I am banging my head against the wall trying to understand some Clojure macros which use unquote-splice, and I can't seem to find out any clear expanation of whay they are needed. Can anyone explain it to me in dummy terms?
1 Answer
I'm no expert on Clojure, but since it's basically a Lisp, things should be like that unquote-splice is unquote which merges the list to the position where it's used. Difference looks like this:
`(1 2 ~(list 3 4)) => (1 2 (3 4))
`(1 2 ~@(list 3 4)) => (1 2 3 4)
` == syntax-quote
~ == unquote
~@ == unquote-splice
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2
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4@Zubair: yep. Also note, that in CLojure
~
(tilde) is used instead of,
(comma).– ffriendDec 31, 2010 at 16:39 -
1@ffriend: `(As someone who likes ,(nth (random 2) '(many some)) of the changes in Closure I'm surprised by their using
~
(tilde) over the traditional,
(comma) — any idea why it was changed?) Sep 29, 2011 at 17:26 -
6@Baldur: there may be 2 possible reasons. First, comma may be considered as not descriptive and confusing - quote does exactly the same thing it does in natural language - quotes symbol (marks denotation, in linguistic terms), but comma does very different thing from what it means in the language. So it makes sense to change it to something else. Second, more weighty reason, is that for readability purposes Clojure allows using commas instead of whitespaces where it makes sense and thus cannot be used as a shortcut for
eval
.– ffriendSep 29, 2011 at 18:33