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bug#64960: Documentation for copy-sequence


From: uzibalqa
Subject: bug#64960: Documentation for copy-sequence
Date: Mon, 31 Jul 2023 01:50:17 +0000

------- Original Message -------
On Monday, July 31st, 2023 at 1:36 PM, Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com> wrote:


> > > > A string doesn't share anything because characters are not reference
> > > > values. They are simply copied.
> > > 
> > > Yes and no.
> > > Chars are not shared, but char properties are.
> > > 
> > > (setq foo (propertize "abcd" 'p1 t 'p2 42))
> > > ;; -> #("abcd" 0 4 (p2 42 p1 t))
> > > (setq bar (copy-sequence foo))
> > > ;; -> #("abcd" 0 4 (p1 t p2 42))
> > > (aset foo 1 ?W) ; -> ?W, aka 87
> > > foo ; -> #("aWcd" 0 4 (p2 42 p1 t))
> > > bar ; -> #("abcd" 0 4 (p1 t p2 42))
> > 
> > Ok, meaning that the actual string becomes different, yet changing
> > the a property, changes the property on both foo and bar ?
> 
> 
> No. I didn't change a property. I swapped one
> char for another. The doc says that the arg's
> "elements" are shared. A string's "elements"
> are its chars. But as Yuri pointed out, the
> chars themselves aren't shared, because they
> aren't sharable: they aren't references.

You only changed a character, which is not actually sharable.
But if I go change a property value for foo, I should see the
change also in bar, or not ?
 
> Strings can also have properties. We sometimes
> say that it's the characters that have the
> properties, but really it's that the properties
> are attached to the characters in the string or
> buffer - the properties are associated with
> string or buffer positions. The chars themselves
> don't really have properties. The properties are
> shared when you copy a string; the chars are not.

Meaning that I can make a copy of a string just to have 
the same properties (e.g, colour).
 
> This is really more of a natural-language nuance,
> about what it means for string elements to be
> shared. You can ignore it, if what I'm saying
> just confuses things.

Not too confusing, but required some attention.

Currently I am only interested in the actual characters
in my implementation where properties are not important.

Yet in my permute implementation I have seen that whether
I just use string or (copy-sequence string) does make a huge
difference.  Quite difficult to understand what's going on.





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