Named-Readtables is a library that provides a namespace for readtables akin to the already-existing namespace of packages. In particular:
you can associate readtables with names, and retrieve readtables by names;
you can associate source files with readtable names, and be sure that the right readtable is active when compiling/loading the file;
similiarly, your development environment now has a chance to
automatically determine what readtable should be active while
processing source forms on interactive commands. (E.g. think of
C-c C-c
in Slime (yet to be done))
It follows that Named-Readtables is a facility for using readtables in a localized way.
Additionally, it also attempts to become a facility for using readtables in a modular way. In particular:
it provides a macro to specify the content of a readtable at a glance;
it makes it possible to use multiple inheritance between readtables.
Here is the official repository and the HTML documentation for the latest version.
Thanks to Robert Goldman for making me want to write this library.
Thanks to Stephen Compall, Ariel Badichi, David Lichteblau, Bart Botta, David Crawford, and Pascal Costanza for being early adopters, providing comments and bugfixes.
The API heavily imitates the API of packages. This has the nice property that any experienced Common Lisper will take it up without effort.
DEFREADTABLE - DEFPACKAGE
IN-READTABLE - IN-PACKAGE
MERGE-READTABLES-INTO - USE-PACKAGE
MAKE-READTABLE - MAKE-PACKAGE
UNREGISTER-READTABLE - DELETE-PACKAGE
RENAME-READTABLE - RENAME-PACKAGE
FIND-READTABLE - FIND-PACKAGE
READTABLE-NAME - PACKAGE-NAME
LIST-ALL-NAMED-READTABLES - LIST-ALL-PACKAGES
There are three major differences between the API of Named-Readtables, and the API of packages.
Readtable names are symbols not strings.
Time has shown that the fact that packages are named by strings causes severe headache because of the potential of package names colliding with each other.
Hence, readtables are named by symbols lest to make the
situation worse than it already is. Consequently, readtables
named CL-ORACLE:SQL-SYNTAX
and CL-MYSQL:SQL-SYNTAX
can
happily coexist next to each other. Or, taken to an extreme,
SCHEME:SYNTAX
and ELISP:SYNTAX
.
If, for example to duly signify the importance of your cool readtable hack, you really think it deserves a global name, you can always resort to keywords.
The inheritance is resolved statically, not dynamically.
A package that uses another package will have access to all the other package's exported symbols, even to those that will be added after its definition. I.e. the inheritance is resolved at run-time, that is dynamically.
Unfortunately, we cannot do the same for readtables in a portable manner.
Therefore, we do not talk about "using" another readtable but about "merging" the other readtable's definition into the readtable we are going to define. I.e. the inheritance is resolved once at definition time, that is statically.
(Such merging can more or less be implemented portably albeit at a certain cost. Most of the time, this cost manifests itself at the time a readtable is defined, i.e. once at compile-time, so it may not bother you. Nonetheless, we provide extra support for Sbcl, ClozureCL, and AllegroCL at the moment. Patches for your implementation of choice are welcome, of course.)
DEFREADTABLE
does not have compile-time effects.
If you define a package via DEFPACKAGE
, you can make that
package the currently active package for the subsequent
compilation of the same file via IN-PACKAGE
. The same is,
however, not true for DEFREADTABLE
and IN-READTABLE
for the
following reason:
It's unlikely that the need for special reader-macros arises for a problem which can be solved in just one file. Most often, you're going to define the reader macro functions, and set up the corresponding readtable in an extra file.
If DEFREADTABLE
had compile-time effects, you'd have to wrap
each definition of a reader-macro function in an EVAL-WHEN
to
make its definition available at compile-time. Because that's
simply not the common case, DEFREADTABLE
does not have a
compile-time effect.
If you want to use a readtable within the same file as its
definition, wrap the DEFREADTABLE
and the reader-macro function
definitions in an explicit EVAL-WHEN
.
NIL
, :STANDARD
, and :COMMON-LISP
designate the
standard readtable.
:MODERN
designates a case-preserving standard-readtable.
:CURRENT
designates the current readtable.
(defreadtable elisp:syntax
(:merge :standard)
(:macro-char #\? #'elisp::read-character-literal t)
(:macro-char #\[ #'elisp::read-vector-literal t)
...
(:case :preserve))
(defreadtable scheme:syntax
(:merge :standard)
(:macro-char #\[ #'(lambda (stream char)
(read-delimited-list #\] stream)))
(:macro-char #\# :dispatch)
(:dispatch-macro-char #\# #\t #'scheme::read-#t)
(:dispatch-macro-char #\# #\f #'scheme::read-#f)
...
(:case :preserve))
(in-readtable elisp:syntax)
...
(in-readtable scheme:syntax)
...
[macro] DEFREADTABLE NAME &BODY OPTIONS
Define a new named readtable, whose name is given by the symbol NAME
.
Or, if a readtable is already registered under that name, redefine
that one.
The readtable can be populated using the following OPTIONS
:
If the first element of OPTIONS
is a string then it is associated
with the readtable as in (SETF (DOCUMENTATION NAME 'READTABLE) DOCSTRING)
.
(:MERGE READTABLE-DESIGNATORS+)
Merge the macro character definitions from the readtables
designated into the new readtable being defined as per
MERGE-READTABLES-INTO
. The copied options are
:DISPATCH-MACRO-CHAR
, :MACRO-CHAR
and :SYNTAX-FROM
, but not
READTABLE-CASE
.
If no :MERGE
clause is given, an empty readtable is used. See
MAKE-READTABLE
.
(:FUSE READTABLE-DESIGNATORS+)
Like :MERGE
except:
Error conditions of type READER-MACRO-CONFLICT
that are signaled
during the merge operation will be silently continued. It
follows that reader macros in earlier entries will be
overwritten by later ones. For backward compatibility, :FUZE
is
accepted as an alias of :FUSE
.
(:DISPATCH-MACRO-CHAR MACRO-CHAR SUB-CHAR FUNCTION)
Define a new sub character SUB-CHAR
for the dispatching macro
character MACRO-CHAR
, per SET-DISPATCH-MACRO-CHARACTER
. You
probably have to define MACRO-CHAR
as a dispatching macro
character by the following option first.
(:MACRO-CHAR MACRO-CHAR FUNCTION [NON-TERMINATING-P])
Define a new macro character in the readtable, per
SET-MACRO-CHARACTER
. If FUNCTION
is the keyword
:DISPATCH
, MACRO-CHAR
is made a dispatching macro character,
per MAKE-DISPATCH-MACRO-CHARACTER
.
(:SYNTAX-FROM FROM-READTABLE-DESIGNATOR FROM-CHAR TO-CHAR)
Set the character syntax of TO-CHAR
in the readtable being
defined to the same syntax as FROM-CHAR
as per
SET-SYNTAX-FROM-CHAR
.
(:CASE CASE-MODE)
Defines the case sensitivity mode of the resulting readtable.
Any number of option clauses may appear. The options are grouped by
their type, but in each group the order the options appeared
textually is preserved. The following groups exist and are executed
in the following order: :MERGE
and :FUSE
(one group), :CASE
,
:MACRO-CHAR
and :DISPATCH-MACRO-CHAR
(one group), finally
:SYNTAX-FROM
.
Notes:
The readtable is defined at load-time. If you want to have it
available at compilation time -- say to use its reader-macros in the
same file as its definition -- you have to wrap the DEFREADTABLE
form in an explicit EVAL-WHEN
.
On redefinition, the target readtable is made empty first before it's refilled according to the clauses.
NIL
, :STANDARD
, :COMMON-LISP
, :MODERN
, and :CURRENT
are
preregistered readtable names.
[macro] IN-READTABLE NAME
Set *READTABLE*
to the readtable referred to by the symbol NAME
.
Return the readtable.
[function] MAKE-READTABLE &OPTIONAL (NAME NIL NAME-SUPPLIED-P) &KEY MERGE
Creates and returns a new readtable under the specified
NAME
.
MERGE
takes a list of NAMED-READTABLE-DESIGNATOR
s and specifies the
readtables the new readtable is created from. (See the :MERGE
clause
of DEFREADTABLE
for details.)
If MERGE
is NIL
, an empty readtable is used instead.
If NAME
is not given, an anonymous empty readtable is returned.
Notes:
An empty readtable is a readtable where each character's syntax is the same as in the standard readtable except that each macro character has been made a constituent. Basically: whitespace stays whitespace, everything else is constituent.
[function] MERGE-READTABLES-INTO RESULT-READTABLE &REST NAMED-READTABLES
Copy macro character definitions of each readtable in
NAMED-READTABLES
into RESULT-READTABLE
.
If a macro character appears in more than one of the readtables,
i.e. if a conflict is discovered during the merge, an error of type
READER-MACRO-CONFLICT
is signaled.
The copied options are :DISPATCH-MACRO-CHAR
, :MACRO-CHAR
and
:SYNTAX-FROM
, but not READTABLE-CASE
.
[function] FIND-READTABLE NAME
Looks for the readtable specified by NAME
and returns it if it is
found. Returns NIL
otherwise.
[function] ENSURE-READTABLE NAME &OPTIONAL (DEFAULT NIL DEFAULT-P)
Looks up the readtable specified by NAME
and returns it if it's found.
If it is not found, it registers the readtable designated by DEFAULT
under the name represented by NAME
; or if no default argument is
given, it signals an error of type READTABLE-DOES-NOT-EXIST
instead.
[function] RENAME-READTABLE OLD-NAME NEW-NAME
Replaces the associated name of the readtable designated by
OLD-NAME
with NEW-NAME
. If a readtable is already registered under
NEW-NAME
, an error of type READTABLE-DOES-ALREADY-EXIST
is
signaled.
[function] READTABLE-NAME NAMED-READTABLE
Returns the name of the readtable designated by NAMED-READTABLE
,
or NIL
.
[function] REGISTER-READTABLE NAME READTABLE
Associate READTABLE
with NAME
. Returns the readtable.
[function] UNREGISTER-READTABLE NAMED-READTABLE
Remove the association of NAMED-READTABLE
. Returns T
if successfull,
NIL
otherwise.
[function] COPY-NAMED-READTABLE NAMED-READTABLE
Like COPY-READTABLE
but takes a NAMED-READTABLE-DESIGNATOR
as argument.
[function] LIST-ALL-NAMED-READTABLES
Returns a list of all registered readtables. The returned list is guaranteed to be fresh, but may contain duplicates.
[type] NAMED-READTABLE-DESIGNATOR
Either a symbol or a readtable itself.
[condition] READER-MACRO-CONFLICT READTABLE-ERROR
Continuable.
This condition is signaled during the merge process if a reader macro (be it a macro character or the sub character of a dispatch macro character) is present in the both source and the target readtable and the two respective reader macro functions differ.
[condition] READTABLE-DOES-ALREADY-EXIST READTABLE-ERROR
Continuable.
[condition] READTABLE-DOES-NOT-EXIST READTABLE-ERROR