Node:Optional Arguments, Next:beginning-of-buffer opt arg, Previous:beginning-of-buffer, Up:beginning-of-buffer
Unless told otherwise, Lisp expects that a function with an argument in
its function definition will be called with a value for that argument.
If that does not happen, you get an error and a message that says
Wrong number of arguments.
However, optional arguments are a feature of Lisp: a keyword may
be used to tell the Lisp interpreter that an argument is optional.
The keyword is &optional. (The & in front of
optional is part of the keyword.) In a function definition, if
an argument follows the keyword &optional, a value does not
need to be passed to that argument when the function is called.
The first line of the function definition of beginning-of-buffer
therefore looks like this:
(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
In outline, the whole function looks like this:
(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
"documentation..."
(interactive "P")
(push-mark)
(goto-char
(if-there-is-an-argument
figure-out-where-to-go
else-go-to
(point-min))))
The function is similar to the simplified-beginning-of-buffer
function except that the interactive expression has "P"
as an argument and the goto-char function is followed by an
if-then-else expression that figures out where to put the cursor if
there is an argument.
The "P" in the interactive expression tells Emacs to pass
a prefix argument, if there is one, to the function. A prefix argument
is made by typing the <META> key followed by a number, or by typing
C-u and then a number (if you don't type a number, C-u
defaults to 4).
The true-or-false-test of the if expression is simple: it is
simply the argument arg. If arg has a value that is not
nil, which will be the case if beginning-of-buffer is
called with an argument, then this true-or-false-test will return true
and the then-part of the if expression will be evaluated. On the
other hand, if beginning-of-buffer is not called with an
argument, the value of arg will be nil and the else-part
of the if expression will be evaluated. The else-part is simply
point-min, and when this is the outcome, the whole
goto-char expression is (goto-char (point-min)), which is
how we saw the beginning-of-buffer function in its simplified
form.