Version: 0.2.3
cl-erlang-term is a Common Lisp library for encoding and decoding objects in the Erlang External Term Format.
Use Quicklisp to install cl-erlang-term.
> (ql:quickload :erlang-term)
Optional dependencies:
- FiveAM (unit-tests)
> (ql:quickload :erlang-term-test)
...
> (erlang-term-test:run-all-tests)
[Function]
decode bytes &key start version-tag => erlang-term, position
Decodes the sequence bytes into an Erlang term, starting from position start. If version-tag has an integer value, bytes is expected to begin with a version tag byte of that value.
start defaults to
0
. version-tag defaults to131
.position is the location in bytes where the decoding ended.
[Function]
encode term &key version-tag compressed => bytes
Encodes term into a sequence of bytes. If version-tag has an integer value, bytes will start with a version tag byte of that value. If compressed is true, the encoded term will be zlib-compressed.
version-tag defaults to
131
. compressed defaults to false.
[Function]
binary &rest bytes => binary
Creates a new Erlang binary with the contents of bytes.
[Function]
binary-to-string binary => string
Converts binary to a string.
[Function]
bytes-to-binary bytes => binary
Creates a new Erlang binary with the contents from the byte sequence bytes.
[Function]
make-atom string => atom
Creates a new Erlang atom (a symbol) with the name of string. The symbol is interned in the package designated by
*atom-symbol-package*
.
[Function]
make-pid node id serial creation => pid
Creates a new Erlang pid identified by the values of node, id, serial, and creation.
[Function]
make-port node id creation => port
Creates a new Erlang port identified by the values of node, id, and creation.
[Function]
make-reference node id creation => reference
Creates a new Erlang reference identified by the values of node, id, and creation.
[Function]
string-to-binary string => binary
Creates a new Erlang binary with the contents of string converted to bytes.
[Function]
tuple &rest erlang-translatable-objects => tuple
Creates a new Erlang tuple with erlang-translatable-objects as elements.
[Reader]
bytes binary => byte-vector
Reader method for getting the contents of binary as byte vector.
[Reader]
bits-in-last-byte bit-binary => number-of-bits
Reader method for getting the number of bits in the last byte of bit-binary.
[Reader]
arity fun-or-tuple => arity
Reader method for getting the arity of either an Erlang fun or an Erlang tuple. The arity of a fun is the number of arguments it takes. The arity of a tuple is the number of elements in it.
[Reader]
size binary-or-tuple => size
Reader method for getting the size of either an Erlang binary or an Erlang tuple. The size of a binary is the number of bytes in it. The size of a tuple is the number of elements in it.
[Reader]
elements tuple => vector
Reader method for getting the elements of tuple as a vector.
[Function]
tuple-arity tuple => arity
Function for getting the number of elements in a tuple.
[Function]
tuple-ref tuple pos => element
Function for getting the element in tuple at position pos.
[Reader]
node identifier => node-name
Reader method for getting the node name from identifier, which is an Erlang pid, port, or reference.
[Reader]
module fun => module-name
Reader method for getting the module name from an Erlang fun.
[Generic function]
match-p object-a object-b => boolean
Returns true if object-a and object-b match in the Erlang sense, i.e. they are structurally equivalent. Otherwise returns false.
[Constant variable]
+protocol-version+
The protocol version byte tag used in the Erlang External Term Format.
Value:
131
[Special variable]
*atom-symbol-package*
The package in which atom symbols are interned. Symbols are uninterned if
NIL
.Default value:
:keyword
[Special variable]
*erlang-false-is-lisp-nil*
Treat the Erlang atom
false
as the Lisp symbolNIL
instead of'|false|
.Default value: false
[Special variable]
*erlang-string-is-lisp-string*
Treat Erlang strings as Lisp strings instead of lists of integers.
Default value: false
[Special variable]
*erlang-true-is-lisp-t*
Treat the Erlang atom
true
as the Lisp symbolT
instead of'|true|
.Default value: false
[Special variable]
*lisp-nil-at-tail-is-erlang-empty-list*
Treat the Lisp symbol
NIL
at the tail of a list as the empty list instead of as the Erlang atom'NIL'
.Default value: true
[Special variable]
*lisp-nil-is-erlang-empty-list*
Treat the Lisp symbol
NIL
as the empty list instead of as the Erlang atom'NIL'
.Default value: true
[Special variable]
*lisp-nil-is-erlang-false*
Treat the Lisp symbol
NIL
as the Erlang atomfalse
instead of'NIL'
.Default value: false
[Special variable]
*lisp-string-is-erlang-binary*
Treat Lisp strings as Erlang binaries instead of as lists of integers.
Default value: false
[Special variable]
*lisp-t-is-erlang-true*
Treat the Lisp symbol
T
as the Erlang atomtrue
instead of'T'
.Default value: false
[Type]
erlang-translatable
The base type for all types of objects that may be translated to Erlang terms.
Directly translatable types: integer, float, symbol, string, and list if all elements also are translatable.
Other types of Erlang terms are translated to subtypes of erlang-object.
[Class]
erlang-object
The base class for all Erlang term types that are not directly translatable to Lisp types.
[Class]
erlang-fun (erlang-object)
The base class for the different representations of Erlang funs.
[Class]
erlang-internal-fun (erlang-fun, erlang-object)
The base class for the two different representations of internal Erlang funs.
[Class]
erlang-binary (erlang-object)
Represents an Erlang binary or bit-binary.
[Class]
erlang-external-fun (erlang-fun, erlang-object)
Represents an external Erlang fun:
fun M:F/A
.
[Class]
erlang-new-internal-fun (erlang-internal-fun, erlang-fun, erlang-object)
Represents an internal Erlang fun:
fun F/A
andfun(Arg1,..) -> ... end
.
[Class]
erlang-old-internal-fun (erlang-internal-fun, erlang-fun, erlang-object)
Represents an internal Erlang fun:
fun F/A
andfun(Arg1,..) -> ... end
.
[Class]
erlang-pid (erlang-object)
Represents an Erlang pid.
[Class]
erlang-port (erlang-object)
Represents an Erlang port.
[Class]
erlang-reference (erlang-object)
Represents an Erlang reference.
[Class]
erlang-tuple (erlang-object)
Represents an Erlang tuple.