This is Info file ../info/cl.info, produced by Makeinfo version 1.68 from the input file cl.texi. INFO-DIR-SECTION XEmacs Editor START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * Common Lisp: (cl). GNU Emacs Common Lisp emulation package. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY This file documents the GNU Emacs Common Lisp emulation package. Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the section entitled "GNU General Public License" is included exactly as in the original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that the section entitled "GNU General Public License" may be included in a translation approved by the author instead of in the original English.  File: cl.info, Node: Implementation Parameters, Prev: Random Numbers, Up: Numbers Implementation Parameters ========================= This package defines several useful constants having to with numbers. - Variable: most-positive-fixnum This constant equals the largest value a Lisp integer can hold. It is typically `2^23-1' or `2^25-1'. - Variable: most-negative-fixnum This constant equals the smallest (most negative) value a Lisp integer can hold. The following parameters have to do with floating-point numbers. This package determines their values by exercising the computer's floating-point arithmetic in various ways. Because this operation might be slow, the code for initializing them is kept in a separate function that must be called before the parameters can be used. - Function: cl-float-limits This function makes sure that the Common Lisp floating-point parameters like `most-positive-float' have been initialized. Until it is called, these parameters will be `nil'. If this version of Emacs does not support floats (e.g., most versions of Emacs 18), the parameters will remain `nil'. If the parameters have already been initialized, the function returns immediately. The algorithm makes assumptions that will be valid for most modern machines, but will fail if the machine's arithmetic is extremely unusual, e.g., decimal. Since true Common Lisp supports up to four different floating-point precisions, it has families of constants like `most-positive-single-float', `most-positive-double-float', `most-positive-long-float', and so on. Emacs has only one floating-point precision, so this package omits the precision word from the constants' names. - Variable: most-positive-float This constant equals the largest value a Lisp float can hold. For those systems whose arithmetic supports infinities, this is the largest *finite* value. For IEEE machines, the value is approximately `1.79e+308'. - Variable: most-negative-float This constant equals the most-negative value a Lisp float can hold. (It is assumed to be equal to `(- most-positive-float)'.) - Variable: least-positive-float This constant equals the smallest Lisp float value greater than zero. For IEEE machines, it is about `4.94e-324' if denormals are supported or `2.22e-308' if not. - Variable: least-positive-normalized-float This constant equals the smallest *normalized* Lisp float greater than zero, i.e., the smallest value for which IEEE denormalization will not result in a loss of precision. For IEEE machines, this value is about `2.22e-308'. For machines that do not support the concept of denormalization and gradual underflow, this constant will always equal `least-positive-float'. - Variable: least-negative-float This constant is the negative counterpart of `least-positive-float'. - Variable: least-negative-normalized-float This constant is the negative counterpart of `least-positive-normalized-float'. - Variable: float-epsilon This constant is the smallest positive Lisp float that can be added to 1.0 to produce a distinct value. Adding a smaller number to 1.0 will yield 1.0 again due to roundoff. For IEEE machines, epsilon is about `2.22e-16'. - Variable: float-negative-epsilon This is the smallest positive value that can be subtracted from 1.0 to produce a distinct value. For IEEE machines, it is about `1.11e-16'.  File: cl.info, Node: Sequences, Next: Lists, Prev: Numbers, Up: Top Sequences ********* Common Lisp defines a number of functions that operate on "sequences", which are either lists, strings, or vectors. Emacs Lisp includes a few of these, notably `elt' and `length'; this package defines most of the rest. * Menu: * Sequence Basics:: Arguments shared by all sequence functions * Mapping over Sequences:: `mapcar*', `mapcan', `map', `every', etc. * Sequence Functions:: `subseq', `remove*', `substitute', etc. * Searching Sequences:: `find', `position', `count', `search', etc. * Sorting Sequences:: `sort*', `stable-sort', `merge'  File: cl.info, Node: Sequence Basics, Next: Mapping over Sequences, Prev: Sequences, Up: Sequences Sequence Basics =============== Many of the sequence functions take keyword arguments; *note Argument Lists::.. All keyword arguments are optional and, if specified, may appear in any order. The `:key' argument should be passed either `nil', or a function of one argument. This key function is used as a filter through which the elements of the sequence are seen; for example, `(find x y :key 'car)' is similar to `(assoc* x y)': It searches for an element of the list whose `car' equals `x', rather than for an element which equals `x' itself. If `:key' is omitted or `nil', the filter is effectively the identity function. The `:test' and `:test-not' arguments should be either `nil', or functions of two arguments. The test function is used to compare two sequence elements, or to compare a search value with sequence elements. (The two values are passed to the test function in the same order as the original sequence function arguments from which they are derived, or, if they both come from the same sequence, in the same order as they appear in that sequence.) The `:test' argument specifies a function which must return true (non-`nil') to indicate a match; instead, you may use `:test-not' to give a function which returns *false* to indicate a match. The default test function is `:test 'eql'. Many functions which take ITEM and `:test' or `:test-not' arguments also come in `-if' and `-if-not' varieties, where a PREDICATE function is passed instead of ITEM, and sequence elements match if the predicate returns true on them (or false in the case of `-if-not'). For example: (remove* 0 seq :test '=) == (remove-if 'zerop seq) to remove all zeros from sequence `seq'. Some operations can work on a subsequence of the argument sequence; these function take `:start' and `:end' arguments which default to zero and the length of the sequence, respectively. Only elements between START (inclusive) and END (exclusive) are affected by the operation. The END argument may be passed `nil' to signify the length of the sequence; otherwise, both START and END must be integers, with `0 <= START <= END <= (length SEQ)'. If the function takes two sequence arguments, the limits are defined by keywords `:start1' and `:end1' for the first, and `:start2' and `:end2' for the second. A few functions accept a `:from-end' argument, which, if non-`nil', causes the operation to go from right-to-left through the sequence instead of left-to-right, and a `:count' argument, which specifies an integer maximum number of elements to be removed or otherwise processed. The sequence functions make no guarantees about the order in which the `:test', `:test-not', and `:key' functions are called on various elements. Therefore, it is a bad idea to depend on side effects of these functions. For example, `:from-end' may cause the sequence to be scanned actually in reverse, or it may be scanned forwards but computing a result "as if" it were scanned backwards. (Some functions, like `mapcar*' and `every', *do* specify exactly the order in which the function is called so side effects are perfectly acceptable in those cases.) Strings in GNU Emacs 19 may contain "text properties" as well as character data. Except as noted, it is undefined whether or not text properties are preserved by sequence functions. For example, `(remove* ?A STR)' may or may not preserve the properties of the characters copied from STR into the result.  File: cl.info, Node: Mapping over Sequences, Next: Sequence Functions, Prev: Sequence Basics, Up: Sequences Mapping over Sequences ====================== These functions "map" the function you specify over the elements of lists or arrays. They are all variations on the theme of the built-in function `mapcar'. - Function: mapcar* FUNCTION SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function calls FUNCTION on successive parallel sets of elements from its argument sequences. Given a single SEQ argument it is equivalent to `mapcar'; given N sequences, it calls the function with the first elements of each of the sequences as the N arguments to yield the first element of the result list, then with the second elements, and so on. The mapping stops as soon as the shortest sequence runs out. The argument sequences may be any mixture of lists, strings, and vectors; the return sequence is always a list. Common Lisp's `mapcar' accepts multiple arguments but works only on lists; Emacs Lisp's `mapcar' accepts a single sequence argument. This package's `mapcar*' works as a compatible superset of both. - Function: map RESULT-TYPE FUNCTION SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function maps FUNCTION over the argument sequences, just like `mapcar*', but it returns a sequence of type RESULT-TYPE rather than a list. RESULT-TYPE must be one of the following symbols: `vector', `string', `list' (in which case the effect is the same as for `mapcar*'), or `nil' (in which case the results are thrown away and `map' returns `nil'). - Function: maplist FUNCTION LIST &rest MORE-LISTS This function calls FUNCTION on each of its argument lists, then on the `cdr's of those lists, and so on, until the shortest list runs out. The results are returned in the form of a list. Thus, `maplist' is like `mapcar*' except that it passes in the list pointers themselves rather than the `car's of the advancing pointers. - Function: mapc FUNCTION SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function is like `mapcar*', except that the values returned by FUNCTION are ignored and thrown away rather than being collected into a list. The return value of `mapc' is SEQ, the first sequence. - Function: mapl FUNCTION LIST &rest MORE-LISTS This function is like `maplist', except that it throws away the values returned by FUNCTION. - Function: mapcan FUNCTION SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function is like `mapcar*', except that it concatenates the return values (which must be lists) using `nconc', rather than simply collecting them into a list. - Function: mapcon FUNCTION LIST &rest MORE-LISTS This function is like `maplist', except that it concatenates the return values using `nconc'. - Function: some PREDICATE SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function calls PREDICATE on each element of SEQ in turn; if PREDICATE returns a non-`nil' value, `some' returns that value, otherwise it returns `nil'. Given several sequence arguments, it steps through the sequences in parallel until the shortest one runs out, just as in `mapcar*'. You can rely on the left-to-right order in which the elements are visited, and on the fact that mapping stops immediately as soon as PREDICATE returns non-`nil'. - Function: every PREDICATE SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function calls PREDICATE on each element of the sequence(s) in turn; it returns `nil' as soon as PREDICATE returns `nil' for any element, or `t' if the predicate was true for all elements. - Function: notany PREDICATE SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function calls PREDICATE on each element of the sequence(s) in turn; it returns `nil' as soon as PREDICATE returns a non-`nil' value for any element, or `t' if the predicate was `nil' for all elements. - Function: notevery PREDICATE SEQ &rest MORE-SEQS This function calls PREDICATE on each element of the sequence(s) in turn; it returns a non-`nil' value as soon as PREDICATE returns `nil' for any element, or `t' if the predicate was true for all elements. - Function: reduce FUNCTION SEQ &key :from-end :start :end :initial-value :key This function combines the elements of SEQ using an associative binary operation. Suppose FUNCTION is `*' and SEQ is the list `(2 3 4 5)'. The first two elements of the list are combined with `(* 2 3) = 6'; this is combined with the next element, `(* 6 4) = 24', and that is combined with the final element: `(* 24 5) = 120'. Note that the `*' function happens to be self-reducing, so that `(* 2 3 4 5)' has the same effect as an explicit call to `reduce'. If `:from-end' is true, the reduction is right-associative instead of left-associative: (reduce '- '(1 2 3 4)) == (- (- (- 1 2) 3) 4) => -8 (reduce '- '(1 2 3 4) :from-end t) == (- 1 (- 2 (- 3 4))) => -2 If `:key' is specified, it is a function of one argument which is called on each of the sequence elements in turn. If `:initial-value' is specified, it is effectively added to the front (or rear in the case of `:from-end') of the sequence. The `:key' function is *not* applied to the initial value. If the sequence, including the initial value, has exactly one element then that element is returned without ever calling FUNCTION. If the sequence is empty (and there is no initial value), then FUNCTION is called with no arguments to obtain the return value. All of these mapping operations can be expressed conveniently in terms of the `loop' macro. In compiled code, `loop' will be faster since it generates the loop as in-line code with no function calls.  File: cl.info, Node: Sequence Functions, Next: Searching Sequences, Prev: Mapping over Sequences, Up: Sequences Sequence Functions ================== This section describes a number of Common Lisp functions for operating on sequences. - Function: subseq SEQUENCE START &optional END This function returns a given subsequence of the argument SEQUENCE, which may be a list, string, or vector. The indices START and END must be in range, and START must be no greater than END. If END is omitted, it defaults to the length of the sequence. The return value is always a copy; it does not share structure with SEQUENCE. As an extension to Common Lisp, START and/or END may be negative, in which case they represent a distance back from the end of the sequence. This is for compatibility with Emacs' `substring' function. Note that `subseq' is the *only* sequence function that allows negative START and END. You can use `setf' on a `subseq' form to replace a specified range of elements with elements from another sequence. The replacement is done as if by `replace', described below. - Function: concatenate RESULT-TYPE &rest SEQS This function concatenates the argument sequences together to form a result sequence of type RESULT-TYPE, one of the symbols `vector', `string', or `list'. The arguments are always copied, even in cases such as `(concatenate 'list '(1 2 3))' where the result is identical to an argument. - Function: fill SEQ ITEM &key :start :end This function fills the elements of the sequence (or the specified part of the sequence) with the value ITEM. - Function: replace SEQ1 SEQ2 &key :start1 :end1 :start2 :end2 This function copies part of SEQ2 into part of SEQ1. The sequence SEQ1 is not stretched or resized; the amount of data copied is simply the shorter of the source and destination (sub)sequences. The function returns SEQ1. If SEQ1 and SEQ2 are `eq', then the replacement will work correctly even if the regions indicated by the start and end arguments overlap. However, if SEQ1 and SEQ2 are lists which share storage but are not `eq', and the start and end arguments specify overlapping regions, the effect is undefined. - Function: remove* ITEM SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end This returns a copy of SEQ with all elements matching ITEM removed. The result may share storage with or be `eq' to SEQ in some circumstances, but the original SEQ will not be modified. The `:test', `:test-not', and `:key' arguments define the matching test that is used; by default, elements `eql' to ITEM are removed. The `:count' argument specifies the maximum number of matching elements that can be removed (only the leftmost COUNT matches are removed). The `:start' and `:end' arguments specify a region in SEQ in which elements will be removed; elements outside that region are not matched or removed. The `:from-end' argument, if true, says that elements should be deleted from the end of the sequence rather than the beginning (this matters only if COUNT was also specified). - Function: delete* ITEM SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end This deletes all elements of SEQ which match ITEM. It is a destructive operation. Since Emacs Lisp does not support stretchable strings or vectors, this is the same as `remove*' for those sequence types. On lists, `remove*' will copy the list if necessary to preserve the original list, whereas `delete*' will splice out parts of the argument list. Compare `append' and `nconc', which are analogous non-destructive and destructive list operations in Emacs Lisp. The predicate-oriented functions `remove-if', `remove-if-not', `delete-if', and `delete-if-not' are defined similarly. - Function: delete ITEM LIST This MacLisp-compatible function deletes from LIST all elements which are `equal' to ITEM. The `delete' function is built-in to Emacs 19; this package defines it equivalently in Emacs 18. - Function: remove ITEM LIST This function removes from LIST all elements which are `equal' to ITEM. This package defines it for symmetry with `delete', even though `remove' is not built-in to Emacs 19. - Function: remq ITEM LIST This function removes from LIST all elements which are `eq' to ITEM. This package defines it for symmetry with `delq', even though `remq' is not built-in to Emacs 19. - Function: remove-duplicates SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end This function returns a copy of SEQ with duplicate elements removed. Specifically, if two elements from the sequence match according to the `:test', `:test-not', and `:key' arguments, only the rightmost one is retained. If `:from-end' is true, the leftmost one is retained instead. If `:start' or `:end' is specified, only elements within that subsequence are examined or removed. - Function: delete-duplicates SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end This function deletes duplicate elements from SEQ. It is a destructive version of `remove-duplicates'. - Function: substitute NEW OLD SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end This function returns a copy of SEQ, with all elements matching OLD replaced with NEW. The `:count', `:start', `:end', and `:from-end' arguments may be used to limit the number of substitutions made. - Function: nsubstitute NEW OLD SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :count :start :end :from-end This is a destructive version of `substitute'; it performs the substitution using `setcar' or `aset' rather than by returning a changed copy of the sequence. The `substitute-if', `substitute-if-not', `nsubstitute-if', and `nsubstitute-if-not' functions are defined similarly. For these, a PREDICATE is given in place of the OLD argument.  File: cl.info, Node: Searching Sequences, Next: Sorting Sequences, Prev: Sequence Functions, Up: Sequences Searching Sequences =================== These functions search for elements or subsequences in a sequence. (See also `member*' and `assoc*'; *note Lists::..) - Function: find ITEM SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end This function searches SEQ for an element matching ITEM. If it finds a match, it returns the matching element. Otherwise, it returns `nil'. It returns the leftmost match, unless `:from-end' is true, in which case it returns the rightmost match. The `:start' and `:end' arguments may be used to limit the range of elements that are searched. - Function: position ITEM SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :start :end :from-end This function is like `find', except that it returns the integer position in the sequence of the matching item rather than the item itself. The position is relative to the start of the sequence as a whole, even if `:start' is non-zero. The function returns `nil' if no matching element was found. - Function: count ITEM SEQ &key :test :test-not :key :start :end This function returns the number of elements of SEQ which match ITEM. The result is always a nonnegative integer. The `find-if', `find-if-not', `position-if', `position-if-not', `count-if', and `count-if-not' functions are defined similarly. - Function: mismatch SEQ1 SEQ2 &key :test :test-not :key :start1 :end1 :start2 :end2 :from-end This function compares the specified parts of SEQ1 and SEQ2. If they are the same length and the corresponding elements match (according to `:test', `:test-not', and `:key'), the function returns `nil'. If there is a mismatch, the function returns the index (relative to SEQ1) of the first mismatching element. This will be the leftmost pair of elements which do not match, or the position at which the shorter of the two otherwise-matching sequences runs out. If `:from-end' is true, then the elements are compared from right to left starting at `(1- END1)' and `(1- END2)'. If the sequences differ, then one plus the index of the rightmost difference (relative to SEQ1) is returned. An interesting example is `(mismatch str1 str2 :key 'upcase)', which compares two strings case-insensitively. - Function: search SEQ1 SEQ2 &key :test :test-not :key :from-end :start1 :end1 :start2 :end2 This function searches SEQ2 for a subsequence that matches SEQ1 (or part of it specified by `:start1' and `:end1'.) Only matches which fall entirely within the region defined by `:start2' and `:end2' will be considered. The return value is the index of the leftmost element of the leftmost match, relative to the start of SEQ2, or `nil' if no matches were found. If `:from-end' is true, the function finds the *rightmost* matching subsequence.  File: cl.info, Node: Sorting Sequences, Prev: Searching Sequences, Up: Sequences Sorting Sequences ================= - Function: sort* SEQ PREDICATE &key :key This function sorts SEQ into increasing order as determined by using PREDICATE to compare pairs of elements. PREDICATE should return true (non-`nil') if and only if its first argument is less than (not equal to) its second argument. For example, `<' and `string-lessp' are suitable predicate functions for sorting numbers and strings, respectively; `>' would sort numbers into decreasing rather than increasing order. This function differs from Emacs' built-in `sort' in that it can operate on any type of sequence, not just lists. Also, it accepts a `:key' argument which is used to preprocess data fed to the PREDICATE function. For example, (setq data (sort data 'string-lessp :key 'downcase)) sorts DATA, a sequence of strings, into increasing alphabetical order without regard to case. A `:key' function of `car' would be useful for sorting association lists. The `sort*' function is destructive; it sorts lists by actually rearranging the `cdr' pointers in suitable fashion. - Function: stable-sort SEQ PREDICATE &key :key This function sorts SEQ "stably", meaning two elements which are equal in terms of PREDICATE are guaranteed not to be rearranged out of their original order by the sort. In practice, `sort*' and `stable-sort' are equivalent in Emacs Lisp because the underlying `sort' function is stable by default. However, this package reserves the right to use non-stable methods for `sort*' in the future. - Function: merge TYPE SEQ1 SEQ2 PREDICATE &key :key This function merges two sequences SEQ1 and SEQ2 by interleaving their elements. The result sequence, of type TYPE (in the sense of `concatenate'), has length equal to the sum of the lengths of the two input sequences. The sequences may be modified destructively. Order of elements within SEQ1 and SEQ2 is preserved in the interleaving; elements of the two sequences are compared by PREDICATE (in the sense of `sort') and the lesser element goes first in the result. When elements are equal, those from SEQ1 precede those from SEQ2 in the result. Thus, if SEQ1 and SEQ2 are both sorted according to PREDICATE, then the result will be a merged sequence which is (stably) sorted according to PREDICATE.  File: cl.info, Node: Lists, Next: Hash Tables, Prev: Sequences, Up: Top Lists ***** The functions described here operate on lists. * Menu: * List Functions:: `caddr', `first', `last', `list*', etc. * Substitution of Expressions:: `subst', `sublis', etc. * Lists as Sets:: `member*', `adjoin', `union', etc. * Association Lists:: `assoc*', `rassoc*', `acons', `pairlis'  File: cl.info, Node: List Functions, Next: Substitution of Expressions, Prev: Lists, Up: Lists List Functions ============== This section describes a number of simple operations on lists, i.e., chains of cons cells. - Function: caddr X This function is equivalent to `(car (cdr (cdr X)))'. Likewise, this package defines all 28 `cXXXr' functions where XXX is up to four `a's and/or `d's. All of these functions are `setf'-able, and calls to them are expanded inline by the byte-compiler for maximum efficiency. - Function: first X This function is a synonym for `(car X)'. Likewise, the functions `second', `third', ..., through `tenth' return the given element of the list X. - Function: rest X This function is a synonym for `(cdr X)'. - Function: endp X Common Lisp defines this function to act like `null', but signalling an error if `x' is neither a `nil' nor a cons cell. This package simply defines `endp' as a synonym for `null'. - Function: list-length X This function returns the length of list X, exactly like `(length X)', except that if X is a circular list (where the cdr-chain forms a loop rather than terminating with `nil'), this function returns `nil'. (The regular `length' function would get stuck if given a circular list.) - Function: last X &optional N This function returns the last cons, or the Nth-to-last cons, of the list X. If N is omitted it defaults to 1. The "last cons" means the first cons cell of the list whose `cdr' is not another cons cell. (For normal lists, the `cdr' of the last cons will be `nil'.) This function returns `nil' if X is `nil' or shorter than N. Note that the last *element* of the list is `(car (last X))'. - Function: butlast X &optional N This function returns the list X with the last element, or the last N elements, removed. If N is greater than zero it makes a copy of the list so as not to damage the original list. In general, `(append (butlast X N) (last X N))' will return a list equal to X. - Function: nbutlast X &optional N This is a version of `butlast' that works by destructively modifying the `cdr' of the appropriate element, rather than making a copy of the list. - Function: list* ARG &rest OTHERS This function constructs a list of its arguments. The final argument becomes the `cdr' of the last cell constructed. Thus, `(list* A B C)' is equivalent to `(cons A (cons B C))', and `(list* A B nil)' is equivalent to `(list A B)'. (Note that this function really is called `list*' in Common Lisp; it is not a name invented for this package like `member*' or `defun*'.) - Function: ldiff LIST SUBLIST If SUBLIST is a sublist of LIST, i.e., is `eq' to one of the cons cells of LIST, then this function returns a copy of the part of LIST up to but not including SUBLIST. For example, `(ldiff x (cddr x))' returns the first two elements of the list `x'. The result is a copy; the original LIST is not modified. If SUBLIST is not a sublist of LIST, a copy of the entire LIST is returned. - Function: copy-list LIST This function returns a copy of the list LIST. It copies dotted lists like `(1 2 . 3)' correctly. - Function: copy-tree X &optional VECP This function returns a copy of the tree of cons cells X. Unlike `copy-sequence' (and its alias `copy-list'), which copies only along the `cdr' direction, this function copies (recursively) along both the `car' and the `cdr' directions. If X is not a cons cell, the function simply returns X unchanged. If the optional VECP argument is true, this function copies vectors (recursively) as well as cons cells. - Function: tree-equal X Y &key :test :test-not :key This function compares two trees of cons cells. If X and Y are both cons cells, their `car's and `cdr's are compared recursively. If neither X nor Y is a cons cell, they are compared by `eql', or according to the specified test. The `:key' function, if specified, is applied to the elements of both trees. *Note Sequences::.  File: cl.info, Node: Substitution of Expressions, Next: Lists as Sets, Prev: List Functions, Up: Lists Substitution of Expressions =========================== These functions substitute elements throughout a tree of cons cells. (*Note Sequence Functions::, for the `substitute' function, which works on just the top-level elements of a list.) - Function: subst NEW OLD TREE &key :test :test-not :key This function substitutes occurrences of OLD with NEW in TREE, a tree of cons cells. It returns a substituted tree, which will be a copy except that it may share storage with the argument TREE in parts where no substitutions occurred. The original TREE is not modified. This function recurses on, and compares against OLD, both `car's and `cdr's of the component cons cells. If OLD is itself a cons cell, then matching cells in the tree are substituted as usual without recursively substituting in that cell. Comparisons with OLD are done according to the specified test (`eql' by default). The `:key' function is applied to the elements of the tree but not to OLD. - Function: nsubst NEW OLD TREE &key :test :test-not :key This function is like `subst', except that it works by destructive modification (by `setcar' or `setcdr') rather than copying. The `subst-if', `subst-if-not', `nsubst-if', and `nsubst-if-not' functions are defined similarly. - Function: sublis ALIST TREE &key :test :test-not :key This function is like `subst', except that it takes an association list ALIST of OLD-NEW pairs. Each element of the tree (after applying the `:key' function, if any), is compared with the `car's of ALIST; if it matches, it is replaced by the corresponding `cdr'. - Function: nsublis ALIST TREE &key :test :test-not :key This is a destructive version of `sublis'.  File: cl.info, Node: Lists as Sets, Next: Association Lists, Prev: Substitution of Expressions, Up: Lists Lists as Sets ============= These functions perform operations on lists which represent sets of elements. - Function: member ITEM LIST This MacLisp-compatible function searches LIST for an element which is `equal' to ITEM. The `member' function is built-in to Emacs 19; this package defines it equivalently in Emacs 18. See the following function for a Common-Lisp compatible version. - Function: member* ITEM LIST &key :test :test-not :key This function searches LIST for an element matching ITEM. If a match is found, it returns the cons cell whose `car' was the matching element. Otherwise, it returns `nil'. Elements are compared by `eql' by default; you can use the `:test', `:test-not', and `:key' arguments to modify this behavior. *Note Sequences::. Note that this function's name is suffixed by `*' to avoid the incompatible `member' function defined in Emacs 19. (That function uses `equal' for comparisons; it is equivalent to `(member* ITEM LIST :test 'equal)'.) The `member-if' and `member-if-not' functions analogously search for elements which satisfy a given predicate. - Function: tailp SUBLIST LIST This function returns `t' if SUBLIST is a sublist of LIST, i.e., if SUBLIST is `eql' to LIST or to any of its `cdr's. - Function: adjoin ITEM LIST &key :test :test-not :key This function conses ITEM onto the front of LIST, like `(cons ITEM LIST)', but only if ITEM is not already present on the list (as determined by `member*'). If a `:key' argument is specified, it is applied to ITEM as well as to the elements of LIST during the search, on the reasoning that ITEM is "about" to become part of the list. - Function: union LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This function combines two lists which represent sets of items, returning a list that represents the union of those two sets. The result list will contain all items which appear in LIST1 or LIST2, and no others. If an item appears in both LIST1 and LIST2 it will be copied only once. If an item is duplicated in LIST1 or LIST2, it is undefined whether or not that duplication will survive in the result list. The order of elements in the result list is also undefined. - Function: nunion LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This is a destructive version of `union'; rather than copying, it tries to reuse the storage of the argument lists if possible. - Function: intersection LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This function computes the intersection of the sets represented by LIST1 and LIST2. It returns the list of items which appear in both LIST1 and LIST2. - Function: nintersection LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This is a destructive version of `intersection'. It tries to reuse storage of LIST1 rather than copying. It does *not* reuse the storage of LIST2. - Function: set-difference LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This function computes the "set difference" of LIST1 and LIST2, i.e., the set of elements that appear in LIST1 but *not* in LIST2. - Function: nset-difference LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This is a destructive `set-difference', which will try to reuse LIST1 if possible. - Function: set-exclusive-or LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This function computes the "set exclusive or" of LIST1 and LIST2, i.e., the set of elements that appear in exactly one of LIST1 and LIST2. - Function: nset-exclusive-or LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This is a destructive `set-exclusive-or', which will try to reuse LIST1 and LIST2 if possible. - Function: subsetp LIST1 LIST2 &key :test :test-not :key This function checks whether LIST1 represents a subset of LIST2, i.e., whether every element of LIST1 also appears in LIST2.  File: cl.info, Node: Association Lists, Prev: Lists as Sets, Up: Lists Association Lists ================= An "association list" is a list representing a mapping from one set of values to another; any list whose elements are cons cells is an association list. - Function: assoc* ITEM A-LIST &key :test :test-not :key This function searches the association list A-LIST for an element whose `car' matches (in the sense of `:test', `:test-not', and `:key', or by comparison with `eql') a given ITEM. It returns the matching element, if any, otherwise `nil'. It ignores elements of A-LIST which are not cons cells. (This corresponds to the behavior of `assq' and `assoc' in Emacs Lisp; Common Lisp's `assoc' ignores `nil's but considers any other non-cons elements of A-LIST to be an error.) - Function: rassoc* ITEM A-LIST &key :test :test-not :key This function searches for an element whose `cdr' matches ITEM. If A-LIST represents a mapping, this applies the inverse of the mapping to ITEM. - Function: rassoc ITEM A-LIST This function searches like `rassoc*' with a `:test' argument of `equal'. It is analogous to Emacs Lisp's standard `assoc' function, which derives from the MacLisp rather than the Common Lisp tradition. The `assoc-if', `assoc-if-not', `rassoc-if', and `rassoc-if-not' functions are defined similarly. Two simple functions for constructing association lists are: - Function: acons KEY VALUE ALIST This is equivalent to `(cons (cons KEY VALUE) ALIST)'. - Function: pairlis KEYS VALUES &optional ALIST This is equivalent to `(nconc (mapcar* 'cons KEYS VALUES) ALIST)'.  File: cl.info, Node: Hash Tables, Next: Structures, Prev: Lists, Up: Top Hash Tables *********** Hash tables are now implemented directly in the C code and documented in *Note Hash Tables: (lispref)Hash Tables.