Where your code contains a macro, you can step the macro expansion or simply step the macro form as-is.
When the Stepper reaches code for which the source contains an unexpanded macro form, by default it offers you the option of macro expanding that form.
To see this, follow the example in Standalone use of the stepper and when your reach my-function
choose
Stepper > Step Through Call
or click
in the Stepper toolbar.
The source code for my-function
is shown in the source area of the Stepper. Choose
Stepper > Step
or click
in the Stepper toolbar.
Click Yes on the dialog asking "Expand MY-MACRO form?". The macro expansion replaces the macro form:
Figure 25.8 Stepping a macro expansion
To macroexpand a macro form before reaching it in the Stepper, position the cursor at the start of the macro form and choose the menu command Stepper > Macroexpand or click in the Stepper toolbar. You can only this when the Stepper has already stepped the function.
Sometimes it is useful to expand macros in outer forms, to allow the more detailed stepping of their expansions. For example, for a definition such as
(defstruct foo (x (print 10)) y)
(make-foo)
expanding the defstruct
form allows you to step more of the constructor.
To collapse a macro expansion in the Stepper, position the cursor at the start of the macro expansion and choose the menu command Stepper > Undo Macroexpand or click in the Stepper toolbar.
You can alter the way the Stepper handles macro forms on a per-symbol or per-package basis. For instance, you can specify that the Stepper always expands your macros automatically, without prompting. For details, see Operator preferences.
LispWorks IDE User Guide (Macintosh version) - 13 Sep 2017