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The function compile-file performs compilation of forms in a file following the rules specified in Compilation Semantics, and produces an output file that can be loaded by using load.
Normally, the top level forms appearing in a file compiled with compile-file are evaluated only when the resulting compiled file is loaded, and not when the file is compiled. However, it is typically the case that some forms in the file need to be evaluated at compile time so the remainder of the file can be read and compiled correctly.
The eval-when special form can be used to control whether a top level form is evaluated at compile time, load time, or both. It is possible to specify any of three situations with eval-when, denoted by the symbols :compile-toplevel, :load-toplevel, and :execute. For top level eval-when forms, :compile-toplevel specifies that the compiler must evaluate the body at compile time, and :load-toplevel specifies that the compiler must arrange to evaluate the body at load time. For non-top level eval-when forms, :execute specifies that the body must be executed in the run-time environment.
The behavior of this form can be more precisely understood in terms of a model of how compile-file processes forms in a file to be compiled. There are two processing modes, called “not-compile-time” and “compile-time-too”.
Successive forms are read from the file by compile-file and processed in not-compile-time mode; in this mode, compile-file arranges for forms to be evaluated only at load time and not at compile time. When compile-file is in compile-time-too mode, forms are evaluated both at compile time and load time.
• Processing of Top Level Forms | ||
• Processing of Defining Macros | ||
• Constraints on Macros and Compiler Macros |
Next: Literal Objects in Compiled Files, Previous: Compilation Semantics, Up: Compilation