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#71934
31.0.50; edebug--called-interactively-skip vs. new fun objects
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Message #61 received at 71934 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
Hello, Andrea.
On Sat, Jul 06, 2024 at 03:48:50 -0400, Andrea Corallo wrote:
> Alan Mackenzie <acm <at> muc.de> writes:
> > Hello, Stefan.
> > On Fri, Jul 05, 2024 at 14:17:38 -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> >> > Not sure what you mean by "no such thing as a form ... like a closure".
> >> A form that starts with `closure` is not a valid form because there is
> >> no definition for `closure`: (fboundp 'closure) => nil.
> >> > I bumped into one last summer.
> >> > In particular (in my development repo fixing bug #64646) I put this into
> >> > *scratch*:
> >> > (defconst foo (lambda (baz) (car baz)))
> >> > , evaluated it with C-x C-e and then M-: (native-compile foo). This
> >> > threw the error "Cannot native-compile, form is not a lambda".
> >> That error seems right according to the docstring:
> >> (defun native-compile (function-or-file &optional output)
> >> "Compile FUNCTION-OR-FILE into native code.
> >> This is the synchronous entry-point for the Emacs Lisp native
> >> compiler. FUNCTION-OR-FILE is a function symbol, a form, or the
> >> filename of an Emacs Lisp source file. If OUTPUT is non-nil, use
> >> it as the filename for the compiled object. If FUNCTION-OR-FILE
> >> is a filename, if the compilation was successful return the
> >> filename of the compiled object. If FUNCTION-OR-FILE is a
> >> function symbol or a form, if the compilation was successful
> >> return the compiled function."
> >> (closure ...) is not a function symbol nor a valid form. Instead it's
> >> a function value and the docstring doesn't say such are
> >> a valid arguments to `native-compile`.
> > All very clever arguments, no doubt, but in the end it means you cannot
> > native compile foo. I've just tried it on emacs-30, and it doesn't work.
> > But you could compile foo last summer after my fixes for bug #64646.
> > Between last summer and now, something has gone badly wrong in Emacs's
> > basic mechanisms.
> (defconst foo (lambda (baz) (car baz)))
> (native-compile #'foo)
> Never worked AFAIR, ....
No. But (native-compile foo) did work. It compiled the value of foo,
producing an anonymous subr.
> ....the functionality you added was:
> (defun foo () "foo doc string"
> (lambda () "lambda doc string" 3))
> (subr-native-elisp-p (funcall (native-compile 'foo)))
Yes.
> And this still works for me.
It still works for me, too.
> I'm probably missing something sorry.
The fact that
(defconst foo (lambda (baz) (car baz)))
(native-compile foo)
worked (as of 2023-11-08), but no longer does. It was not the main topic
of bug #64646 (for which see above), but was fixed in the commit for that
bug anyway. This was possibly not a good idea. That commit was:
commit 06e4ebc81a44c709b08ce72c746629c6c77e6f6e
Author: Alan Mackenzie <acm <at> muc.de>
Date: Wed Nov 8 20:49:48 2023 +0000
With `native-compile', compile lambdas in a defun or lambda too
..
> Andrea
--
Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).
This bug report was last modified 314 days ago.
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