Eli, Thanks for the reply. I can see where you're going with the word 'converse'. I'm not hung up on it but I think it could use a little clarification on what we mean by "opposite of 'when'". If you decide the manual warrants a tweak and you want me to take a crack at it, let me know. Otherwise, I appreciate your time. Cheers, Ryan Hodges On Wed, Nov 15, 2023 at 11:33 AM Eli Zaretskii wrote: > [Please use Reply All to reply, so that everyone is CC'ed.] > > > From: Ryan Hodges > > Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 09:58:11 -0800 > > > > On Wed, Nov 15, 2023 at 4:18 AM Eli Zaretskii wrote: > > > > > From: Ryan Hodges > > > Date: Tue, 14 Nov 2023 15:14:53 -0800 > > > > > > In section '8.2.2 Lisp macro' it says, > > > > > > "The ‘kill-region’ function definition also has an ‘unless’ macro; it > > > is the converse of ‘when’. The ‘unless’ macro is an ‘if’ without a > then clause" > > > > > > Instead of saying "converse of 'when'" it should say "inverse of > > > 'when'." > > > > I'm not a native English speaker, but "converse" sounds correct to me > > in this context. > > > > 'converse' means to reverse the order of. > > Not necessarily, at least not according to the dictionaries I see. For > example > (https://www.collinsdictionary.com/us/dictionary/english/converse): > > The converse of a statement is its opposite or reverse. > > Or (https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/converse): > > the opposite: > . In the US, you drive on the right-hand side of the road, but in the > UK the converse applies. > . However, the converse of this theory may also be true. > > > No, it says it doesn't have "then", i.e. it only have the "else" part. > > Which sounds fine to me. > > > > Earlier in the document, 'when' is described as an 'if' statement > without an 'else' clause. That makes > > sense to me. The 'else' clause is completely optional. i.e the 'if' > form below does not have an 'else' > > > > (if (> 5 4) 'true) > > > > In this section of the document we are describing an 'if' without a > 'then'. That didn't make sense to me > > because the 'then' clause is a mandatory argument. It can be 'nil' but > it's still mandatory. > > AFAIU, the text attempts to explain 'when' and 'unless' in terms if > 'if', and it doesn't try to be rigorously correct, but rather to be > intuitively understandable by people who may not be programmers or > have a mathematical background. So "if without then" might not make > sense to someone who has the "if" syntax burnt into his/her muscle > memory, but it does make sense if you consider that "if" has a "then" > block and an "else" block, and "unless" executes the "else" block of > the condition. > > So this is why I asked Richard to review this text and your comments. >