dde-execute-command* service topic command arg-list &key errorp connect-error-p new-conversation-p => result
A string or symbol.
A string or symbol.
A string or symbol.
A list of strings, integers, and floats.
A boolean.
A boolean.
The function dde-execute-command*
is similar to dde-execute-command, and sends a command string to the server specified by service on a topic given by topic . The command string consists of command and arg-list , which are combined using the appropriate argument-marshalling conventions. By default, the syntax is
[command(arg1,arg2,...)]
If server names a client service registered with define-dde-client
, the registered service name is used as the DDE service name. If server is any other symbol, the print name of the symbol is used as the DDE service name. If server is a string, that string is used as the DDE service name.
The topic argument specifies the DDE topic name to be used in the conversation. If it is a symbol, the symbol's print name is used. If it is a string, the string is used.
If necessary, the function dde-execute-command*
creates a conversation for the duration of the transaction, but if a suitable conversation already exists, the transaction is executed over that conversation. Hence, if several transactions will be made with the same service and topic , placing them inside a with-dde-conversation prevents a new conversation being established for each transaction.
If new-conversation-p is set to t
a new conversation is always established for the transaction. This new conversation is always automatically disconnected when the transaction is completed.
If connect-error-p is t
(the default value) and a conversation cannot be established, then LispWorks signals an error. If it is nil
, dde-execute-command*
returns nil
if a conversation cannot be established. This allows the caller to distinguish between the cases when the server is not running, and when the server is running but the transaction fails.
Upon success, this function returns a result of t
. On failure, the behavior depends on the value of the errorp argument. If errorp is t
(the default value), LispWorks signals an error. If it is nil
, the function returns nil
to indicate failure.