'foo
evaluates to the symbol FOO.
#'foo
evaluates to the function bound to the name FOO.
In Lisp a symbol can be called as a function when the symbol FOO has a function binding. Here CAR is a symbol that has a function binding.
But this does not work:
(flet ((foo (a) (+ a 42)))
(mapcar 'foo '(1 2 3 4 5)))
That's because FOO as a symbol does not access the local lexical function and the Lisp system will complain when foo
is not a function defined elsewhere.
We need to write:
(flet ((foo (a) (+ a 42)))
(mapcar #'foo '(1 2 3 4 5)))
Here the (function foo) or its shorthand notation #'foo refers to the lexical local function FOO.
Note also that in
(funcall #'foo ...)
vs.
(funcall 'foo ...)
The later might do one more indirection, since it needs to lookup the function from the symbol, while #'foo denotes the function directly.
Summary:
If a symbol has a function binding, calling a function through the symbol works.