> What does "C-h k y" say? Look for the word "interactive": > > evil-yank is an interactive Lisp function in `evil-operators.el'. > ^^^^^^^^^^^ > > If your advice somehow turned `evil-yank' into a mere function, > it should be indicated here.
Thank you very much for the help. I never paid attention to this details in "C-h k", and you are right it didn't say it was an interactive function and only when I add "(interactive)" to the yank advice "C-h k" will report an interactive function, however, it doesn't matter what "C-h k" says, the problem is still the same. > > Also, try using `defadvice' without the ARGLIST argument: > > (defadvice evil-yank (around around-yank activate) > ad-do-it) > > Although it's possible to advise a function's interactive behavior, > this shouldn't really be an issue with simple advices like above -- > `defadvice' is smart enough to recognize commands. Removing the ARGLIST didn't help, though it counteracted the side effect of adding "(interactive)" to "flet" in that I can again make yank work again by re-evaluate `evil-yank' (C-M-x). I think the real question (and interesting) here is why "flet" doesn't restore the original `evil-yank' after "ad-do-it". _______________________________________________ implementations-list mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/implementations-list
