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Besides a while
loop, you can work on each of a list of files with
recursion. A recursive version of lengths-list-many-files
is short
and simple.
The recursive function has the usual parts: the do-again-test, the
next-step-expression, and the recursive call. The do-again-test determines
whether the function should call itself again, which it will do if the
list-of-files
contains any remaining elements; the
next-step-expression resets the list-of-files
to the CDR of
itself, so eventually the list will be empty; and the recursive call calls
itself on the shorter list. The complete function is shorter than this
description!
(defun recursive-lengths-list-many-files (list-of-files)
"Return list of lengths of each defun in LIST-OF-FILES."
(if list-of-files ; do-again-test
(append
(lengths-list-file
(expand-file-name (car list-of-files)))
(recursive-lengths-list-many-files
(cdr list-of-files)))))
In a sentence, the function returns the lengths’ list for the first of the
list-of-files
appended to the result of calling itself on the rest of
the list-of-files
.
Here is a test of recursive-lengths-list-many-files
, along with the
results of running lengths-list-file
on each of the files
individually.
Install recursive-lengths-list-many-files
and
lengths-list-file
, if necessary, and then evaluate the following
expressions. You may need to change the files’ pathnames; those here work
when this Info file and the Emacs sources are located in their customary
places. To change the expressions, copy them to the *scratch*
buffer, edit them, and then evaluate them.
The results are shown after the ‘⇒’. (These results are for files from Emacs version 22.1.1; files from other versions of Emacs may produce different results.)
(cd "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/") (lengths-list-file "./lisp/macros.el") ⇒ (283 263 480 90)
(lengths-list-file "./lisp/mail/mailalias.el") ⇒ (38 32 29 95 178 180 321 218 324)
(lengths-list-file "./lisp/makesum.el") ⇒ (85 181)
(recursive-lengths-list-many-files '("./lisp/macros.el" "./lisp/mail/mailalias.el" "./lisp/makesum.el")) ⇒ (283 263 480 90 38 32 29 95 178 180 321 218 324 85 181)
The recursive-lengths-list-many-files
function produces the output we
want.
The next step is to prepare the data in the list for display in a graph.
Next: Prepare the data, Previous: Several files, Up: Words in a defun [Contents][Index]