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Posted

I have been experimenting with generating variables through code rather than defining them manually. The problem is that when the program creates them, they are defined as global variables. Is there a way to generate them as local variables instead?

 

Below is the sample code that I wrote for testing it.

 

;ListToVariables creates variables named testvar0, testvar1, testvar2, etc.
;Each newly created variable contains the contents of the correlated slot from testlist.
(defun c:test ( / testlist )
(setq testlist (list "aaa" "bbb" "ccc" "ddd" "eee"))
(ListToVariables testlist)
)

(defun ListToVariables ( listname / i )
(setq i 0)
(repeat (length listname)
	(set (read (strcat "testvar" (rtos i 2 0))) (nth i listname))
	(setq i (1+ i))
)
(princ)
)

Posted

You can but it is a RPIA

 

Your best bet is to use a standard name convention for these types that will be used for that session only

 

I use a prefix of gv_ for variable that are global and set for reuse and tv_ for temp variables

 

-David

Posted
You can but it is a RPIA

 

Your best bet is to use a standard name convention for these types that will be used for that session only

 

I use a prefix of gv_ for variable that are global and set for reuse and tv_ for temp variables

 

-David

 

That makes sense, and it sounds like the route I might have to go. Out of curiosity, I'm still interested to see how generated local variables could be done though. If anybody has any examples, or a link to any sort of documentation describing it, I'd love to check it out. The only way I can think of right now is to write it as an intermediate program that writes its own function which declares the variables locally.

Posted

Maybe...

 

; (ListToVariables "hello" '(44 55 88))
(defun ListToVariables ( pref L / varnm i r )
 (setq i 0)
 (foreach x L
   (set (read (setq varnm (strcat pref (itoa (setq i (1+ i)))))) x)
   (setq r (cons varnm r))
 )
 (reverse r)
)

 

(ListToVariables "hello" '(44 55 88)) >> ("hello1" "hello2" "hello3")
hello1 >> 44
hello2 >> 55
hello3 >> 88
hello4 >> nil

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