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 dynamic 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.
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)))
(; -> outputs:
,doc print-sep ;; (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))))
(
5) ; -> error: Missing argument z (print-calculation
Note that the second argument ?y
is allowed to be
nil
, but z
is not:
5 nil 3) ; -> 2 (print-calculation
Like fn
, lambdas accept an optional docstring after the
argument list.
Locals are introduced using let
with the names and
values wrapped in a single set of square brackets:
let [x (+ 89 5.2)
(fn [abc] (print (* 2 abc)))]
f ( (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.
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 (
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)
(- x 12)
y (
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") (..
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 values out of tables:
let [tbl (function-which-returns-a-table)
("a certain key"]
key (. tbl key))
And tset
to put them in:
let [tbl {}
("a long string"
key1 12]
key2 tset tbl key1 "the first value")
(tset tbl key2 "the second one")
(; -> {"a long string" "the first value" 12 "the second one"} tbl)
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 values 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"
(
2) ; -> "b"
(. ltrs ;; 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
.
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])]
(length s))
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)) (
If you need to loop but don't know how many times, you can use
while
:
while (keep-looping?)
( (do-something))
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?)
("boots")
(wear (deploy-umbrella))
Strings that don't have spaces or reserved characters in them can use
the :shorthand
syntax instead, which is often used for
table keys:
531} {:key value :number
If a table has string keys like this, you can pull values 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)
(; -> {:one 1 :two 2} tbl)
If a table key has the same name as the variable you're setting it
to, you can omit the key name and use :
instead:
let [one 1 two 2
(: one : two}]
tbl {; -> {:one 1 :two 2} tbl)
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"}])
(: y}] (f)]
[a d {:x x 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.
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 destructuring with parens instead of square
brackets:
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
do (use-file-contents (f:read :*all))
f (
(f:close))print "Could not open file:" err-msg)) (nil err-msg) (
You can write your own function which returns multiple values with
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 complex thing about Lua, and a full discussion is out of scope for this tutorial, but it's 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
error
s into multiple-value failures):
let [f (assert (io.open filename))
("*all")]
contents (f.read f
(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.
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 ...))
(
":D " :d :e :f) (myprint
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 ...))) (
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:
allowedGlobals
parameter. See the Lua API page for
instructions.--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
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]))
.
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.
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.
You can use the require
function to load code from other
files.
let [lume (require :lume)
(52 99 412 654]
tbl [fn [x y] (+ x y))]
plus (partial plus 2))) ; -> [54 101 414 656] (lume.map tbl (
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.
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.
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.
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
(...
).