In terms of scope? Actual implementation in memory? The syntax? For eg, if (let a 1) Is 'a' a variable or a symbol?
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Jörg's answer points in the right direction. Let me add a bit to it. I'll talk about Lisps that are similar to Common Lisp. A symbol is a real data structure in Lisp. You can create symbols, you can use symbols, you can store symbols, you can pass symbols around and symbols can be part of larger data structures, for example lists of symbols. A symbol has a name, can have a value and can have a function value. So you can take a symbol and set its value.
Usually one would write (setq foo 42), or (set 'foo 42) or (setf foo 42). But!
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In both forms above in the source code there are symbols and a is written like a symbol and using the function READ to read that source returns a symbol a in some list. But the setq operation does NOT set the symbol value of a to 42. Here the LET and the DEFUN introduce a VARIABLE a that we write with a symbol. Thus the SETQ operation then sets the variable value to 42. So, if we look at:
We introduce a global variable FOO. In bar the first SETQ sets the symbol value of the global variable FOO. The second SETQ sets the local variable BAZ to 3. In both case we use the same SETQ and we write the variable as a symbol, but in the first case the FOO donates a global variable and those store values in the symbol value. In the second case BAZ denotes a local variable and how the value gets stored, we don't know. All we can do is to access the variable to get its value. In Common Lisp there is no way to take a symbol BAZ and get the local variable value. We don't have access to the local variable bindings and their values using symbols. That's a part of how lexical binding of local variables work in Common Lisp. This leads for example to the observation, that in compiled code with no debugging information recorded, the symbol BAZ is gone. It can be a register in your processor or implemented some other way. The symbol FOO is still there, because we use it as a global variable. So: A symbol is a data type, a data structure in Lisp. A variable is a conceptual thing. Global variables are based on symbols. Local lexical variables not. In source code we write all kinds of names for functions, classes and variables using symbols. There is some conceptual overlap:
In the above SOURCE code, defun, foo, bar, setq and baz are all symbols. DEFUN is a symbol providing a macro. FOO is a symbol providing a function. SETQ is a symbol providing a special operator. BAZ is a symbol used as data. Thus the quote before BAZ. BAR is a variable. In compiled code its symbol is no longer needed. | |||
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Quoting from the Common Lisp HyperSpec:
Explanation time. What Lisp calls symbols is fairly close to what many languages call variables. In a first approximation, symbols have values; when you evaluate the expression A feature of Lisp that most languages don't have is that symbols are ordinary objects (symbols are first-class objects, in programming language terminology). When you write Conceptually speaking, there is an environment which is an association table from symbols to values. Evaluating a symbol means looking it up in the current environment. (Environments are first-class objects too, but this is beyond the scope of this answer.) A binding refers to a particular entry in an environment. However, there's an additional complication. Most Lisp dialects have multiple namespaces, at least a namespace of variables and a namespace of functions. An environment can in fact contain multiple entries for one symbol, one entry for each namespace. A variable, strictly speaking, is an entry in an environment in the namespace of variables. In everyday Lisp terminology, a symbol is often referred to as a variable when its binding as a variable is what you're interested in. For example, in On the other hand, in In most cases, when a symbol appears unquoted in an expression, it is evaluated by looking up its variable binding. The main exception is that in a function call | |||
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A symbol is a name for a thing. A variable is a mutable pointer to a mutable storage location. In the code snippet you showed, both But the name of the thing is not the thing itself. The symbol Example: the symbol | |||
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Lisp uses environments which are similar to maps (key -> value) but with extra built-in mechanisms for chaining environments and controlling bindings. Now, symbols are pretty much, keys (except special form symbols), and point to a value, | |||
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A symbol is a Lisp data object. A Lisp "form" means a Lisp object that is intended to be evaluated. When a symbol itself is used as a Lisp form, i.e. when you evaluate a symbol, the result is a value that is associated with that symbol. The way values are associated with symbols is a deep part of the Lisp langauge. Whether the symbol has been declared to be "special" or not greatly changes the way evaluation works. Lexical values are denoted by symbols, but you can't manipulate those symbols as objects yourself. In my opinion, explaining anything in Lisp in terms of "pointers" or "locations" is not the best way. | |||
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Symbol and variable are 2 different things. Like in mathematic symbol is a value. And variable have the same meaning than in mathematic. But your confusion came from the fact that symbol are the meta representation of a variable. That is if you do
You just define a variable a. Incidentally the way common lisp store it is throw the structure of a symbol. In common lips symbol is a structure withe different property. Each one can be access with function like In the case of variable you can access his value via s
This is not the common case of getting the value of a.
Note that symbols are self evaluating that mean that if you ask a symbol you get the symbol not the
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Adding a side note to the above answers: Newcomers to Lisp often are not sure exactly what symbols are for, besides being the names of variables. I think the best answer is that they are like enumeration constants, except that you don't have to declare them before using them. Of course, as others have explained, they are also objects. (This shouldn't seem strange to users of Java, in which enumeration constants are objects too.) | |||
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