Node:Prevent confusion, Next:Parts of let Expression, Previous:let, Up:let
let Prevents ConfusionThe let special form prevents confusion. let creates a
name for a local variable that overshadows any use of the same
name outside the let expression. This is like understanding
that whenever your host refers to `the house', he means his house, not
yours. (Symbols used in argument lists work the same way.
See The defun Special Form.)
Local variables created by a let expression retain their value
only within the let expression itself (and within
expressions called within the let expression); the local
variables have no effect outside the let expression.
Another way to think about let is that it is like a setq
that is temporary and local. The values set by let are
automatically undone when the let is finished. The setting
only effects expressions that are inside the bounds of the let
expression. In computer science jargon, we would say "the binding of
a symbol is visible only in functions called in the let form;
in Emacs Lisp, scoping is dynamic, not lexical."
let can create more than one variable at once. Also,
let gives each variable it creates an initial value, either a
value specified by you, or nil. (In the jargon, this is called
`binding the variable to the value'.) After let has created
and bound the variables, it executes the code in the body of the
let, and returns the value of the last expression in the body,
as the value of the whole let expression. (`Execute' is a jargon
term that means to evaluate a list; it comes from the use of the word
meaning `to give practical effect to' (Oxford English
Dictionary). Since you evaluate an expression to perform an action,
`execute' has evolved as a synonym to `evaluate'.)