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From: | Urs Liska |
Subject: | Re: Compile twice with different includes |
Date: | Fri, 15 Feb 2013 13:07:35 +0100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:17.0) Gecko/20130106 Thunderbird/17.0.2 |
Am 15.02.2013 13:01, schrieb Jan-Peter Voigt:
OK, copy&paste lost a paren ... but not in the let-line, but in the end of the whole function.Ah, OK. And since I 'corrected' the non-matching brackets in the line itself, Frescobaldi's syntax highlighting led me to believe everything was alright :-(
Thanks for the explanation, now it works perfectly (hope this statement holds until I try to use it in the real context ...)let opens a new "scope", so you start with a new block: (let ((book #{ ... #}) (something-else 42)) ; paren closes definitions ; now do something inside this scope using the defined vars (ly:process-book book ...) ) ; close let-block
Best Urs
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