I think the most efficient way is to use 'cpp' of gcc to do the pre-processer, or you have to try eval-when, please read the manual for it.
Nala Ginrut <nalaginrut@gmail.com> wrote:
>> I would like to program for Guile as the lowest denominator.
>>
>> What is the proper check I should define that would tell me whether
>I'm currently interpreting the code in Guile, or Emacs, or Crisp.
>>
>
>If you just want to check whether a symbol was defined, try:
>(module-defined? (current-module) 'function-lambda-expression)
Hi:
Thanks for the tip.
What I'm trying to do: I have a host of kx-... functions which I want to call from any interpreter with the same syntax, i.e. let's say for instance (kx-file-open "funny-file.txt")
Now, within the kx-file-open I need to find out whether I'm in guile or clisp or emacs, via a function call, let's say kx-interpreter.
This function should return let's say 0 for guile, 1 for clisp and 2 for emacs. Based on this, the file open function will use the appropriate lisp syntax for opening the file.
Now I'm wondering what the most effective / fastest way is to find out not whether a symbol is defined, but basically the answer to the self-awareness question: am I in guile, or am I in emacs...
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