Common Lisp the Language, 2nd Edition
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A name can be given to a function in one of two ways. A global
name can be given to a function by using the defun
construct. A local name can be given to a function by using the
flet
or labels
special form. When a function
is named, a lambda-expression is effectively associated with that name
along with information about the entities that are lexically apparent at
that point. If a symbol appears as the first element of a function-call
form, then it refers to the definition established by the innermost
flet
or labels
construct that textually
contains the reference, or to the global definition (if any) if there is
no such containing construct.
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