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save-excursion in append-to-bufferThe body of the let expression in append-to-buffer
consists of a save-excursion expression.
The save-excursion function saves the location of point, and restores it
to that position after the expressions in the
body of the save-excursion complete execution. In addition,
save-excursion keeps track of the original buffer, and
restores it. This is how save-excursion is used in
append-to-buffer.
Incidentally, it is worth noting here that a Lisp function is normally
formatted so that everything that is enclosed in a multi-line spread is
indented more to the right than the first symbol. In this function
definition, the let is indented more than the defun, and
the save-excursion is indented more than the let, like
this:
(defun …
…
…
(let…
(save-excursion
…
This formatting convention makes it easy to see that the lines in
the body of the save-excursion are enclosed by the parentheses
associated with save-excursion, just as the
save-excursion itself is enclosed by the parentheses associated
with the let:
(let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
(save-excursion
…
(set-buffer …)
(insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
…))
The use of the save-excursion function can be viewed as a process
of filling in the slots of a template:
(save-excursion first-expression-in-body second-expression-in-body … last-expression-in-body)
In this function, the body of the save-excursion contains only
one expression, the let* expression. You know about a
let function. The let* function is different. It has a
‘*’ in its name. It enables Emacs to set each variable in its
varlist in sequence, one after another.
Its critical feature is that variables later in the varlist can make
use of the values to which Emacs set variables earlier in the varlist.
See The let* expression.
We will skip functions like let* and focus on two: the
set-buffer function and the insert-buffer-substring
function.
In the old days, the set-buffer expression was simply
(set-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer))
but now it is
(set-buffer append-to)
append-to is bound to (get-buffer-create buffer) earlier
on in the let* expression. That extra binding would not be
necessary except for that append-to is used later in the
varlist as an argument to get-buffer-window-list.
The append-to-buffer function definition inserts text from the
buffer in which you are currently to a named buffer. It happens that
insert-buffer-substring does just the reverse—it copies text
from another buffer to the current buffer—that is why the
append-to-buffer definition starts out with a let that
binds the local symbol oldbuf to the value returned by
current-buffer.
The insert-buffer-substring expression looks like this:
(insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
The insert-buffer-substring function copies a string
from the buffer specified as its first argument and inserts the
string into the present buffer. In this case, the argument to
insert-buffer-substring is the value of the variable created
and bound by the let, namely the value of oldbuf, which
was the current buffer when you gave the append-to-buffer
command.
After insert-buffer-substring has done its work,
save-excursion will restore the action to the original buffer
and append-to-buffer will have done its job.
Written in skeletal form, the workings of the body look like this:
(let (bind-oldbuf-to-value-of-current-buffer) (save-excursion ; Keep track of buffer. change-buffer insert-substring-from-oldbuf-into-buffer) change-back-to-original-buffer-when-finished let-the-local-meaning-of-oldbuf-disappear-when-finished
In summary, append-to-buffer works as follows: it saves the
value of the current buffer in the variable called oldbuf. It
gets the new buffer (creating one if need be) and switches Emacs’s
attention to it. Using the value of oldbuf, it inserts the
region of text from the old buffer into the new buffer; and then using
save-excursion, it brings you back to your original buffer.
In looking at append-to-buffer, you have explored a fairly
complex function. It shows how to use let and
save-excursion, and how to change to and come back from another
buffer. Many function definitions use let,
save-excursion, and set-buffer this way.
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