11

When I use some long function names, I used the use form, like this:

(use '[clojure.string :as str])

But I don't know why add a single quote ' to the vector, so I tried to figure out its type:

(type '[clojure.string :as str])
;=> clojure.lang.PersistentVector

Simplified example:

(type ["hello"])
;=> clojure.lang.PersistentVector

(type '["hello"])
;=> clojure.lang.PersistentVector

It seems the single quote doesn't change anything, can anybody explain the usage of it in the use form?

2 Answers 2

15

The intent is to quote the symbols. This way they'll be treated as symbols, and use can take those symbols as naming a namespace to load and pull into the current. You want to avoid the default treatment of a symbol, which is resolving it as the name of a Var and using the value of that Var. You can also do this as

(use ['clojure.string :as 'str])

but that involves some unnecessary typing; quoting the whole vector makes you less likely to forget anything. Particularly if you're doing anything with :only, :refer or similar keyword arguments.

Aside: ns doesn't need this because as a macro it can control evaluation of its arguments - functions like require and use have all their arguments read and evaluated before they themselves run. This is part of the reason why ns is normally preferred over those functions.

4

use is a function, hence the evaluator evaluates its arguments before they are passed (applicative order evaluation).

You don't want [clojure.string :as str] to be evaluated as the evaluator would try to resolve the symbols in it with no success before applying use.

Hence quote (reader shorthand ') is there to prevent their evaluation.

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