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nil.
nil, then newline characters in strings
are printed as `\n' and formfeeds are printed as `\f'.
Normally these characters are printed as actual newlines and formfeeds.
This variable affects the print functions prin1 and print
that print with quoting. It does not affect princ. Here is an
example using prin1:
(prin1 "a\nb")
-| "a
-| b"
=> "a
b"
(let ((print-escape-newlines t))
(prin1 "a\nb"))
-| "a\nb"
=> "a
b"
|
In the second expression, the local binding of
print-escape-newlines is in effect during the call to
prin1, but not during the printing of the result.
nil, then unibyte non-ASCII
characters in strings are unconditionally printed as backslash sequences
by the print functions prin1 and print that print with
quoting.
Those functions also use backslash sequences for unibyte non-ASCII characters, regardless of the value of this variable, when the output stream is a multibyte buffer or a marker pointing into one.
nil, then multibyte non-ASCII
characters in strings are unconditionally printed as backslash sequences
by the print functions prin1 and print that print with
quoting.
Those functions also use backslash sequences for multibyte non-ASCII characters, regardless of the value of this variable, when the output stream is a unibyte buffer or a marker pointing into one.
If the value is nil (the default), then there is no limit.
(setq print-length 2)
=> 2
(print '(1 2 3 4 5))
-| (1 2 ...)
=> (1 2 ...)
|
nil (which is the default) means no limit.
These variables are used for detecting and reporting circular and shared structure--but they are only defined in Emacs 21.
nil, this variable enables detection of circular
and shared structure in printing.
nil, this variable enables detection of uninterned symbols
(see section 8.3 Creating and Interning Symbols) in printing. When this is enabled,
uninterned symbols print with the prefix `#:', which tells the Lisp
reader to produce an uninterned symbol.
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