What's the difference between \newcommand and \newcommand*?

A bit of background first. When Knuth wrote TeX, he realised that most macros would not need to absorb more than one paragraph as an argument. As a result, a good way to test for errors such as a missing } is to forbid macros to accept paragraph tokens (either those generated by blank lines or explicit \par tokens). So he created \def for definitions which cannot take a paragraph token, and the \long prefix to allow them to:

\def\examplea#1{% #1 cannot contain \par
}
\long\def\exampleb#1{% #1 can contain \par
}

When LaTeX was written, Lamport created \newcommand as a wrapper around \def with various bits of error checking. He found that paragraph tokens can pop up in odd places. So he decided that \newcommand would be 'long'. When the LaTeX team took over for LaTeX2e, they decided that you would need to add the modifier * to prevent this:

\newcommand{\examplea}[1]{% #1 can contain \par
}
\newcommand*{\exampleb}[1]{% #1 cannot contain \par
}

Most of the time, \newcommand* is the best choice as you want the error-checking that it provides. That is why examples given by experienced LaTeX users normally use this form, rather than just \newcommand.

The same behaviour is seen with \newenvironment:

\newenvironment{examplea}[1]{% #1 can contain \par
}{}
\newenvironment*{exampleb}[1]{% #1 cannot contain \par
}{}

This works by defining \examplea and \endexamplea more-or-less using \newcommand, and \exampleb and \endexampleb more-or-less using \newcommand*. As a result, the 'end' macros have the same 'long' status as the 'begin' ones, even though they never take arguments. (Note that this does not affect what can go into the body of the environment, only the arguments at the start.) Environments are covered in more detail in What is the difference between \newenvironment and \newenvironment*?.

For LaTeX3, we've decided to take a somewhat hybrid approach. If you use xparse for defining document commands, they are only 'long' if you ask for it:

\NewDocumentCommand\examplea{m}{% #1 cannot contain \par
}
\NewDocumentCommand\examplab{+m}{% #1 can contain \par
}

(We've decided on + to represent a long argument). On the other hand, for internal use it is normally best to accept paragraph tokens, and to leave the filtering to the user interface level.


According to the 2nd Edition of the LaTeX Companion: (p. 846):

[\newcommand*] defines a [command], that is not, in TeX terms, long. This means that the newly defined command does not accept empty lines or \par.

This is also the default behaviour of \def, while the unstarred version is actually equivalent to \long\def.


From here: "Using the starred version of \newcommand means that the arguments of the defined command cannot contain a blank line or \par. This makes it a lot easier to spot runaway arguments."