Common Lisp the Language, 2nd Edition


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25.1.2. Compiled Functions

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X3J13 voted in June 1989 (COMPILED-FUNCTION-REQUIREMENTS)   to impose certain requirements on the functions produced by the compilation process.

If a function is of type compiled-function, then all macro calls appearing lexically within the function have already been expanded and will not be expanded again when the function is called. The process of compilation effectively turns every macrolet or symbol-macrolet construct into a progn (or a locally) with all instances of the local macros in the body fully expanded.

If a function is of type compiled-function, then all load-time-value forms appearing lexically within the function have already been pre-evaluated and will not be evaluated again when the function is called.

Implementations are free to classify every function as a compiled-function provided that all functions satisfy the preceding requirements. Conversely, it is permissible for a function that is not a compiled-function to satisfy the preceding requirements.

If one or more functions are defined in a file that is compiled with compile-file and the compiled file is subsequently loaded by the function load, the resulting loaded function definitions must be of type compiled-function.

The function compile must produce an object of type compiled-function as the value that is either returned or stored into the symbol-function of a symbol argument.

Note that none of these restrictions addresses questions of the compilation technology or target instruction set. For example, a compiled function does not necessarily consist of native machine instructions. These requirements merely specify the behavior of the type system with respect to certain actions taken by compile, compile-file, and load.
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