Backquote constructs allow you to quote a list, but
selectively evaluate elements of that list. In the simplest case, it
is identical to the special form
quote
(described in the previous section; see Quoting).
For example, these two forms yield identical results:
`(a list of (+ 2 3) elements) ⇒ (a list of (+ 2 3) elements)
'(a list of (+ 2 3) elements) ⇒ (a list of (+ 2 3) elements)
The special marker ‘,’ inside of the argument to backquote indicates a value that isn’t constant. The Emacs Lisp evaluator evaluates the argument of ‘,’, and puts the value in the list structure:
`(a list of ,(+ 2 3) elements) ⇒ (a list of 5 elements)
Substitution with ‘,’ is allowed at deeper levels of the list structure also. For example:
`(1 2 (3 ,(+ 4 5))) ⇒ (1 2 (3 9))
You can also splice an evaluated value into the resulting list, using the special marker ‘,@’. The elements of the spliced list become elements at the same level as the other elements of the resulting list. The equivalent code without using ‘`’ is often unreadable. Here are some examples:
(setq some-list '(2 3)) ⇒ (2 3)
(cons 1 (append some-list '(4) some-list)) ⇒ (1 2 3 4 2 3)
`(1 ,@some-list 4 ,@some-list) ⇒ (1 2 3 4 2 3)
(setq list '(hack foo bar)) ⇒ (hack foo bar)
(cons 'use (cons 'the (cons 'words (append (cdr list) '(as elements))))) ⇒ (use the words foo bar as elements)
`(use the words ,@(cdr list) as elements) ⇒ (use the words foo bar as elements)
If a subexpression of a backquote construct has no substitutions or
splices, it acts like quote
in that it yields conses,
vectors and strings that might be shared and should not be modified.
See Self-Evaluating Forms.