Full namespace name:
clojure.repl OverviewUtilities meant to be used interactively at the REPL
Usage: (apropos str-or-pattern)
Given a regular expression or stringable thing, return a seq of all public definitions in all currently-loaded namespaces that match the str-or-pattern.Source
Usage: (demunge fn-name)
Given a string representation of a fn class, as in a stack trace element, returns a readable version.Added in Clojure version 1.3
Usage: (dir nsname)
Prints a sorted directory of public vars in a namespaceSource
Usage: (dir-fn ns)
Returns a sorted seq of symbols naming public vars in a namespace or namespace alias. Looks for aliases in *ns*Source
Usage: (doc name)
Prints documentation for a var or special form given its name, or for a spec if given a keywordAdded in Clojure version 1.0
Usage: (find-doc re-string-or-pattern)
Prints documentation for any var whose documentation or name contains a match for re-string-or-patternAdded in Clojure version 1.0
Usage: (pst) (pst e-or-depth) (pst e depth)
Prints a stack trace of the exception, to the depth requested. If none supplied, uses the root cause of the most recent repl exception (*e), and a depth of 12.Added in Clojure version 1.3
Usage: (root-cause t)
Returns the initial cause of an exception or error by peeling off all of its wrappersAdded in Clojure version 1.3
Usage: (set-break-handler!) (set-break-handler! f)
Register INT signal handler. After calling this, Ctrl-C will cause the given function f to be called with a single argument, the signal. Uses thread-stopper if no function given.Source
Usage: (source n)
Prints the source code for the given symbol, if it can find it. This requires that the symbol resolve to a Var defined in a namespace for which the .clj is in the classpath. Example: (source filter)Source
Usage: (source-fn x)
Returns a string of the source code for the given symbol, if it can find it. This requires that the symbol resolve to a Var defined in a namespace for which the .clj is in the classpath. Returns nil if it can't find the source. For most REPL usage, 'source' is more convenient. Example: (source-fn 'filter)Source
Usage: (stack-element-str el)
Returns a (possibly unmunged) string representation of a StackTraceElementAdded in Clojure version 1.3
Usage: (thread-stopper) (thread-stopper thread)
Returns a function that takes one arg and uses that as an exception message to stop the given thread. Defaults to the current threadSource
Logo & site design by
Tom Hickey.
Clojure auto-documentation system by Tom Faulhaber.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4