The global value of a variable with buffer-local bindings is also called the default value, because it is the value that is in effect whenever neither the current buffer nor the selected frame has its own binding for the variable.
The functions default-value
and setq-default
access and
change a variable’s default value regardless of whether the current
buffer has a buffer-local binding. For example, you could use
setq-default
to change the default setting of
paragraph-start
for most buffers; and this would work even when
you are in a C or Lisp mode buffer that has a buffer-local value for
this variable.
The special forms defvar
and defconst
also set the
default value (if they set the variable at all), rather than any
buffer-local value.
This function returns symbol’s default value. This is the value
that is seen in buffers and frames that do not have their own values for
this variable. If symbol is not buffer-local, this is equivalent
to symbol-value
(see Accessing Variable Values).
The function default-boundp
tells you whether symbol’s
default value is nonvoid. If (default-boundp 'foo)
returns
nil
, then (default-value 'foo)
would get an error.
default-boundp
is to default-value
as boundp
is to
symbol-value
.
This special form gives each symbol a new default value, which is
the result of evaluating the corresponding form. It does not
evaluate symbol, but does evaluate form. The value of the
setq-default
form is the value of the last form.
If a symbol is not buffer-local for the current buffer, and is not
marked automatically buffer-local, setq-default
has the same
effect as setq
. If symbol is buffer-local for the current
buffer, then this changes the value that other buffers will see (as long
as they don’t have a buffer-local value), but not the value that the
current buffer sees.
;; In buffer ‘foo’:
(make-local-variable 'buffer-local)
⇒ buffer-local
(setq buffer-local 'value-in-foo) ⇒ value-in-foo
(setq-default buffer-local 'new-default) ⇒ new-default
buffer-local ⇒ value-in-foo
(default-value 'buffer-local) ⇒ new-default
;; In (the new) buffer ‘bar’:
buffer-local
⇒ new-default
(default-value 'buffer-local) ⇒ new-default
(setq buffer-local 'another-default) ⇒ another-default
(default-value 'buffer-local) ⇒ another-default
;; Back in buffer ‘foo’:
buffer-local
⇒ value-in-foo
(default-value 'buffer-local)
⇒ another-default
This function is like setq-default
, except that symbol is
an ordinary evaluated argument.
(set-default (car '(a b c)) 23) ⇒ 23
(default-value 'a) ⇒ 23
A variable can be let-bound (see Local Variables) to a value.
This makes its global value shadowed by the binding;
default-value
will then return the value from that binding, not
the global value, and set-default
will be prevented from
setting the global value (it will change the let-bound value instead).
The following two functions allow to reference the global value even
if it’s shadowed by a let-binding.
This function returns the top-level default value of symbol, which is its value outside of any let-binding.
(defvar variable 'global-value) ⇒ variable
(let ((variable 'let-binding)) (default-value 'variable)) ⇒ let-binding
(let ((variable 'let-binding)) (default-toplevel-value 'variable)) ⇒ global-value
This function sets the top-level default value of symbol to the specified value. This comes in handy when you want to set the global value of symbol regardless of whether your code runs in the context of symbol’s let-binding.