Книга: Learning GNU Emacs, 3rd Edition

9.8.4 Lisp Mode Differences

9.8.4 Lisp Mode Differences

Lisp mode (as opposed to Emacs Lisp mode) is meant for use with Lisp processors other than the Emacs Lisp interpreter. Therefore it includes a couple of commands for interfacing to an external Lisp interpreter. The Lisp mode command C-c C-z(run-lisp) starts up your system's Lisp interpreter as a subprocess and creates the *lisp* buffer (with an associated window) for input and output.[69] If a Lisp subprocess already exists, C-c C-z uses it rather than creating a second one. You can send function definitions to the Lisp subprocess by putting the cursor anywhere within a function's definition and using C-M-x, which in this case stands for lisp-send-defun. This procedure causes the functions you define to become known to the Lisp interpreter so that you can invoke them later.

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