FUNCTION. The returned value is a cons cell of the form
(MIN . MAX), where MIN is the minimum number of arguments, and
MAX is either the maximum number of arguments, or the symbol many
for functions with &rest arguments, or the symbol unevalled if
FUNCTION is a special form.
Note that this function might return inaccurate results in some
situations, such as the following:
Functions defined using apply-partially (*note
apply-partially: (elisp)Calling Functions.).
Functions that are advised using advice-add (*note
(elisp)Advising Named Functions::).
Functions that determine the argument list dynamically, as
part of their code.
*Note (elisp)What Is a Function::.
-- Function: mapcan function sequence
This function applies FUNCTION to each element of SEQUENCE, like
mapcar, but instead of collecting the results into a list, it
returns a single list with all the elements of the results (which
must be lists), by altering the results (using nconc; *note
(elisp)Rearrangement::). Like with mapcar, SEQUENCE can be of
any type except a char-table.
;; Contrast this: (mapcar #'list '(a b c d)) ⇒ ((a) (b) (c)
(d)) ;; with this: (mapcan #'list '(a b c d)) ⇒ (a b c d)
*Note (elisp)Mapping Functions::.
-- Function: cXXXr
-- Function: cXXXXr
*Note (elisp)List Elements::.
-- Function: gensym &optional prefix
This function returns a symbol using make-symbol, whose name is
made by appending gensym-counter to PREFIX and incrementing that
counter, guaranteeing that no two calls to this function will
generate a symbol with the same name. The prefix defaults to
"g".
-- Variable: gensym-counter
See gensym.
-- Function: make-nearby-temp-file prefix &optional dir-flag suffix
This function is similar to make-temp-file, but it creates a
temporary file as close as possible to default-directory. If
PREFIX is a relative file name, and default-directory is a remote
file name or located on a mounted file systems, the temporary file
is created in the directory returned by the function
temporary-file-directory. Otherwise, the function
make-temp-file is used. PREFIX, DIR-FLAG and SUFFIX have the
same meaning as in make-temp-file.
(let ((default-directory "/ssh:remotehost:")) (make-nearby-temp-file
"foo")) ⇒ "/ssh:remotehost:/tmp/foo232J6v"
-- Variable: mounted-file-systems
A regular expression matching files names that are probably on a
mounted file system.
-- Function: temporary-file-directory
The directory for writing temporary files via
make-nearby-temp-file. In case of a remote default-directory,
this is a directory for temporary files on that remote host. If
such a directory does not exist, or default-directory ought to be
located on a mounted file system (see mounted-file-systems), the
function returns default-directory. For a non-remote and
non-mounted default-directory, the value of the variable
temporary-file-directory is returned.
*Note (elisp)Unique File Names::.
-- Macro: if-let* (bindings...) then &rest else
if-let* is mostly equivalent to if-let, with the exception that
the legacy (if (VAR (test)) foo bar) syntax is not permitted.
-- Macro: when-let* (bindings...) then &rest else
when-let* is mostly equivalent to when-let, with the exception
that the legacy (when-let (VAR (test)) foo bar) syntax is not
permitted.
-- Macro: and-let* (bindings...) &rest body
A combination of LET* and AND, analogous to when-let*. If all
BINDINGS are non-nil and BODY is nil, then the result of the
and-let* form will be the last value bound in BINDINGS.
**Please Note:** The implementation provided by Compat does not
include a bug that was observed with Emacs 26 (see
<https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=31840>).
-- Function: file-local-name filename
This function returns the _local part_ of FILENAME. This is the
part of the files name that identifies it on the remote host, and
is typically obtained by removing from the remote file name the
parts that specify the remote host and the method of accessing it.
For example:
(file-local-name "/ssh:USER@HOST:/foo/bar") ⇒
"/foo/bar"
For a remote FILENAME, this function returns a file name which
could be used directly as an argument of a remote process (*note
(elisp)Asynchronous Processes::, and *note (elisp)Synchronous
Processes::), and as the program to run on the remote host. If
FILENAME is local, this function returns it unchanged.
*Note (elisp)Magic File Names::.
-- Macro: file-name-quoted-p name
This macro returns non-nil, when NAME is quoted with the prefix
/:. If NAME is a remote file name, the local part of NAME is
checked.
*Note (elisp)File Name Expansion::.
-- Macro: file-name-quote name
This macro adds the quotation prefix /: to the file NAME. For a
local file NAME, it prefixes NAME with /:. If NAME is a remote
file name, the local part of NAME (*note (elisp)Magic File Names::)
is quoted. If NAME is already a quoted file name, NAME is returned
unchanged.
(substitute-in-file-name (file-name-quote "bar/~/foo")) ⇒
"/:bar/~/foo"
(substitute-in-file-name (file-name-quote "/ssh:host:bar/~/foo"))
⇒ "/ssh:host:/:bar/~/foo"
The macro cannot be used to suppress file name handlers from magic
file names (*note (elisp)Magic File Names::).
*Note (elisp)File Name Expansion::.
-- Function: read-multiple-choice prompt choices &optional help-string
show-help long-form
Ask user a multiple choice question. PROMPT should be a string
that will be displayed as the prompt.
CHOICES is an alist where the first element in each entry is a
character to be entered, the second element is a short name for the
entry to be displayed while prompting (if theres room, it might be
shortened), and the third, optional entry is a longer explanation
that will be displayed in a help buffer if the user requests more
help.
If optional argument LONG-FORM is non-nil, the user will have to
type in long-form answers (using completing-read) instead of
hitting a single key. The answers must be among the second
elements of the values in the CHOICES list.
Note: The Compat implementation of this function ignores the
optional arguments HELP-STRING and SHOW-HELP. Therefore the
optional third element in each CHOICES entry will also be
disregarded.
See *note Reading One Event: (elisp)Reading One Event.
-- Function: image-property
Defined in image.el.
This function can also be used as a generalised variable. To use
this you need to explicitly require compat-26.
-- Function: file-attribute-type
Return the field _type_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-link-number
Return the field _link-number_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-user-id
Return the field _user-id_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-group-id
Return the field _group-id_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-access-time
Return the field _access-time_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-modification-time
Return the field _modification-time_ as generated by
file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-status-change-time
Return the field _modification-time_ as generated by
file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-size
Return the field _size_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-modes
Return the field _modes_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-inode-number
Return the field _inode-number_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-device-number
Return the field _device-number_ as generated by file-attributes.
*Note (elisp)File Attributes::.
-- Function: file-attribute-collect attributes &rest attr-names
Filter the file attributes ATTRIBUTES, as generated by
file-attributes, according to ATTR-NAMES.
Valid attribute names for ATTR-NAMES are: type, link-number,
user-id, group-id, access-time, modification-time,
status-change-time, size, modes, inode-number and device-number.
(file-attributes ".") ⇒ (t 1 1000 1000 (25329 18215 325481 96000) (25325 15364 530263 840000) (25325 15364 530263 840000) 788 "drwxr-xr-x" t 137819 40)
(file-attribute-collect (file-attributes ".") 'type 'modes
'inode-number) ⇒ (t "drwxr-xr-x" 137819)
2.3.2 Prefixed Definitions
--------------------------
These functions are prefixed with compat prefix, and are only loaded
when compat-26 is required:
-- Function: compat-assoc key alist &optional testfn
This function returns the first association for KEY in ALIST,
comparing KEY against the alist elements using TESTFN if it is a
function, and equal otherwise (*note (elisp)Equality
Predicates::). If TESTFN is a function, it is called with two
arguments: the CAR of an element from ALIST and KEY. The function
returns nil if no association in ALIST has a CAR equal to KEY, as
tested by TESTFN.
*Note (elisp)Association Lists::.
The compatibility version adds support for handling the optional
argument TESTFN.
-- Function: compat-line-number-at-pos &optional pos absolute
This function returns the line number in the current buffer
corresponding to the buffer position POS. If POS is nil or
omitted, the current buffer position is used. If ABSOLUTE is
nil, the default, counting starts at (point-min), so the value
refers to the contents of the accessible portion of the
(potentially narrowed) buffer. If ABSOLUTE is non-nil, ignore
any narrowing and return
*Note (elisp)Text Lines::.
The compatibility version adds support for handling the optional
argument ABSOLUTE.
-- Function: compat-alist-get key alist &optional default remove testfn
*Note (elisp)Association Lists::. This function is similar to
assq. It finds the first association (KEY . VALUE) by
comparing KEY with ALIST elements, and, if found, returns the VALUE
of that association. If no association is found, the function
returns DEFAULT. Comparison of KEY against ALIST elements uses the
function specified by TESTFN, defaulting to eq.
*Note (elisp)Association Lists::.
The compatibility version handles the optional argument TESTFN. It
can also be used as a *note Generalized Variables:
(elisp)generalised variable.
-- Function: compat-string-trim-left string &optional regexp
Remove the leading text that matches REGEXP from STRING. REGEXP
defaults to [ \t\n\r]+.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
The compatibility version handles the optional argument REGEXP.
-- Function: compat-string-trim-right string &optional regexp
Remove the trailing text that matches REGEXP from STRING. REGEXP
defaults to [ \t\n\r]+.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
The compatibility version handles the optional argument REGEXP.
-- Function: compat-string-trim string &optional trim-left trim-right
Remove the leading text that matches TRIM-LEFT and trailing text
that matches TRIM-RIGHT from STRING. Both regexps default to [
\t\n\r]+.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
The compatibility version handles the optional arguments TRIM-LEFT
and TRIM-RIGHT.
2.3.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------
Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 26.1:
• The function secure-hash-algorithms.
• The function gnutls-avalaible-p.
• Support for records and record functions.
• The function mapbacktrace.
• The function file-name-case-insensitive-p.
• The file-attributes constructors.
• The additional elements of parse-partial-sexp.
• The function add-variable-watcher.
• The function undo-amalgamate-change-group.
• The function char-from-name
• Signalling errors when length or member deal with list cycles.
• The function frame-list-z-order.
• The function frame-restack.
• Support for side windows and atomic windows.
• All changes related to display-buffer.
• The function window-swap-states.

File: compat.info, Node: Emacs 27.1, Next: Emacs 28.1, Prev: Emacs 26.1, Up: Support
2.4 Emacs 27.1
==============
2.4.1 Unprefixed Definitions
----------------------------
The following functions and macros implemented in 27.1, and are provided
by Compat by default:
-- Function: proper-list-p object
This function returns the length of OBJECT if it is a proper list,
nil otherwise (*note (elisp)Cons Cells::). In addition to
satisfying listp, a proper list is neither circular nor dotted.
(proper-list-p '(a b c)) ⇒ 3
(proper-list-p '(a b . c)) ⇒ nil
*Note (elisp)List-related Predicates::.
-- Function: string-distance string1 string2 &optional bytecompare
This function returns the _Levenshtein distance_ between the source
string STRING1 and the target string STRING2. The Levenshtein
distance is the number of single-character changes—deletions,
insertions, or replacements—required to transform the source string
into the target string; it is one possible definition of the _edit
distance_ between strings.
Letter-case of the strings is significant for the computed
distance, but their text properties are ignored. If the optional
argument BYTECOMPARE is non-nil, the function calculates the
distance in terms of bytes instead of characters. The byte-wise
comparison uses the internal Emacs representation of characters, so
it will produce inaccurate results for multibyte strings that
include raw bytes (*note (elisp)Text Representations::); make the
strings unibyte by encoding them (*note (elisp)Explicit Encoding::)
if you need accurate results with raw bytes.
*Note (elisp)Text Comparison::.
-- Function: json-serialize object &rest args
This function returns a new Lisp string which contains the JSON
representation of OBJECT. The argument ARGS is a list of
keyword/argument pairs. The following keywords are accepted:
:null-object
The value decides which Lisp object to use to represent the
JSON keyword null. It defaults to the symbol :null.
:false-object
The value decides which Lisp object to use to represent the
JSON keyword false. It defaults to the symbol :false.
*Note (elisp)Parsing JSON::.
-- Function: json-insert object &rest args
This function inserts the JSON representation of OBJECT into the
current buffer before point. The argument ARGS are interpreted as
in json-parse-string.
*Note (elisp)Parsing JSON::.
-- Function: json-parse-string string &rest args
This function parses the JSON value in STRING, which must be a Lisp
string. If STRING doesnt contain a valid JSON object, this
function signals the json-parse-error error.
The argument ARGS is a list of keyword/argument pairs. The
following keywords are accepted:
:object-type
The value decides which Lisp object to use for representing
the key-value mappings of a JSON object. It can be either
hash-table, the default, to make hashtables with strings as
keys; alist to use alists with symbols as keys; or plist
to use plists with keyword symbols as keys.
:array-type
The value decides which Lisp object to use for representing a
JSON array. It can be either array, the default, to use
Lisp arrays; or list to use lists.
:null-object
The value decides which Lisp object to use to represent the
JSON keyword null. It defaults to the symbol :null.
:false-object
The value decides which Lisp object to use to represent the
JSON keyword false. It defaults to the symbol :false.
*Note (elisp)Parsing JSON::.
-- Function: json-parse-buffer &rest args
This function reads the next JSON value from the current buffer,
starting at point. It moves point to the position immediately
after the value if contains a valid JSON object; otherwise it
signals the json-parse-error error and doesnt move point. The
arguments ARGS are interpreted as in json-parse-string.
*Note (elisp)Parsing JSON::.
-- Macro: ignore-errors body...
This construct executes BODY, ignoring any errors that occur during
its execution. If the execution is without error, ignore-errors
returns the value of the last form in BODY; otherwise, it returns
nil.
Heres the example at the beginning of this subsection rewritten
using ignore-errors:
(ignore-errors (delete-file filename))
*Note (elisp)Handling Errors::.
-- Macro: dolist-with-progress-reporter (var count [result])
reporter-or-message body...
This is another convenience macro that works the same way as
dolist does, but also reports loop progress using the functions
described above. As in dotimes-with-progress-reporter,
reporter-or-message can be a progress reporter or a string. You
can rewrite the previous example with this macro as follows:
(dolist-with-progress-reporter (k (number-sequence 0 500)) "Collecting
some mana for Emacs..." (sit-for 0.01))
*Note (elisp)Progress::.
-- Function: flatten-tree tree
This function returns a “flattened” copy of TREE, that is, a list
containing all the non-nil terminal nodes, or leaves, of the tree
of cons cells rooted at TREE. Leaves in the returned list are in
the same order as in TREE.
(flatten-tree '(1 (2 . 3) nil (4 5 (6)) 7)) ⇒(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)
*Note (elisp)Building Lists::.
-- Function: xor condition1 condition2
This function returns the boolean exclusive-or of CONDITION1 and
CONDITION2. That is, xor returns nil if either both arguments
are nil, or both are non-nil. Otherwise, it returns the value
of that argument which is non-nil.
Note that in contrast to or, both arguments are always evaluated.
*Note (elisp)Combining Conditions::.
-- Variable: regexp-unmatchable
This variable contains a regexp that is guaranteed not to match any
string at all. It is particularly useful as default value for
variables that may be set to a pattern that actually matches
something.
*Note (elisp)Regexp Functions::
-- Function: decoded-time-second time
Return the SECONDS field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-minute time
Return the MINUTE field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-hour time
Return the HOUR field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-day time
Return the DAY field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-month time
Return the MONTH field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-year time
Return the YEAR field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-weekday time
Return the WEEKDAY field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-dst time
Return the DST (daylight saving time indicator) field of a
decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: decoded-time-zone time
Return the ZONE field of a decoded-time record TIME.
-- Function: package-get-version
Return the version number of the package in which this is used.
-- Function: time-equal-p t1 t2
This returns t if the two time values T1 and T2 are equal.
*Note (elisp)Time Calculations::.
-- Function: date-days-in-month year month
Return the number of days in MONTH in YEAR. For instance, February
2020 has 29 days.
*Note (elisp)Time Calculations::. This function requires the
time-date feature to be loaded.
-- User Option: exec-path
The value of this variable is a list of directories to search for
programs to run in subprocesses. Each element is either the name
of a directory (i.e., a string), or nil, which stands for the
default directory (which is the value of default-directory).
*Note executable-find: (elisp)Locating Files, for the details of
this search.
The value of exec-path is used by call-process and
start-process when the PROGRAM argument is not an absolute file
name.
Generally, you should not modify exec-path directly. Instead,
ensure that your PATH environment variable is set appropriately
before starting Emacs. Trying to modify exec-path independently
of PATH can lead to confusing results.
*Note (elisp)Subprocess Creation::.
-- Function: provided-mode-derived-p mode &rest modes
This function returns non-nil if MODE is derived from any of the
major modes given by the symbols MODES.
-- Function: derived-mode-p &rest modes
This function returns non-nil if the current major mode is
derived from any of the major modes given by the symbols MODES.
*Note (elisp)Derived Modes::.
2.4.2 Prefixed Definitions
--------------------------
These functions are prefixed with compat prefix, and are only loaded
when compat-27 is required:
-- Function: compat-recenter &optional count redisplay
This function scrolls the text in the selected window so that point
is displayed at a specified vertical position within the window.
It does not move point with respect to the text.
*Note (elisp)Textual Scrolling::.
This compatibility version adds support for the optional argument
REDISPLAY.
-- Function: compat-lookup-key keymap key &optional accept-defaults
This function returns the definition of KEY in KEYMAP. If the
string or vector KEY is not a valid key sequence according to the
prefix keys specified in KEYMAP, it must be too long and have extra
events at the end that do not fit into a single key sequence. Then
the value is a number, the number of events at the front of KEY
that compose a complete key.
*Note (elisp)Low-Level Key Binding::.
This compatibility version allows for KEYMAP to be a list of
keymaps, instead of just a singular keymap.
-- Macro: setq-local &rest pairs
PAIRS is a list of variable and value pairs. This macro creates a
buffer-local binding in the current buffer for each of the
variables, and gives them a buffer-local value. It is equivalent
to calling make-local-variable followed by setq for each of the
variables. The variables should be unquoted symbols.
(setq-local var1 "value1"
var2 "value2")
*Note (elisp)Creating Buffer-Local::.
This compatibility version allows for more than one variable to be
set at once, as can be done with setq.
-- Function: compat-regexp-opt strings &optional paren
This function returns an efficient regular expression that will
match any of the strings in the list STRINGS. This is useful when
you need to make matching or searching as fast as possible—for
example, for Font Lock mode.
*Note (elisp)Regexp Functions::.
The compatibility version of this functions handles the case where
STRINGS in an empty list. In that case, a regular expression is
generated that never matches anything (see regexp-unmatchable).
-- Function: compat-file-size-human-readable file-size &optional flavor
space unit
Return a string with a human readable representation of FILE-SIZE.
The optional second argument FLAVOR controls the units and the
display format. If FLAVOR is...
si, each kilobyte is 1000 bytes and the produced suffixes
are k, M, G, T, etc.
iec, each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced suffixes
are KiB, MiB, GiB, TiB, etc.
nil or omitted, each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced
suffixes are k, M, G, T, etc.
The compatibility version handles the optional third (SPACE) and
forth (UNIT) arguments. The argument SPACE can be a string that is
placed between the number and the unit. The argument UNIT
determines the unit to use. By default it will be an empty string,
unless FLAVOR is iec, in which case it will be B.
-- Function: compat-assoc-delete-all
This function is like assq-delete-all except that it accepts an
optional argument TEST, a predicate function to compare the keys in
ALIST. If omitted or nil, TEST defaults to equal. As
assq-delete-all, this function often modifies the original list
structure of ALIST.
*Note (elisp)Association Lists::.
This compatibility version handles the optional third (TESTFN)
argument.
-- Function: compat-executable-find program &optional remote
This function searches for the executable file of the named PROGRAM
and returns the absolute file name of the executable, including its
file-name extensions, if any. It returns nil if the file is not
found. The function searches in all the directories in
exec-path, and tries all the file-name extensions in
exec-suffixes (*note (elisp)Subprocess Creation::).
If REMOTE is non-nil, and default-directory is a remote
directory, PROGRAM is searched on the respective remote host.
*Note (elisp)Locating Files::.
This compatibility version adds support to handle the optional
second (REMOTE) argument.
-- Function: compat-dired-get-marked-files &optional localp arg filter
distinguish-one-marked error
Return a list of file names that are _marked_ in a Dired buffer.
This compatibility version handles the optional fifth (ERROR)
argument, which signals an error if the list of found files is
empty. error can be a string with the error message.
2.4.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------
Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 27.1:
• Bigint support.
• The function time-convert.
• All iso8601-* functions.
• The macro benchmark-progn.
• The function read-char-from-minibuffer.
• The minor mode reveal-mode.
• The macro with-suppressed-warnings.
• Support for condition-case to handle t.
• The functions major-mode-suspend and major-mode-restore.
• The function provided-mode-derived-p.
• The function file-system-info.
• The more consistent treatment of NaN values.
• The function ring-resize.
• The function group-name.
• Additional format-spec modifiers.
• Support for additional body forms for
define-globalized-minor-mode.
• The macro with-connection-local-variables and related
functionality.

File: compat.info, Node: Emacs 28.1, Prev: Emacs 27.1, Up: Support
2.5 Emacs 28.1
==============
2.5.1 Unprefixed Definitions
----------------------------
The following functions and macros implemented in 28.1, and are provided
by Compat by default:
-- Function: string-search needle haystack &optional start-pos
Return the position of the first instance of NEEDLE in HAYSTACK,
both of which are strings. If START-POS is non-nil, start
searching from that position in NEEDLE. Return nil if no match
was found. This function only considers the characters in the
strings when doing the comparison; text properties are ignored.
Matching is always case-sensitive.
-- Function: length= sequence length
Return non-nil if the length of SEQUENCE is equal to LENGTH.
-- Function: length< sequence length
Return non-nil if SEQUENCE is shorter than LENGTH. This may be
more efficient than computing the length of SEQUENCE if SEQUENCE is
a long list.
-- Function: length> sequence length
Return non-nil if SEQUENCE is longer than LENGTH.
-- Function: file-name-concat directory &rest components
Concatenate COMPONENTS to DIRECTORY, inserting a slash before the
components if DIRECTORY or the preceding component didnt end with
a slash.
(file-name-concat "/tmp" "foo") ⇒ "/tmp/foo"
A DIRECTORY or components that are nil or the empty string are
ignored—they are filtered out first and do not affect the results
in any way.
This is almost the same as using concat, but DIRNAME (and the
non-final components) may or may not end with slash characters, and
this function will not double those characters.
-- Function: garbage-collect-maybe factor
Suggest to run garbage collection, if _enough_ data has been
allocated. This is determined by the positive numerical argument
FACTOR, that would proportionally increase the likelihood of
garbage collection taking place.
This compatibility function does nothing and ignores any
suggestion.
-- Function: string-replace from-string to-string in-string
This function replaces all occurrences of FROM-STRING with
TO-STRING in IN-STRING and returns the result. It may return one
of its arguments unchanged, a constant string or a new string.
Case is significant, and text properties are ignored.
-- Function: always &rest arguments
This function ignores any ARGUMENTS and returns t.
*Note (elisp)Calling Functions::.
-- Function: insert-into-buffer to-buffer &optional start end
This is like insert-buffer-substring, but works in the opposite
direction: The text is copied from the current buffer into
TO-BUFFER. The block of text is copied to the current point in
TO-BUFFER, and point (in that buffer) is advanced to after the end
of the copied text. Is start/end is nil, the entire text in
the current buffer is copied over.
*Note (elisp)Insertion::.
-- Function: replace-string-in-region regexp replacement &optional
start end
This function replaces all the occurrences of REGEXP with
REPLACEMENT in the region of buffer text between START and END;
START defaults to position of point, and END defaults to the last
accessible position of the buffer. The search for REGEXP is
case-sensitive, and REPLACEMENT is inserted without changing its
letter-case. The REPLACEMENT string can use the same special
elements starting with \ as replace-match does. The function
returns the number of replaced occurrences, or nil if REGEXP is
not found. The function preserves the position of point.
(replace-regexp-in-region "foo[ \t]+bar" "foobar")
*Note (elisp)Search and Replace::.
-- Function: replace-regexp-in-string string replacement &optional
start end
This function works similarly to replace-regexp-in-region, but
searches for, and replaces, literal STRINGs instead of regular
expressions.
*Note (elisp)Search and Replace::.
-- Function: buffer-local-boundp variable buffer
This returns non-nil if theres either a buffer-local binding of
VARIABLE (a symbol) in buffer BUFFER, or VARIABLE has a global
binding.
*Note (elisp)Creating Buffer-Local::.
-- Macro: with-existing-directory body...
This macro ensures that default-directory is bound to an existing
directory before executing BODY. If default-directory already
exists, thats preferred, and otherwise some other directory is
used. This macro can be useful, for instance, when calling an
external command that requires that its running in a directory
that exists. The chosen directory is not guaranteed to be
writable.
*Note (elisp)Testing Accessibility::.
-- Macro: dlet (bindings...) forms...
This special form is like let, but it binds all variables
dynamically. This is rarely useful—you usually want to bind normal
variables lexically, and special variables (i.e., variables that
are defined with defvar) dynamically, and this is what let
does.
dlet can be useful when interfacing with old code that assumes
that certain variables are dynamically bound (*note (elisp)Dynamic
Binding::), but its impractical to defvar these variables.
dlet will temporarily make the bound variables special, execute
the forms, and then make the variables non-special again.
*Note (elisp)Local Variables::.
-- Function: ensure-list object
This function returns OBJECT as a list. If OBJECT is already a
list, the function returns it; otherwise, the function returns a
one-element list containing OBJECT.
This is usually useful if you have a variable that may or may not
be a list, and you can then say, for instance:
(dolist (elem (ensure-list foo))
(princ elem))
*Note (elisp)Building Lists::.
-- Function: string-clean-whitespace string
Clean up the whitespace in STRING by collapsing stretches of
whitespace to a single space character, as well as removing all
whitespace from the start and the end of STRING.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
-- Function: string-fill string length
Attempt to Word-wrap STRING so that no lines are longer than
LENGTH. Filling is done on whitespace boundaries only. If there
are individual words that are longer than LENGTH, these will not be
shortened.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
-- Function: string-lines string &optional omit-nulls keep-newlines
Split STRING into a list of strings on newline boundaries. If the
optional argument OMIT-NULLS is non-nil, remove empty lines from
the results. If the optional argument KEEP-NEWLINES is non-nil,
dont remove the trailing newlines from the result strings.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
-- Function: string-pad string length &optional padding start
Pad STRING to be of the given LENGTH using PADDING as the padding
character. PADDING defaults to the space character. If STRING is
longer than LENGTH, no padding is done. If START is nil or
omitted, the padding is appended to the characters of STRING, and
if its non-nil, the padding is prepended to STRINGs characters.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
-- Function: string-chop-newline string
Remove the final newline, if any, from STRING.
*Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.
-- Macro: named-let name bindings &rest body
This special form is a looping construct inspired from the Scheme
language. It is similar to let: It binds the variables in
BINDINGS, and then evaluates BODY. However, named-let also binds
NAME to a local function whose formal arguments are the variables
in BINDINGS and whose body is BODY. This allows BODY to call
itself recursively by calling NAME, where the arguments passed to
NAME are used as the new values of the bound variables in the
recursive invocation.
Recursive calls to NAME that occur in _tail positions_ in BODY are
guaranteed to be optimized as _tail calls_, which means that they
will not consume any additional stack space no matter how deeply
the recursion runs. Such recursive calls will effectively jump to
the top of the loop with new values for the variables.
*Note (elisp)Local Variables::.
-- Function: file-name-with-extension filename extension
This function returns FILENAME with its extension set to EXTENSION.
A single leading dot in the EXTENSION will be stripped if there is
one. For example:
(file-name-with-extension "file" "el")
⇒ "file.el"
(file-name-with-extension "file" ".el")
⇒ "file.el"
(file-name-with-extension "file.c" "el")
⇒ "file.el"
Note that this function will error if FILENAME or EXTENSION are
empty, or if the FILENAME is shaped like a directory (i.e., if
directory-name-p returns non-nil).
*Note File Name Components: (elisp)File Name Components.
-- Function: directory-empty-p directory
This utility function returns t if given DIRECTORY is an
accessible directory and it does not contain any files, i.e., is an
empty directory. It will ignore . and .. on systems that
return them as files in a directory.
Symbolic links to directories count as directories. See
FILE-SYMLINK-P to distinguish symlinks.
*Note (elisp)Contents of Directories::.
-- Function: format-prompt prompt default &rest format-args
Format PROMPT with default value DEFAULT according to the
minibuffer-default-prompt-format variable.
minibuffer-default-prompt-format is a format string (defaulting
to " (default %s)" that says how the “default” bit in prompts
like "Local filename (default somefile): " are to be formatted.
To allow the users to customize how this is displayed, code that
prompts the user for a value (and has a default) should look
something along the lines of this code snippet:
(read-file-name
(format-prompt "Local filename" file)
nil file)
If FORMAT-ARGS is nil, PROMPT is used as a literal string. If
FORMAT-ARGS is non-nil, PROMPT is used as a format control
string, and PROMPT and FORMAT-ARGS are passed to format (*note
(elisp)Formatting Strings::).
minibuffer-default-prompt-format can be "", in which case no
default values are displayed.
If DEFAULT is nil, there is no default value, and therefore no
“default value” string is included in the result value. If DEFAULT
is a non-nil list, the first element of the list is used in the
prompt.
*Note (elisp)Text from Minibuffer::.
-- Function: thing-at-mouse event thing &optional no-properties
Mouse-EVENT equivalent of thing-at-point. THING can be symbol,
list, sexp, filename, url, ... among other things.
When NO-PROPERTIES has a non-nil value, any text properties that
might have been present in the buffer are stripped away.
-- Function: macroexp-file-name
Return the name of the file in which the code is currently being
evaluated, or nil if it cannot be determined.
-- Macro: with-environment-variables variables body...
This macro sets the environment variables according to VARIABLES
temporarily when executing BODY. The previous values are restored
when the form finishes. The argument VARIABLES should be a list of
pairs of strings of the form (VAR VALUE), where VAR is the name
of the environment variable and VALUE is that variables value.
(with-environment-variables (("LANG" "C")
("LANGUAGE" "en_US:en"))
(call-process "ls" nil t))
*Note System Environment: (elisp)System Environment.
-- Function: button-buttonize string callback &optional data help-echo
Return a button with STRING as its label. When interacted on, the
one-argument function in CALLBACK is called and DATA (or nil is
not present) will be passed as the argument.
If non-nil, the argument HELP-ECHO will be used to set the
help-echo text property.
-- Function: make-directory-autoloads dir output-file
Parse and search the directory DIR for autoload definitions, and
write the processed results to the file OUTPUT-FILE.
-- Function: color-values-from-color-spec spec
Convert the textual color specification SPEC to a color triple
(RED GREEN blue). Each of RED, GREEN and blue is a integer
value between 0 and 65535.
The specification SPEC can be one of the following
#RGB, where R, G and B are hex numbers of equal length, 1-4
digits each.
rgb:R/G/B, where R, G, and B are hex numbers, 1-4 digits
each.
rgbi:R/G/B, where R, G and B are floating-point numbers in
[0,1].
-- Function: file-modes-number-to-symbolic modes
This function converts a numeric file mode specification in MODES
into the equivalent symbolic form.
*Note Changing Files: (elisp)Changing Files.
-- Function: file-backup-file-names filename
This function returns a list of all the backup file names for
FILENAME, or nil if there are none. The files are sorted by
modification time, descending, so that the most recent files are
first.
*Note (elisp)Backup Names::.
-- Function: make-lock-file-name filename
Return a string containing a lock file name for FILENAME, obeying
lock-file-name-transforms.
-- Function: null-device
Return the path to the null device (usually something like
/dev/null) on the current system.
-- Function: decoded-time-period time
Interpret TIME as a period and return its length in seconds. For
computational purposes, years are 365 days long and months are 30
days long.
-- Function: subr-primitive-p object
Return t if OBJECT is a primitive, built-in function. On systems
with native compilation subrp does not distinguish between
built-in functions and functions that have been compiled. If
native compilation is not avaliable, this function behaves
identically to subrp.
-- Function: file-name-absolute-p filename
This function returns t if file FILENAME is an absolute file
name, nil otherwise. A file name is considered to be absolute if
its first component is ~, or is ~USER where USER is a valid
login name. In the following examples, assume that there is a user
named rms but no user named nosuchuser.
(file-name-absolute-p "~rms/foo")
⇒ t
(file-name-absolute-p "~nosuchuser/foo")
⇒ nil
(file-name-absolute-p "rms/foo")
⇒ nil
(file-name-absolute-p "/user/rms/foo")
⇒ t
*Note (elisp)Absolute and Relative File Names::.
2.5.2 Prefixed Definitions
--------------------------
These functions are prefixed with compat prefix, and are only loaded
when compat-28 is required:
-- Function: compat-unlock-buffer
This function unlocks the file being visited in the current buffer,
if the buffer is modified. If the buffer is not modified, then the
file should not be locked, so this function does nothing. It also
does nothing if the current buffer is not visiting a file, or is
not locked. This function handles file system errors by calling
display-warning and otherwise ignores the error.
*Note (elisp)File Locks::.
This compatibility versions catches the file-error condition,
issuing a warning instead of propagating on the error.
-- Function: compat-string-width string &optional from to
This function returns the width in columns of the string STRING, if
it were displayed in the current buffer and the selected window.
Optional arguments FROM and TO specify the substring of STRING to
consider, and are interpreted as in substring (*note
(elisp)Creating Strings::).
The return value is an approximation: it only considers the values
returned by char-width for the constituent characters, always
takes a tab character as taking tab-width columns, ignores
display properties and fonts, etc.
*Note (elisp)Size of Displayed Text::.
This compatibility version handles the optional arguments FROM and
TO.
-- Function: compat-json-serialize
*Note Emacs 27.1::.
This compatibility version handles primitive, top-level JSON values
(numbers, strings, booleans).
-- Function: compat-json-insert
*Note Emacs 27.1::.
This compatibility version handles primitive, top-level JSON values
(numbers, strings, booleans).
-- Function: compat-json-parse-string
*Note Emacs 27.1::.
This compatibility version handles primitive, top-level JSON values
(numbers, strings, booleans).
-- Function: compat-json-parse-buffer
*Note Emacs 27.1::.
This compatibility version handles primitive, top-level JSON values
(numbers, strings, booleans).
-- Function: compat-count-windows
Return the number of live windows on the selected frame.
The optional argument MINIBUF specifies whether the minibuffer
window is included in the count.
If ALL-FRAMES is non-nil, count the windows in all frames instead
just the selected frame.
This compatibility version handles the optional argument
ALL-FRAMES.
2.5.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------
Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 28.1:
• Support for interactive or declare to list applicable modes.
• Support for :interactive argument to define-minor-mode and
define-derived-mode.
• Support for :predicate argument to
define-globalized-minor-mode.
• "Success handler" for condition-case.
• The function benchmark-call.
• Support for the natnum defcustom type.
• The function macroexp-compiling-p.
• The function macroexp-warn-and-return.
• Additional Edebug keywords.
• Shorthand support.
• The function custom-add-choice.
• The function decoded-time-period.
• The function dom-print.
• The function dom-remove-attribute.
• The function dns-query-asynchronous.
• The function get-locale-names.
• The function json-avaliable-p.
• The function mail-header-parse-addresses-lax.
• The function mail-header-parse-address-lax.
• The function make-separator-line.
• The function num-processors.
• The function object-intervals.
• The function process-lines-ignore-status.
• The function require-theme.
• The function syntax-class-to-char.
• The function path-separator.

File: compat.info, Node: Development, Next: Function Index, Prev: Support, Up: Top
3 Development
*************
Compat is developed on SourceHut (https://sr.ht/~pkal/compat). A
restricted GitHub mirror (https://github.com/phikal/compat.el) is also
maintained.
Patches and comments can be sent to the development mailing list
(https://lists.sr.ht/~pkal/compat-devel) (~pkal/compat-devel@lists.sr.ht
<~pkal/compat-devel@lists.sr.ht>). Bug reports are best sent to the
issue tracker (https://todo.sr.ht/~pkal/compat) (~pkal/compat@todo.sr.ht
<~pkal/compat@todo.sr.ht>). The GitHub mirror can also be used to
submit patches. These may include issues in the compatibility code,
missing definitions or performance issues.
Please note that as a GNU ELPA package, Compat requires contributors
to have signed the FSF copyright assignment
(https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Copyright-Assignment.html),
before any non-trivial contribution (roughly 15 lines of code) can be
applied.

File: compat.info, Node: Function Index, Next: Variable Index, Prev: Development, Up: Top
Appendix A Function Index
*************************
[index]
* Menu:
* alist-get: Emacs 25.1. (line 50)
* always: Emacs 28.1. (line 61)
* and-let*: Emacs 26.1. (line 99)
* bool-vector: Emacs 25.1. (line 166)
* bool-vector-count-consecutive: Emacs 24.4. (line 118)
* bool-vector-count-population: Emacs 24.4. (line 125)
* bool-vector-exclusive-or: Emacs 24.4. (line 76)
* bool-vector-intersection: Emacs 24.4. (line 90)
* bool-vector-not: Emacs 24.4. (line 104)
* bool-vector-set-difference: Emacs 24.4. (line 97)
* bool-vector-subsetp: Emacs 24.4. (line 111)
* bool-vector-union: Emacs 24.4. (line 83)
* buffer-local-boundp: Emacs 28.1. (line 99)
* button-buttonize: Emacs 28.1. (line 285)
* color-values-from-color-spec: Emacs 28.1. (line 297)
* compat-<: Emacs 24.4. (line 175)
* compat-<=: Emacs 24.4. (line 185)
* compat-=: Emacs 24.4. (line 170)
* compat->: Emacs 24.4. (line 180)
* compat->=: Emacs 24.4. (line 190)
* compat-alist-get: Emacs 26.1. (line 284)
* compat-assoc: Emacs 26.1. (line 256)
* compat-assoc-delete-all: Emacs 27.1. (line 305)
* compat-count-windows: Emacs 28.1. (line 422)
* compat-dired-get-marked-files: Emacs 27.1. (line 333)
* compat-executable-find: Emacs 27.1. (line 317)
* compat-file-size-human-readable: Emacs 27.1. (line 285)
* compat-json-insert: Emacs 28.1. (line 404)
* compat-json-parse-buffer: Emacs 28.1. (line 416)
* compat-json-parse-string: Emacs 28.1. (line 410)
* compat-json-serialize: Emacs 28.1. (line 398)
* compat-line-number-at-pos: Emacs 26.1. (line 270)
* compat-lookup-key: Emacs 27.1. (line 245)
* compat-recenter: Emacs 27.1. (line 235)
* compat-regexp-opt: Emacs 27.1. (line 273)
* compat-sort: Emacs 25.1. (line 178)
* compat-split-string: Emacs 24.4. (line 199)
* compat-string-trim: Emacs 26.1. (line 314)
* compat-string-trim-left: Emacs 26.1. (line 298)
* compat-string-trim-right: Emacs 26.1. (line 306)
* compat-string-width: Emacs 28.1. (line 381)
* compat-unlock-buffer: Emacs 28.1. (line 368)
* completion-table-with-cache: Emacs 24.4. (line 130)
* cXXXr: Emacs 26.1. (line 47)
* cXXXXr: Emacs 26.1. (line 48)
* date-days-in-month: Emacs 27.1. (line 193)
* decoded-time-day: Emacs 27.1. (line 166)
* decoded-time-dst: Emacs 27.1. (line 178)
* decoded-time-hour: Emacs 27.1. (line 163)
* decoded-time-minute: Emacs 27.1. (line 160)
* decoded-time-month: Emacs 27.1. (line 169)
* decoded-time-period: Emacs 28.1. (line 332)
* decoded-time-second: Emacs 27.1. (line 157)
* decoded-time-weekday: Emacs 27.1. (line 175)
* decoded-time-year: Emacs 27.1. (line 172)
* decoded-time-zone: Emacs 27.1. (line 182)
* define-error: Emacs 24.4. (line 65)
* delete-consecutive-dups: Emacs 24.4. (line 60)
* derived-mode-p: Emacs 27.1. (line 223)
* directory-empty-p: Emacs 28.1. (line 218)
* directory-files-recursively: Emacs 25.1. (line 139)
* directory-name-p: Emacs 25.1. (line 24)
* dlet: Emacs 28.1. (line 117)
* dolist-with-progress-reporter: Emacs 27.1. (line 116)
* ensure-list: Emacs 28.1. (line 132)
* face-spec-set: Emacs 24.4. (line 139)
* file-attribute-access-time: Emacs 26.1. (line 201)
* file-attribute-collect: Emacs 26.1. (line 238)
* file-attribute-device-number: Emacs 26.1. (line 233)
* file-attribute-group-id: Emacs 26.1. (line 196)
* file-attribute-inode-number: Emacs 26.1. (line 228)
* file-attribute-link-number: Emacs 26.1. (line 186)
* file-attribute-modes: Emacs 26.1. (line 223)
* file-attribute-modification-time: Emacs 26.1. (line 206)
* file-attribute-size: Emacs 26.1. (line 218)
* file-attribute-status-change-time: Emacs 26.1. (line 212)
* file-attribute-type: Emacs 26.1. (line 181)
* file-attribute-user-id: Emacs 26.1. (line 191)
* file-backup-file-names: Emacs 28.1. (line 316)
* file-local-name: Emacs 26.1. (line 108)
* file-modes-number-to-symbolic: Emacs 28.1. (line 310)
* file-name-absolute-p: Emacs 28.1. (line 344)
* file-name-concat: Emacs 28.1. (line 31)
* file-name-quote: Emacs 26.1. (line 133)
* file-name-quoted-p: Emacs 26.1. (line 126)
* file-name-with-extension: Emacs 28.1. (line 200)
* flatten-tree: Emacs 27.1. (line 129)
* format-message: Emacs 25.1. (line 12)
* format-prompt: Emacs 28.1. (line 229)
* func-arity: Emacs 26.1. (line 12)
* garbage-collect-maybe: Emacs 28.1. (line 46)
* gensym: Emacs 26.1. (line 51)
* if-let: Emacs 25.1. (line 67)
* if-let*: Emacs 26.1. (line 90)
* ignore-errors: Emacs 27.1. (line 103)
* image-property: Emacs 26.1. (line 175)
* insert-into-buffer: Emacs 28.1. (line 66)
* json-insert: Emacs 27.1. (line 57)
* json-parse-buffer: Emacs 27.1. (line 94)
* json-parse-string: Emacs 27.1. (line 64)
* json-serialize: Emacs 27.1. (line 42)
* length<: Emacs 28.1. (line 23)
* length=: Emacs 28.1. (line 20)
* length>: Emacs 28.1. (line 28)
* macroexp-file-name: Emacs 28.1. (line 267)
* macroexpand-1: Emacs 25.1. (line 132)
* macrop: Emacs 24.4. (line 47)
* make-directory-autoloads: Emacs 28.1. (line 293)
* make-lock-file-name: Emacs 28.1. (line 324)
* make-nearby-temp-file: Emacs 26.1. (line 61)
* mapcan: Emacs 26.1. (line 34)
* named-let: Emacs 28.1. (line 182)
* null-device: Emacs 28.1. (line 328)
* package-get-version: Emacs 27.1. (line 185)
* proper-list-p: Emacs 27.1. (line 12)
* provided-mode-derived-p: Emacs 27.1. (line 219)
* read-multiple-choice: Emacs 26.1. (line 151)
* replace-regexp-in-string: Emacs 28.1. (line 91)
* replace-string-in-region: Emacs 28.1. (line 76)
* setq-local: Emacs 27.1. (line 258)
* special-form-p: Emacs 24.4. (line 41)
* string-chop-newline: Emacs 28.1. (line 177)
* string-clean-whitespace: Emacs 28.1. (line 145)
* string-distance: Emacs 27.1. (line 22)
* string-fill: Emacs 28.1. (line 152)
* string-greaterp: Emacs 25.1. (line 32)
* string-lines: Emacs 28.1. (line 160)
* string-pad: Emacs 28.1. (line 168)
* string-replace: Emacs 28.1. (line 55)
* string-search: Emacs 28.1. (line 12)
* string-suffix-p: Emacs 24.4. (line 53)
* subr-primitive-p: Emacs 28.1. (line 337)
* temporary-file-directory: Emacs 26.1. (line 78)
* thing-at-mouse: Emacs 28.1. (line 260)
* thread-first: Emacs 25.1. (line 90)
* thread-last: Emacs 25.1. (line 111)
* time-equal-p: Emacs 27.1. (line 188)
* when-let: Emacs 25.1. (line 85)
* when-let*: Emacs 26.1. (line 94)
* with-environment-variables: Emacs 28.1. (line 271)
* with-eval-after-load: Emacs 24.4. (line 12)
* with-existing-directory: Emacs 28.1. (line 106)
* with-file-modes: Emacs 25.1. (line 39)
* xor: Emacs 27.1. (line 139)

File: compat.info, Node: Variable Index, Prev: Function Index, Up: Top
Appendix B Variable Index
*************************
[index]
* Menu:
* exec-path: Emacs 27.1. (line 200)
* gensym-counter: Emacs 26.1. (line 58)
* mounted-file-systems: Emacs 26.1. (line 74)
* regexp-unmatchable: Emacs 27.1. (line 149)

Tag Table:
Node: Top821
Node: Introduction2274
Node: Overview2433
Node: Usage3656
Node: Additional libraries4663
Node: Intentions5118
Node: Support6728
Node: Emacs 24.47310
Node: Emacs 25.117364
Node: Emacs 26.126321
Node: Emacs 27.140419
Node: Emacs 28.155775
Node: Development75469
Node: Function Index76484
Node: Variable Index87168

End Tag Table

Local Variables:
coding: utf-8
End: