When you ran the gp:getPointInput function, control was automatically passed from VLISP to AutoCAD. You responded to three prompts, after which control was passed back from AutoCAD to VLISP, and a T symbol displayed in the Console window.
Within the program, here's what happens:
You need some way to return values from one function to another. One way to do this is to create a list of the values retrieved from gp:getPointInput, as highlighted in the following code:
(defun gp:getPointInput ( / StartPt EndPt HalfWidth )
(if (setq StartPt (getpoint "\nStart point of path: "))
(if (setq EndPt (getpoint StartPt "\nEndpoint of path: "))
(if (setq HalfWidth (getdist EndPt "\nhalf-width of path: "))
(list StartPt EndPt HalfWidth)
)
)
)
)
Copy this version of gp:getPointInput into the Console window and press ENTER. Here's an opportunity to try another feature of the Console window.
To use the Console window history feature to run gp:getPointInput
This invokes the Console history command, cycling through any commands previously entered in the Console window. If you go too far, press SHIFT + TAB to cycle in the other direction.
The function returns a list containing two nested lists and a real (floating point) value. The return values look like the following:
((4.46207 4.62318 0.0) (7.66688 4.62318 0.0) 0.509124)
These values correspond to the StartPt,EndPt, and HalfWidth variables.