intern
string &optional package ⇒ symbol, status
string | a string. |
package | a package designator.
The default is the current package. |
symbol | a symbol. |
status | one of :inherited , :external , :internal , or nil.
|
intern enters a symbol named string into package.
If a symbol whose name is the same as string
is already accessible in package, it is returned.
If no such symbol is accessible in package,
a new symbol with the given name is created
and entered into package as an internal symbol,
or as an external symbol if the package is the KEYWORD
package;
package becomes the home package of the created symbol.
The first value returned by intern, symbol, is the symbol that was found or created. The meaning of the secondary value, status, is as follows:
:internal
The symbol was found and is present in package as an internal symbol.
:external
The symbol was found and is present as an external symbol.
:inherited
The symbol was found and is inherited via use-package (which implies that the symbol is internal).
No pre-existing symbol was found, so one was created.
It is implementation-dependent whether the string that becomes the new symbol’s name is the given string or a copy of it. Once a string has been given as the string argument to intern in this situation where a new symbol is created, the consequences are undefined if a subsequent attempt is made to alter that string.
(in-package "COMMON-LISP-USER") ⇒ #<PACKAGE "COMMON-LISP-USER">
(intern "Never-Before") ⇒ |Never-Before|, NIL
(intern "Never-Before") ⇒ |Never-Before|, :INTERNAL
(intern "NEVER-BEFORE" "KEYWORD") ⇒ :NEVER-BEFORE, NIL
(intern "NEVER-BEFORE" "KEYWORD") ⇒ :NEVER-BEFORE, :EXTERNAL
find-symbol, ‘read; read-preserving-whitespace’, symbol, unintern, Symbols as Tokens
intern does not need to do any name conflict checking because it never creates a new symbol if there is already an accessible symbol with the name given.