vote up 4 vote down star

I wrote the following function

(defun test ()
  (let ((str1 "foo") (str2 "bar"))
    (loop for s in '(str1 str2) do (message s))))

but it does not work. The elisp Backtrace message is "Debugger entered--Lisp error: (wrong-type-argument stringp str1)"

How can I make it work?

P.S.: the following modified version works perfectly, but I need the original version

(defun test1 ()
  (loop for s in '("asdf" "fdsa") do (message s)))
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3 Answers

vote up 11 vote down check

The quote operator (for which the apostrophe is syntactic sugar) means that its arguments are not evaluated, i.e. (quote (str1 str2)) returns a list of two symbols. Use list instead: (list str1 str2).

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vote up 3 vote down

Build a list of the values:

(defun test ()
  (let ((str1 "foo") (str2 "bar"))
    (loop for s in (list str1 str2) do (message s))))
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vote up 1 vote down

try:

`(,str1 ,str2)
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A bit complex -- a simeple (list str1 str2) would do as well – HD Jan 28 at 14:50

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