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D. Tips and Conventions

This chapter describes no additional features of Emacs Lisp. Instead it gives advice on making effective use of the features described in the previous chapters, and describes conventions Emacs Lisp programmers should follow.

You can automatically check some of the conventions described below by running the command M-x checkdoc RET when visiting a Lisp file. It cannot check all of the conventions, and not all the warnings it gives necessarily correspond to problems, but it is worth examining them all.


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D.1 Emacs Lisp Coding Conventions

Here are conventions that you should follow when writing Emacs Lisp code intended for widespread use:


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D.2 Tips for Making Compiled Code Fast

Here are ways of improving the execution speed of byte-compiled Lisp programs.


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D.3 Tips for Documentation Strings

Here are some tips and conventions for the writing of documentation strings. You can check many of these conventions by running the command M-x checkdoc-minor-mode.


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D.4 Tips on Writing Comments

We recommend these conventions for where to put comments and how to indent them:

;

Comments that start with a single semicolon, ‘;’, should all be aligned to the same column on the right of the source code. Such comments usually explain how the code on the same line does its job. In Lisp mode and related modes, the M-; (indent-for-comment) command automatically inserts such a ‘;’ in the right place, or aligns such a comment if it is already present.

This and following examples are taken from the Emacs sources.

 
(setq base-version-list                 ; there was a base
      (assoc (substring fn 0 start-vn)  ; version to which
             file-version-assoc-list))  ; this looks like
                                        ; a subversion
;;

Comments that start with two semicolons, ‘;;’, should be aligned to the same level of indentation as the code. Such comments usually describe the purpose of the following lines or the state of the program at that point. For example:

 
(prog1 (setq auto-fill-function
             …
             …
  ;; update mode line
  (force-mode-line-update)))

We also normally use two semicolons for comments outside functions.

 
;; This Lisp code is run in Emacs
;; when it is to operate as a server
;; for other processes.

Every function that has no documentation string (presumably one that is used only internally within the package it belongs to), should instead have a two-semicolon comment right before the function, explaining what the function does and how to call it properly. Explain precisely what each argument means and how the function interprets its possible values.

;;;

Comments that start with three semicolons, ‘;;;’, should start at the left margin. These are used, occasionally, for comments within functions that should start at the margin. We also use them sometimes for comments that are between functions—whether to use two or three semicolons there is a matter of style.

Another use for triple-semicolon comments is for commenting out lines within a function. We use three semicolons for this precisely so that they remain at the left margin.

 
(defun foo (a)
;;; This is no longer necessary.
;;;  (force-mode-line-update)
  (message "Finished with %s" a))
;;;;

Comments that start with four semicolons, ‘;;;;’, should be aligned to the left margin and are used for headings of major sections of a program. For example:

 
;;;; The kill ring

The indentation commands of the Lisp modes in Emacs, such as M-; (indent-for-comment) and <TAB> (lisp-indent-line), automatically indent comments according to these conventions, depending on the number of semicolons. See (emacs)Comments section ‘Manipulating Comments’ in The GNU Emacs Manual.



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This document was generated by Yasutaka SHINDOH on April 18, 2010 using texi2html 1.82.