emacs.d/clones/lisp/colinallen.dnsalias.org/lp/node70.html

46 lines
1.3 KiB
HTML

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3O//DTD W3 HTML 2.0//EN">
<!Originally converted to HTML using LaTeX2HTML 95 (Thu Jan 19 1995) by Nikos Drakos (nikos@cbl.leeds.ac.uk), CBLU, University of Leeds >
<HEAD>
<TITLE> Backquote and Commas</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY>
<meta name="description" value=" Backquote and Commas">
<meta name="keywords" value="lp">
<meta name="resource-type" value="document">
<meta name="distribution" value="global">
<P>
<BR> <HR>
<A HREF="node71.html"><IMG ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="next" SRC="next_motif.gif"></A>
<A HREF="node64.html"><IMG ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="up" SRC="up_motif.gif"></A>
<A HREF="node69.html"><IMG ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="previous" SRC="previous_motif.gif"></A> <BR>
<A HREF="lp.html"><B>Contents</B></A>
<B> Next:</B>
<A HREF="node71.html"> Defmacro</A>
<B>Up:</B>
<A HREF="node64.html"> FunctionsLambda Expressions, </A>
<B> Previous:</B>
<A HREF="node69.html"> Mapcar</A>
<BR> <HR> <P>
<H1> Backquote and Commas</H1>
<P>
Backquoted lists allow evaluation of items that are preceded by commas.
<p>
For example:
<pre>
>`(2 ,(+ 3 4))
(2 7)
</pre>
Any number of commas may appear inside a backquoted list, and at any
depth inside that context. For example:
<pre>
> `(4 ,(+ 1 2) '(3 ,(+ 1 2)) 5)
(4 3 '(3 3) 5)
</pre>
<BR> <HR>
<P>
<ADDRESS>
<I>&#169; Colin Allen &amp; Maneesh Dhagat <BR>
March 2007 </I>
</ADDRESS>
</BODY>