Provided by: fennel_1.6.0+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       fennel-tutorial - Getting Started with Fennel

DESCRIPTION

       A  programming  language  is made up of syntax and semantics.  The semantics of Fennel vary only in small
       ways from Lua (all noted below).  The syntax of Fennel comes from the lisp family  of  languages.   Lisps
       have  syntax  which is very uniform and predictable, which makes it easier to write code that operates on
       code as well as structured editing.

       If you know Lua and a lisp already, you'll feel right at home in Fennel.  Even if not, Lua is one of  the
       simplest programming languages in existence, so if you've programmed before you should be able to pick it
       up without too much trouble, especially if you've used another dynamically-typed imperative language with
       closures.   The  Lua reference manual is a fine place to look for details, but Fennel's own Lua Primer is
       shorter and covers the highlights.

       If you've already got some Lua example code and you just want to see how it would look in Fennel, you can
       learn a lot from putting it in antifennel.

OK, SO HOW DO YOU DO THINGS?

   Functions and lambdas
       Use fn to make functions.  If you provide an optional name, the function will be bound to  that  name  in
       local scope; otherwise it is simply an anonymous value.

              A   brief   note  on  naming:  identifiers  are  typically  lowercase  separated  by  dashes  (aka
              "kebab-case").  They may contain digits too, as long as they're not at the start.   You  can  also
              use   the   question   mark   (typically   for  functions  that  return  a  true  or  false,  ex.,
              at-max-velocity?).  Underscores (_) are often used to name a variable that we don't plan on using.

       The argument list is provided in square brackets.  The final value in the body is returned.

       (If you've never used a lisp before, the main thing to note is that the function or  macro  being  called
       goes inside the parens, not outside.)

              (fn print-and-add [a b c]
                (print a)
                (+ b c))

       Functions  can  take  an optional docstring in the form of a string that immediately follows the argument
       list.  Under normal compilation, this is removed from the emitted Lua, but during development in the REPL
       the docstring and function usage can be viewed with the ,doc command:

              (fn print-sep [sep ...]
                "Prints args as a string, delimited by sep"
                (print (table.concat [...] sep)))
              ,doc print-sep ; -> outputs:
              ;; (print-sep sep ...)
              ;;   Prints args as a string, delimited by sep

       Like other lisps, Fennel uses semicolons for comments.

       Functions defined with fn are fast; they have no runtime overhead compared to Lua.   However,  they  also
       have  no  arity checking.  (That is, calling a function with the wrong number of arguments does not cause
       an error.)  For safer code you can use lambda which ensures you will get at least as  many  arguments  as
       you define, unless you signify that one may be omitted by beginning its name with a ?:

              (lambda print-calculation [x ?y z]
                (print (- x (* (or ?y 1) z))))

              (print-calculation 5) ; -> error: Missing argument z

       Note that the second argument ?y is allowed to be nil, but z is not:

              (print-calculation 5 nil 3) ; -> 2

       Like fn, lambdas accept an optional docstring after the argument list.

   Locals and variables
       Locals are introduced using let with the names and values wrapped in a single set of square brackets:

              (let [x (+ 89 5.2)
                    f (fn [abc] (print (* 2 abc)))]
                (f x))

       Here  x is bound to the result of adding 89 and 5.2, while f is bound to a function that prints twice its
       argument.  These bindings are only valid inside the body of the let call.   All  values  are  dynamically
       typed.

       You  can  also introduce locals with local, which is nice when they'll be used across the whole file, but
       in general let is preferred inside functions because it's clearer at a glance  where  the  value  can  be
       used:

              (local tau-approx 6.28318)

       Locals  set  this  way cannot be given new values, but you can introduce new locals that shadow the outer
       names:

              (let [x 19]
                ;; (set x 88) <- not allowed!
                (let [x 88]
                  (print (+ x 2))) ; -> 90
                (print x)) ; -> 19

       If you need to change the value of a local, you can use var which works like local except it  allows  set
       to work on it.  There is no nested let-like equivalent of var.

              (var x 19)
              (set x (+ x 8))
              (print x) ; -> 27

       Note that introducing a table with local or let does not prevent its fields from being changed using set.

   Numbers and strings
       Of course, all our standard arithmetic operators like +, -, *, and / work here in prefix form.  Note that
       numbers  are double-precision floats in all Lua versions prior to 5.3, which introduced integers.  On 5.3
       and up, integer division uses // and bitwise operations use lshift, rshift,  bor,  band,  bnot  and  xor.
       Bitwise  operators  and  integer division will not work if the host Lua environment is older than version
       5.3.

       You may also use underscores to separate sections of long numbers.  The underscores have no effect on the
       value.

              (let [x (+ 1 99)
                    y (- x 12)
                    z 100_000]
                (+ z (/ y 10)))

       Strings are essentially immutable byte arrays.  UTF-8 support is  provided  in  the  utf8  table  in  Lua
       5.3+ or from a 3rd-party library in earlier versions.  Strings are concatenated with ..:

              (.. "hello" " world")

   Tables
       In  Lua  (and thus in Fennel), tables are the only data structure.  The main syntax for tables uses curly
       braces with key/value pairs in them:

              {"key" value
               "number" 531
               "f" (fn [x] (+ x 2))}

       You can use . to get data out of tables:

              (let [tbl (function-which-returns-a-table)
                    key "a certain key"]
                (. tbl key))

       And tset to put them in:

              (let [tbl {}
                    key1 "a long string"
                    key2 12]
                (tset tbl key1 "the first value")
                (tset tbl key2 "the second one")
                tbl) ; -> {"a long string" "the first value" 12 "the second one"}

   Sequential Tables
       Some tables are used to store data that's used sequentially; the keys  in  this  case  are  just  numbers
       starting with 1 and going up.  Fennel provides alternate syntax for these tables with square brackets:

              ["abc" "def" "xyz"] ; equivalent to {1 "abc" 2 "def" 3 "xyz"}

       Lua's  built-in  table.insert function is meant to be used with sequential tables; all elements after the
       inserted value are shifted up by one index: If you don't provide an index to table.insert it will  append
       to the end of the table.

       The  table.remove  function  works similarly; it takes a table and an index (which defaults to the end of
       the table) and removes the value at that index, returning it.

              (local ltrs ["a" "b" "c" "d"])

              (table.remove ltrs)       ; Removes "d"
              (table.remove ltrs 1)     ; Removes "a"
              (table.insert ltrs "d")   ; Appends "d"
              (table.insert ltrs 1 "a") ; Prepends "a"

              (. ltrs 2)                ; -> "b"
              ;; ltrs is back to its original value ["a" "b" "c" "d"]

       The length form returns the length of sequential tables and strings:

              (let [tbl ["abc" "def" "xyz"]]
                (+ (length tbl)
                   (length (. tbl 1)))) ; -> 6

       Note that the length of a table with gaps in it is undefined; it can return a number corresponding to any
       of the table's "boundary" positions between nil and non-nil values.

       Lua's standard library is very small, and thus several functions you might expect to  be  included,  such
       map,  reduce,  and filter are absent.  In Fennel macros are used for this instead; see icollect, collect,
       and accumulate.

   Iteration
       Looping over table elements is done with each and an iterator like pairs (used  for  general  tables)  or
       ipairs (for sequential tables):

              (each [key value (pairs {"key1" 52 "key2" 99})]
                (print key value))

              (each [index value (ipairs ["abc" "def" "xyz"])]
                (print index value))

       Note  that  whether  a table is sequential or not is not an inherent property of the table but depends on
       which iterator is used with it.  You can call ipairs on any table, and it will only iterate over  numeric
       keys starting with 1 until it hits a nil.

       You  can  use  any  Lua iterator with  each, but these are the most common.  Here's an example that walks
       through matches in a string:

              (var sum 0)
              (each [digits (string.gmatch "244 127 163" "%d+")]
                (set sum (+ sum (tonumber digits))))

       If you want to get a table back, try icollect to get a sequential table or collect  to  get  a  key/value
       one.  A body which returns nil will cause that to be omitted from the resulting table.

              (icollect [_ s (ipairs [:greetings :my :darling])]
                (if (not= :my s)
                    (s:upper)))
              ;; -> ["GREETINGS" "DARLING"]

              (collect [_ s (ipairs [:greetings :my :darling])]
                s (length s))
              ;; -> {:darling 7 :greetings 9 :my 2}

       A  lower-level iteration construct is for which iterates numerically from the provided start value to the
       inclusive finish value:

              (for [i 1 10]
                (print i))

       You can specify an optional step value; this loop will only print odd numbers under ten:

              (for [i 1 10 2]
                (print i))

   Looping
       If you need to loop but don't know how many times, you can use while:

              (while (keep-looping?)
                (do-something))

   Conditionals
       Finally we have conditionals.  The if form in Fennel can be used the same way as in other lisp languages,
       but it can also be used as cond for multiple conditions compiling into elseif branches:

              (let [x (math.random 64)]
                (if (= 0 (% x 2))
                    "even"
                    (= 0 (% x 9))
                    "multiple of nine"
                    "I dunno, something else"))

       With an odd number of arguments, the final clause is interpreted as "else".

       Being a lisp, Fennel has no statements, so if returns a value as an expression.  Lua programmers will  be
       glad to know there is no need to construct precarious chains of and/or just to get a value!

       The  other  conditional  is  when,  which is used for an arbitrary number of side-effects and has no else
       clause:

              (when (currently-raining?)
                (wear "boots")
                (deploy-umbrella))

BACK TO TABLES JUST FOR A BIT

       Strings that don't have spaces or reserved characters in them can  use  the  :shorthand  syntax  instead,
       which is often used for table keys:

              {:key value :number 531}

       If  a  table  has  string keys like this, you can pull fields out of it easily with a dot if the keys are
       known up front:

              (let [tbl {:x 52 :y 91}]
                (+ tbl.x tbl.y)) ; -> 143

       You can also use this syntax with set:

              (let [tbl {}]
                (set tbl.one 1)
                (set tbl.two 2)
                tbl) ; -> {:one 1 :two 2}

       If a table key has the same name as the variable you're binding it to, you can omit the key name and  use
       : instead:

              (let [one 1 two 2
                    tbl {: one : two}]
                tbl) ; -> {:one 1 :two 2}

       Finally, let can destructure a table into multiple locals.

       There is positional destructuring:

              (let [data [1 2 3]
                    [fst snd thrd] data]
                (print fst snd thrd)) ; -> 1       2       3

       And destructuring of tables via key:

              (let [pos {:x 23 :y 42}
                    {:x x-pos :y y-pos} pos]
                (print x-pos y-pos)) ; -> 23      42

       As  above,  if a table key has the same name as the variable you're destructuring it to, you can omit the
       key name and use : instead:

              (let [pos {:x 23 :y 42}
                    {: x : y} pos]
                (print x y)) ; -> 23      42

       This can nest and mix and match:

              (let [f (fn [] ["abc" "def" {:x "xyz" :y "abc"}])
                    [a d {:x x : y}] (f)]
                (print a d)
                (print x y))

       If the size of the table doesn't match the number of binding locals, missing values are filled  with  nil
       and  extra  values  are  discarded.   Note that unlike many languages, nil in Lua actually represents the
       absence of a value, and thus tables cannot contain nil.  It is an error to try to use nil as a  key,  and
       using nil as a value removes whatever entry was at that key before.

ERROR HANDLING

       Errors  in  Lua have two forms they can take.  Functions in Lua can return any number of values, and most
       functions which can fail will indicate failure by using two return values:  nil  followed  by  a  failure
       message string.  You can interact with this style of function in Fennel by placing the function call into
       a table and pattern matching against the table:

              (case [(io.open "file")]
                ;; when io.open succeeds, it will return a file, but if it fails
                ;; it will return nil and an err-msg string describing why
                [f] (do (use-file-contents (f:read :*all))
                        (f:close))
                [nil err-msg] (report-error "Could not open file:" err-msg))

       You can write your own function which returns multiple values by calling values.

              (fn use-file [filename]
                (if (valid-file-name? filename)
                    (open-file filename)
                    (values nil (.. "Invalid filename: " filename))))

       Note:  while  errors are the most common reason to return multiple values from a function, it can be used
       in other cases as well.  This is the most complicated feature of Lua, and a full  discussion  is  out  of
       scope  for  this tutorial, but it's https://benaiah.me/posts/everything-you-didnt-want-to-know-about-lua-
       multivals/ covered well elsewhere.

       The problem with this type of error is that it does not compose well; the error status must be propagated
       all the way along the call chain from inner to outer.  To address this, you can  use  error.   This  will
       terminate  the  whole  process unless it's within a protected call, similar to the way in other languages
       where throwing an exception will stop the program unless it is  within  a  try/catch.   You  can  make  a
       protected call with pcall:

              (let [(ok? val-or-msg) (pcall potentially-disastrous-call filename)]
                (if ok?
                    (print "Got value" val-or-msg)
                    (print "Could not get value:" val-or-msg)))

       The  pcall  invocation  there  means  you are running (potentially-disastrous-call filename) in protected
       mode.  pcall takes an arbitrary number of arguments which are passed on to the  function.   You  can  see
       that pcall returns a boolean (ok?  here) to let you know if the call succeeded or not, and a second value
       (val-or-msg) which is the actual value if it succeeded or an error message if it didn't.

       The assert function takes a value and an error message; it calls error if the value is nil and returns it
       otherwise.   This  can  be used to turn multiple-value failures into errors (kind of the inverse of pcall
       which turns errors into multiple-value failures):

              (let [f (assert (io.open filename))
                    contents (f.read f "*all")]
                (f.close f)
                contents)

       In this example because io.open returns nil and an error message upon failure, a failure will trigger  an
       error and halt execution.

VARIADIC FUNCTIONS

       Fennel  supports  variadic  functions (in other words, functions which take any number of arguments) like
       many languages.  The syntax for taking a variable number of arguments to a function is  the  ...  symbol,
       which must be the last parameter to a function.  This syntax is inherited from Lua rather than Lisp.

       The  ...  form  is  not  a  list  or  first class value, it expands to multiple values inline.  To access
       individual elements of the vararg, you can destructure with parentheses, or first  wrap  it  in  a  table
       literal  ([...])  and  index  like  a  normal  table, or use the select function from Lua's core library.
       Often, the vararg can be passed directly to another function such as print without needing to bind it.

              (fn print-each [...]
                (each [i v (ipairs [...])]
                  (print (.. "Argument " i " is " v))))

              (print-each :a :b :c)

              (fn myprint [prefix ...]
                (io.write prefix)
                (io.write (.. (select "#" ...) " arguments given: "))
                (print ...))

              (myprint ":D " :d :e :f)

       Varargs are scoped differently than other variables as well - they are only accessible to the function in
       which they are created.  Unlike normal values, functions cannot close over them.   This  means  that  the
       following code will NOT work, as the varargs in the inner function are out of scope.

              (fn badcode [...]
                (fn []
                  (print ...)))

STRICT GLOBAL CHECKING

       If you get an error that says unknown global in strict mode it means that you're trying compile code that
       uses  a  global  which the Fennel compiler doesn't know about.  Most of the time, this is due to a coding
       mistake.  However, in some cases you may get this error with a  legitimate  global  reference.   If  this
       happens,  it may be due to an inherent limitation of Fennel's strategy.  You can use _G.myglobal to refer
       to it in a way that works around this check and calls attention to the  fact  that  this  is  in  fact  a
       global.

       Another  possible  cause  for this error is a modified function environment.  The solution depends on how
       you're using Fennel:

       • Embedded  Fennel  can  have  its  searcher  modified  to  ignore  certain  (or  all)  globals  via  the
         allowedGlobals parameter.  See the Lua API page for instructions.

       • Fennel's  CLI  has  the --globals parameter, which accepts a comma-separated list of globals to ignore.
         For example, to disable strict mode for globals x, y, and z:

                fennel --globals x,y,z yourfennelscript.fnl

GOTCHAS

       There are a few surprises that might bite seasoned  lispers.   Most  of  these  result  necessarily  from
       Fennel's insistence upon imposing zero runtime overhead over Lua.

       • The  arithmetic,  comparison,  and boolean operators are not first-class functions.  They can behave in
         surprising ways with multiple-return-valued functions, because the number of arguments to them must  be
         known at compile-time.

       • There  is  no  apply function; instead use table.unpack or unpack depending on your Lua version: (f 1 3
         (table.unpack [4 9])) does what (apply f 1 3 [4 9]) would do in other lisps.

       • Tables are compared for equality by identity, not based on the value of their contents, as per Baker.

       • Return values in the repl will get pretty-printed, but calling (print tbl) will emit output like table:
         0x55a3a8749ef0.  If you don't already have one, it's recommended for  debugging  to  define  a  printer
         function  which  calls fennel.view on its argument before printing it: (local fennel (require :fennel))
         (fn _G.pp [x] (print (fennel.view x))).  If you add this definition to your ~/.fennelrc file it will be
         available in the standard repl.

       • Lua programmers should note Fennel functions cannot do early returns.

OTHER STUFF JUST WORKS

       Note that built-in functions in Lua's standard library like math.random above can be called with no  fuss
       and no overhead.

       This  includes  features  like  coroutines,  which  are  often  implemented using special syntax in other
       languages.  Coroutines let you express non-blocking operations without callbacks.

       Tables in Lua may seem a bit limited, but metatables allow  a  great  deal  more  flexibility.   All  the
       features of metatables are accessible from Fennel code just the same as they would be from Lua.

MODULES AND MULTIPLE FILES

       You can use the require function to load code from other files.

              (let [lume (require :lume)
                    tbl [52 99 412 654]
                    plus (fn [x y] (+ x y))]
                (lume.map tbl (partial plus 2))) ; -> [54 101 414 656]

       Modules  in Fennel and Lua are simply tables which contain functions and other values.  The last value in
       a Fennel file will be used as the value of the whole module.  Technically this can be any value, not just
       a table, but using a table is most common for good reason.

       To require a module that's in a subdirectory, take the file name, replace  the  slashes  with  dots,  and
       remove  the  extension,  then pass that to require.  For instance, a file called lib/ui/menu.lua would be
       read when loading the module lib.ui.menu.

       When you run your program with the fennel command, you can call require to load Fennel  or  Lua  modules.
       But in other contexts (such as compiling to Lua and then using the lua command, or in programs that embed
       Lua) it will not know about Fennel modules.  You need to install the searcher that knows how to find .fnl
       files:

              require("fennel").install()
              local mylib = require("mylib") -- will compile and load code in mylib.fnl

       Once  you  add  this, require will work on Fennel files just like it does with Lua; for instance (require
       :mylib.parser) will look in "mylib/parser.fnl" on Fennel's search path (stored in  fennel.path  which  is
       distinct from package.path used to find Lua modules).  The path usually includes an entry to let you load
       things relative to the current directory by default.

RELATIVE REQUIRE

       There  are several ways to write a library which uses modules.  One of these is to rely on something like
       LuaRocks, to manage library installation and availability of it and its modules.  Another way is  to  use
       the  relative require style for loading nested modules.  With relative require, libraries don't depend on
       the root directory name or its location when resolving inner module paths.

       For example, here's a small example library, which contains an init.fnl file, and a module  at  the  root
       directory:

              ;; file example/init.fnl:
              (local a (require :example.module-a))

              {:hello-a a.hello}

       Here, the main module requires additional example.module-a module, which holds the implementation:

              ;; file example/module-a.fnl
              (fn hello [] (print "hello from a"))
              {:hello hello}

       The  main  issue  here  is  that  the  path to the library must be exactly example, e.g.  library must be
       required as (require :example) for it to work, which can't be enforced on the library user.  For example,
       if the library were moved into libs directory of  the  project  to  avoid  cluttering,  and  required  as
       (require  :libs.example), there will be a runtime error.  This happens because library itself will try to
       require :example.module-a and not :libs.example.module-a, which is now the correct module path:

              runtime error: module 'example.module-a' not found:
                      no field package.preload['example.module-a']
                      ...
                      no file './example/module-a.lua'
                      ...
              stack traceback:
                [C]: in function 'require'
                ./libs/example/init.fnl:2: in main chunk

       LuaRocks addresses this problem by enforcing both the directory name and  installation  path,  populating
       the  LUA_PATH  environment variable to make the library available.  This, of course, can be done manually
       by setting LUA_PATH per project in the build pipeline, pointing it to the right directory.  But  this  is
       not  very  transparent, and when requiring a project local library it's better to see the full path, that
       directly maps to the project's file structure, rather than looking up where the LUA_PATH is modified.

       In the Fennel ecosystem we encourage a simpler way of managing project dependencies.  Simply  dropping  a
       library  into  your project's tree or using git submodule is usually enough, and the require paths should
       be handled by the library itself.

       Here's how a relative require path can be specified in the libs/example/init.fnl  to  make  it  name/path
       agnostic, assuming that we've moved our example library there:

              ;; file libs/example/init.fnl:
              (local a (require (.. ... :.module-a)))

              {:hello-a a.hello}

       Now,  it  doesn't  matter  how library is named or where we put it - we can require it from anywhere.  It
       works because when requiring the library with (require :lib.example), the first value in ...   will  hold
       the  "lib.example"  string.   This  string  is  then  concatenated with the ".module-a", and require will
       properly find and load the nested module at runtime under the "lib.example.module-a" path.   It's  a  Lua
       feature, and not something Fennel specific, and it will work the same when the library is AOT compiled to
       Lua.

   Compile-time relative include
       Since  Fennel  v0.10.0  this  also  works  at  compile-time,  when  using  the  include  special  or  the
       --require-as-include flag, with the constraint that the expression can be computed at compile time.  This
       means that the expression must be self-contained, i.e.  doesn't refer to locals or  globals,  but  embeds
       all  values directly.  In other words, the following code will only work at runtime, but not with include
       or --require-as-include because current-module is not known at compile time:

              (local current-module ...)
              (require (.. current-module :.other-module))

       This, on the other hand, will work both at runtime and at compile time:

              (require (.. ... :.other-module))

       The ... module args are propagated during compilation, so when the application which uses this library is
       compiled, all library code is correctly included into the self-contained Lua file.

       Compiling a project that uses this example library with --require-as-include will include  the  following
       section in the resulting Lua code:

              package.preload["libs.example.module-a"] = package.preload["libs.example.module-a"] or function(...)
                local function hello()
                  return print("hello from a")
                end
                return {hello = hello}
              end

       Note  that  the  package.preload entry contains a fully qualified path "libs.example.module-a", which was
       resolved at compile time.

   Requiring modules from modules other than init.fnl
       To require a module from a module other than init module, we must keep the path up to the current module,
       but remove the module name.  For example, let's add a greet module in  libs/example/utils/greet.fnl,  and
       require it from libs/example/module-a.fnl:

              ;; file libs/example/utils/greet.fnl:
              (fn greet [who] (print (.. "hello " who)))

       This module can be required as follows:

              ;; file libs/example/module-a.fnl
              (local greet (require (.. (: ... :match "(.+)%.[^.]+") :.utils.greet)))

              (fn hello [] (print "hello from a"))

              {:hello hello :greet greet}

       The  parent  module  name  is  determined  via calling the match method on the current module name string
       (...).

AUTHORS

       Fennel Maintainers.

fennel 1.6.0                                       2025-10-13                                 fennel-tutorial(7)