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remove-advice

Function
Summary

Remove a piece of advice.

Package

lispworks

Signature
remove-advice dspec
 name
 => nil
dspec ::= fn-nam
e |
          macro-name
 |
          (method
 generic-fn-name
  [(class
*)]) 
Arguments

dspec

Specifies the functional definition to which the piece of advice belongs. The specification contains the name of the associated function. In the case of a method the list of classes is used to identify from which particular method the advice should come. This list must correspond exactly with the classes corresponding to the specialized parameters for some method belonging to the generic function.

name

A symbol naming the piece of advice to be removed. Since several pieces of advice may be attached to a single functional definition, the name is necessary to indicate which one is to be removed.

Values

remove-advice returns nil .

Description

remove-advice is the function used to remove a piece of advice. Advice is a way of altering the behavior of functions. Pieces of advice are associated with a function using defadvice . They define additional actions to be performed when the function is invoked, or alternative code to be performed instead of the function, which may or may not access the original definition. As well as being attached to ordinary functions, advice may be attached to methods and to macros (in this case it is in fact associated with the macro's expansion function).

hcl:delete-advice is a macro, identical in effect to remove-advice , except that you do not need to quote the arguments.

Notes

remove-advice is an extension to Common Lisp.

See also

defadvice
delete-advice


LispWorks Reference Manual - 12 Mar 2008

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