Define efficient global variables in Common Lisp.
;; Similar to defparameter with regard to redefinitions
(define-global-parameter -x- 3)
;; Similar to defvar with regard to redefinitions
(define-global-var -y- 4)
;; ...
(setf -x- 5)
(setf -y- 6)
In Common Lisp, a special variable that is never dynamically bound
typically serves as a stand-in for a global variable. The
global-vars library provides true global variables that are
implemented by some compilers. An attempt to rebind a global variable
properly results in a compiler error. That is, a global variable
cannot be dynamically bound.
Global variables therefore allow us to communicate an intended usage that differs from special variables. Global variables are also more efficient than special variables, especially in the presence of threads.
-
[macro]
define-global-varnamevalue&optionaldocumentationDefine a global variable with a compile-time value.
Subsequent redefinitions will not change the value (like
defvar).The
valueargument is evaluated at compile-time. On SBCL, this permits optimizations based upon the invariant thatnameis always bound. -
[macro]
define-global-var*namevalue&optionaldocumentationSame as
define-global-varexceptvalueis evaluated at load time, not compile time. -
[macro]
define-global-parameternamevalue&optionaldocumentationSame as
define-global-varexcept subsequent redefinitions will update the value (likedefparameter). -
[macro]
define-global-parameter*namevalue&optionaldocumentationSame as
define-global-parameterexceptvalueis evaluated at load time, not compile time.
global-vars wraps the following implementation-specific features:
-
SBCL:
sb-ext:defglobalandsb-ext:define-load-time-global. -
CCL:
ccl:defstaticandccl:defstaticvar. -
LispWorks:
hcl:special-global, in particulardefglobal-parameteranddefglobal-variable.
For these implementations, rebinding a global variable is a compilation error.
On other implementations, a global variable is implemented as a symbol
macro which expands to a symbol-value form. Rebinding a global
variable will (unfortunately) not signal an error.
It is recommended to use a naming convention for global variables,
such as -foo-. This makes it clear that (let ((-foo- 9)) ...) is a
mistake even if the compiler doesn't catch it.
James M. Lawrence [email protected]