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Re: Interesting problem: eval-after-load and local variables
From: |
Michael Heerdegen |
Subject: |
Re: Interesting problem: eval-after-load and local variables |
Date: |
Thu, 18 Oct 2012 06:09:10 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.2.50 (gnu/linux) |
"Sebastien Vauban" <wxhgmqzgwmuf@spammotel.com> writes:
> > Actually, I think the file local variables are applied and then
> > overridden by
> > the eval-after-load form (but only for the first file that you save).
>
> Your explanation must be right. But my question was more general, in
> the sense: is this the behavior one would expect? Or *should local
> vars triumph over the setq done in the eval-after-load?*
This is absolutely what one would expect. Whenever a variable x has a
buffer local binding in a buffer b, and you eval (setq x foo) while b is
current, this _always_ sets the local binding of x in b.
`eval-after-load' isn't special here in any regard. It's just the fact
that you let it eval a setq form with a current buffer that has already
local bindings.
So, setq is the wrong function for you to use in such a context. If you
want to set the default value of a variable, _always_ use setq-default
when the variable may already have local bindings in effect.
> > or use setq-default in the eval-after-load form as suggested by Michael.
>
> Can I use setq-default with whichever var? I guess not. But am I right?
Of course you can. `setq' and `setq-default' both accept any symbol.
The difference is just that
- setq sets the default value if no buffer local binding is currently
in effect, else, it sets the local binding
- setq-default always sets the default binding
In addition, there is a special case of variables that are automatically
buffer-local when they are set in any fashion.
You should really read the chapters Variables > Buffer-Local Variables
and > File Local Variables in the Elisp manual. It describes it much
better.
Michael.