It is almost impossible to google, hence my understanding is limited to contextual clues from reading through the slime source code: perhaps it is part of the object system in common lisp? Something like 'self'?

snippet:

(cond #+#.(swank-backend::sbcl-with-new-stepper-p)

Perhaps this will make it more googleable : pound plus pound // hash plus hash symbol // octothorp plus octothorp

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Nice Googleability addition. People should always do that. – Rafe Kettler Apr 26 '11 at 4:00
Wow, never knew it was called an octothorp. – Andrew Apr 26 '11 at 4:08
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3 Answers

That's pretty rare to see.

#+clim clim:+red+ #-clim mygraphics:+red+

above means that the reader returns either red symbol and it depends whether there is a symbol with the name CLIM is on the list of features *features*. That's a built-in mechanism in Common Lisp.

#.(cl:if (cl:zerop (cl:random 2)) :high :low)

Above also is a mechanism of the reader. It allows to do computations at read time. Which btw. is a security problem and in Lisp applications it should be disabled - see the variable *read-eval* for controlling this. At read time the reader using READ will return either :HIGH or :LOW, randomly.

The combination #+#.(FOO) BAR means that the function foo returns a symbol at read time and this symbol then is checked by the reader if there is a symbol with this name on the feature list *features* and if that is the case, then the next item in input is read, otherwise the next item is skipped over.

Trivial example, IF always returns :CAPI in this example:

In LispWorks (where CAPI is on the features list):

CL-USER 41 > (read-from-string "#+#.(cl:if cl:t :capi :clim) a b")
A
31

In SBCL

* (read-from-string "#+#.(cl:if cl:t :capi :clim) a b")

B
32
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It's actually Sharpsign Plus followed by Sharpsign Dot.

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They're Common Lisp reader macro characters:

a textual notation introduced by dispatch on one or two characters that defines special-purpose syntax for use by the Lisp reader, and that is implemented by a reader macro function.

Reader macros should not be confused with regular macros - they have nothing to do with each other.

The set-dispatch-macro-character function can be used to extend the Common Lisp syntax with custom reader macros.

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