📚 node [[20210708160418 macros]]

Macros are a feature in certain programming languagesthat allow for editing source code at compile or runtime. Similar to functions, macros are a means of code reuse, but rather than rewrite functionality they rewrite code.

Macros first appeared, to my knowledge, in Lisp

In Lisp (specifically Emacs Lisp, a macro looks like this:

(defmacro ++ (var)
  "Incrementing operator like in C."
  (list 'setq var (list '+ 1 var)))

(let ((my-var 1))
  (++ my-var))

2

The above, at runtime, is expanded in the following manner:

(macroexpand '(++ foo))

Consider also the following example in Rust

macro_rules! inc {
    ($name:ident) => {
        $name = $name + 1
    }
}

fn main () {
    let mut foo = 1;
    inc!(foo); // macros in rust end with exclamation points
    println!("foo: {}", foo); // println is also a macro
    // => 2
}

Macros allow for programming language extension

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