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From: Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com>
To: drain <aeuster@gmail.com>, Help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org
Subject: RE: completing-read
Date: Wed, 28 May 2014 11:16:17 -0700 (PDT)	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <926e8399-5b2b-4a32-8131-0bcda2776f86@default> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1401299088212-323117.post@n5.nabble.com>

> I'm curious what the numbers passed to the completing-read function are
> used for. Here is the example I found online:
> 
> (completing-read
>  "Complete a foo: "
>  '(("foobar1" 1) ("barfoo" 2) ("foobaz" 3) ("foobar2" 4))
>  nil t "fo")
> 
> This function appears to work fine without the 1, 2, 3, 4.

You would probably need to look at the context of the example
you cite, to see why they used an alist or that particular alist.

As to whether it is *necessary* to use an alist: no.

1. If by "without the 1,2,3,4" you mean (("foobar1") ("barfoo)...)
then yes.  That has always worked just as well.

2. If you instead mean ("foobar1" "barfoo"...) then yes, that
works just as well also.  However, in older versions of Emacs
the second arg, if a list, had to be a proper alist.  You could
not pass just a list of strings.

3. The real point behind having an alist argument is that the
arg *can* be an alist.  There are lots of ready-to-hand alists
in Emacs.  You can pass an alist as arg directly, without first
mapping over it to get its cars.



  reply	other threads:[~2014-05-28 18:16 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2014-05-28 17:44 completing-read drain
2014-05-28 18:16 ` Drew Adams [this message]
2014-05-29  1:54 ` completing-read lee
2014-05-29  2:17   ` completing-read Drew Adams
2014-05-30  5:12     ` completing-read drain
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2007-02-19 16:53 completing-read John J Foerch
2007-02-19 17:46 ` completing-read Drew Adams

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