I've noticed a trend in my code of repeating the same (with-current-buffer ....
over and over again so I decided to define a macro based off that macro definition of with-current-buffer
- this is what I have so far:
(defmacro with-assembla-buffer(asm-buffer-name heading-str &rest body)
"Create buffer with name of ASM-BUFFER-NAME, or uses it if exists,
preps it with readonly/erase/heading - executes `body' - then puts
readonly back on, goes to beginning of buffer, and switches to it."
(with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create asm-buffer-name)
(assembla-mode)
(toggle-read-only -1)
(erase-buffer)
(insert (format "-- %s --------------------" heading-str))
(newline)
`(progn ,@body)
(toggle-read-only 1)
(goto-char (point-min))
(switch-to-buffer (current-buffer))))
The body of this is never being executed, however when it's switched to defun
instead of defmacro
is does work perfectly. So aside from why is body never executed, my other question is - does this make more sense as a macro than a defun?
C-h f switch-to-buffer
: "WARNING: This is NOT the way to work on another buffer temporarily within a Lisp program! Useset-buffer
instead. That avoids messing with the window-buffer correspondences"