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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
651f374c 3@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003,
ceb4c4d3 4@c 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6@setfilename ../info/lists
7@node Lists, Sequences Arrays Vectors, Strings and Characters, Top
8@chapter Lists
9@cindex list
10@cindex element (of list)
11
12 A @dfn{list} represents a sequence of zero or more elements (which may
13be any Lisp objects). The important difference between lists and
14vectors is that two or more lists can share part of their structure; in
15addition, you can insert or delete elements in a list without copying
16the whole list.
17
18@menu
19* Cons Cells:: How lists are made out of cons cells.
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20* List-related Predicates:: Is this object a list? Comparing two lists.
21* List Elements:: Extracting the pieces of a list.
22* Building Lists:: Creating list structure.
23* Modifying Lists:: Storing new pieces into an existing list.
24* Sets And Lists:: A list can represent a finite mathematical set.
25* Association Lists:: A list can represent a finite relation or mapping.
a99eb78d 26* Rings:: Managing a fixed-size ring of objects.
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27@end menu
28
29@node Cons Cells
30@section Lists and Cons Cells
31@cindex lists and cons cells
32@cindex @code{nil} and lists
33
34 Lists in Lisp are not a primitive data type; they are built up from
2b3fc6c3 35@dfn{cons cells}. A cons cell is a data object that represents an
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36ordered pair. That is, it has two slots, and each slot @dfn{holds}, or
37@dfn{refers to}, some Lisp object. One slot is known as the @sc{car},
38and the other is known as the @sc{cdr}. (These names are traditional;
39see @ref{Cons Cell Type}.) @sc{cdr} is pronounced ``could-er.''
73804d4b 40
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41 We say that ``the @sc{car} of this cons cell is'' whatever object
42its @sc{car} slot currently holds, and likewise for the @sc{cdr}.
43
44 A list is a series of cons cells ``chained together,'' so that each
05aea714 45cell refers to the next one. There is one cons cell for each element of
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46the list. By convention, the @sc{car}s of the cons cells hold the
47elements of the list, and the @sc{cdr}s are used to chain the list: the
48@sc{cdr} slot of each cons cell refers to the following cons cell. The
49@sc{cdr} of the last cons cell is @code{nil}. This asymmetry between
50the @sc{car} and the @sc{cdr} is entirely a matter of convention; at the
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51level of cons cells, the @sc{car} and @sc{cdr} slots have the same
52characteristics.
53
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54@cindex true list
55 Since @code{nil} is the conventional value to put in the @sc{cdr} of
56the last cons cell in the list, we call that case a @dfn{true list}.
57
58 In Lisp, we consider the symbol @code{nil} a list as well as a
59symbol; it is the list with no elements. For convenience, the symbol
60@code{nil} is considered to have @code{nil} as its @sc{cdr} (and also
61as its @sc{car}). Therefore, the @sc{cdr} of a true list is always a
62true list.
63
64@cindex dotted list
65@cindex circular list
66 If the @sc{cdr} of a list's last cons cell is some other value,
67neither @code{nil} nor another cons cell, we call the structure a
68@dfn{dotted list}, since its printed representation would use
69@samp{.}. There is one other possibility: some cons cell's @sc{cdr}
70could point to one of the previous cons cells in the list. We call
71that structure a @dfn{circular list}.
72
73 For some purposes, it does not matter whether a list is true,
74circular or dotted. If the program doesn't look far enough down the
75list to see the @sc{cdr} of the final cons cell, it won't care.
76However, some functions that operate on lists demand true lists and
77signal errors if given a dotted list. Most functions that try to find
78the end of a list enter infinite loops if given a circular list.
79
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80@cindex list structure
81 Because most cons cells are used as part of lists, the phrase
82@dfn{list structure} has come to mean any structure made out of cons
83cells.
84
3fd64c56 85 The @sc{cdr} of any nonempty true list @var{l} is a list containing all the
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86elements of @var{l} except the first.
87
2b3fc6c3 88 @xref{Cons Cell Type}, for the read and print syntax of cons cells and
5838fa52 89lists, and for ``box and arrow'' illustrations of lists.
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90
91@node List-related Predicates
92@section Predicates on Lists
93
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94 The following predicates test whether a Lisp object is an atom,
95whether it is a cons cell or is a list, or whether it is the
96distinguished object @code{nil}. (Many of these predicates can be
97defined in terms of the others, but they are used so often that it is
98worth having all of them.)
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99
100@defun consp object
101This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a cons cell, @code{nil}
102otherwise. @code{nil} is not a cons cell, although it @emph{is} a list.
103@end defun
104
105@defun atom object
106@cindex atoms
107This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is an atom, @code{nil}
108otherwise. All objects except cons cells are atoms. The symbol
109@code{nil} is an atom and is also a list; it is the only Lisp object
2b3fc6c3 110that is both.
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111
112@example
113(atom @var{object}) @equiv{} (not (consp @var{object}))
114@end example
115@end defun
116
117@defun listp object
118This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a cons cell or
119@code{nil}. Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}.
120
121@example
122@group
123(listp '(1))
124 @result{} t
125@end group
126@group
127(listp '())
128 @result{} t
129@end group
130@end example
131@end defun
132
133@defun nlistp object
134This function is the opposite of @code{listp}: it returns @code{t} if
135@var{object} is not a list. Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}.
136
137@example
138(listp @var{object}) @equiv{} (not (nlistp @var{object}))
139@end example
140@end defun
141
142@defun null object
143This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is @code{nil}, and
144returns @code{nil} otherwise. This function is identical to @code{not},
145but as a matter of clarity we use @code{null} when @var{object} is
146considered a list and @code{not} when it is considered a truth value
147(see @code{not} in @ref{Combining Conditions}).
148
149@example
150@group
151(null '(1))
152 @result{} nil
153@end group
154@group
155(null '())
156 @result{} t
157@end group
158@end example
159@end defun
160
ec221d13 161@need 2000
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162
163@node List Elements
164@section Accessing Elements of Lists
165@cindex list elements
166
167@defun car cons-cell
b6954afd 168This function returns the value referred to by the first slot of the
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169cons cell @var{cons-cell}. Expressed another way, this function
170returns the @sc{car} of @var{cons-cell}.
171
172As a special case, if @var{cons-cell} is @code{nil}, then @code{car}
173is defined to return @code{nil}; therefore, any list is a valid argument
174for @code{car}. An error is signaled if the argument is not a cons cell
175or @code{nil}.
176
177@example
178@group
179(car '(a b c))
180 @result{} a
181@end group
182@group
183(car '())
184 @result{} nil
185@end group
186@end example
187@end defun
188
189@defun cdr cons-cell
b6954afd 190This function returns the value referred to by the second slot of
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191the cons cell @var{cons-cell}. Expressed another way, this function
192returns the @sc{cdr} of @var{cons-cell}.
193
194As a special case, if @var{cons-cell} is @code{nil}, then @code{cdr}
195is defined to return @code{nil}; therefore, any list is a valid argument
196for @code{cdr}. An error is signaled if the argument is not a cons cell
197or @code{nil}.
198
199@example
200@group
201(cdr '(a b c))
202 @result{} (b c)
203@end group
204@group
205(cdr '())
206 @result{} nil
207@end group
208@end example
209@end defun
210
211@defun car-safe object
212This function lets you take the @sc{car} of a cons cell while avoiding
213errors for other data types. It returns the @sc{car} of @var{object} if
214@var{object} is a cons cell, @code{nil} otherwise. This is in contrast
215to @code{car}, which signals an error if @var{object} is not a list.
216
217@example
218@group
219(car-safe @var{object})
220@equiv{}
221(let ((x @var{object}))
222 (if (consp x)
223 (car x)
224 nil))
225@end group
226@end example
227@end defun
228
229@defun cdr-safe object
230This function lets you take the @sc{cdr} of a cons cell while
231avoiding errors for other data types. It returns the @sc{cdr} of
232@var{object} if @var{object} is a cons cell, @code{nil} otherwise.
233This is in contrast to @code{cdr}, which signals an error if
234@var{object} is not a list.
235
236@example
237@group
238(cdr-safe @var{object})
239@equiv{}
240(let ((x @var{object}))
241 (if (consp x)
242 (cdr x)
243 nil))
244@end group
245@end example
246@end defun
247
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248@defmac pop listname
249This macro is a way of examining the @sc{car} of a list,
aa9261ac 250and taking it off the list, all at once.
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251
252It operates on the list which is stored in the symbol @var{listname}.
253It removes this element from the list by setting @var{listname}
254to the @sc{cdr} of its old value---but it also returns the @sc{car}
255of that list, which is the element being removed.
256
257@example
258x
259 @result{} (a b c)
260(pop x)
261 @result{} a
262x
263 @result{} (b c)
264@end example
265@end defmac
266
73804d4b 267@defun nth n list
7baeca0c 268@anchor{Definition of nth}
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269This function returns the @var{n}th element of @var{list}. Elements
270are numbered starting with zero, so the @sc{car} of @var{list} is
271element number zero. If the length of @var{list} is @var{n} or less,
272the value is @code{nil}.
273
274If @var{n} is negative, @code{nth} returns the first element of
275@var{list}.
276
277@example
278@group
279(nth 2 '(1 2 3 4))
280 @result{} 3
281@end group
282@group
283(nth 10 '(1 2 3 4))
284 @result{} nil
285@end group
286@group
287(nth -3 '(1 2 3 4))
288 @result{} 1
289
290(nth n x) @equiv{} (car (nthcdr n x))
291@end group
292@end example
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293
294The function @code{elt} is similar, but applies to any kind of sequence.
295For historical reasons, it takes its arguments in the opposite order.
296@xref{Sequence Functions}.
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297@end defun
298
299@defun nthcdr n list
300This function returns the @var{n}th @sc{cdr} of @var{list}. In other
f9f59935 301words, it skips past the first @var{n} links of @var{list} and returns
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302what follows.
303
304If @var{n} is zero or negative, @code{nthcdr} returns all of
305@var{list}. If the length of @var{list} is @var{n} or less,
306@code{nthcdr} returns @code{nil}.
307
308@example
309@group
310(nthcdr 1 '(1 2 3 4))
311 @result{} (2 3 4)
312@end group
313@group
314(nthcdr 10 '(1 2 3 4))
315 @result{} nil
316@end group
317@group
318(nthcdr -3 '(1 2 3 4))
319 @result{} (1 2 3 4)
320@end group
321@end example
322@end defun
323
dbda27d1 324@defun last list &optional n
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325This function returns the last link of @var{list}. The @code{car} of
326this link is the list's last element. If @var{list} is null,
327@code{nil} is returned. If @var{n} is non-@code{nil}, the
328@var{n}th-to-last link is returned instead, or the whole of @var{list}
329if @var{n} is bigger than @var{list}'s length.
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330@end defun
331
969fe9b5 332@defun safe-length list
7baeca0c 333@anchor{Definition of safe-length}
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334This function returns the length of @var{list}, with no risk of either
335an error or an infinite loop. It generally returns the number of
336distinct cons cells in the list. However, for circular lists,
337the value is just an upper bound; it is often too large.
f9f59935 338
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339If @var{list} is not @code{nil} or a cons cell, @code{safe-length}
340returns 0.
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341@end defun
342
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343 The most common way to compute the length of a list, when you are not
344worried that it may be circular, is with @code{length}. @xref{Sequence
345Functions}.
346
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347@defun caar cons-cell
348This is the same as @code{(car (car @var{cons-cell}))}.
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349@end defun
350
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351@defun cadr cons-cell
352This is the same as @code{(car (cdr @var{cons-cell}))}
353or @code{(nth 1 @var{cons-cell})}.
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354@end defun
355
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356@defun cdar cons-cell
357This is the same as @code{(cdr (car @var{cons-cell}))}.
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358@end defun
359
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360@defun cddr cons-cell
361This is the same as @code{(cdr (cdr @var{cons-cell}))}
362or @code{(nthcdr 2 @var{cons-cell})}.
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363@end defun
364
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365@defun butlast x &optional n
366This function returns the list @var{x} with the last element,
367or the last @var{n} elements, removed. If @var{n} is greater
368than zero it makes a copy of the list so as not to damage the
369original list. In general, @code{(append (butlast @var{x} @var{n})
370(last @var{x} @var{n}))} will return a list equal to @var{x}.
371@end defun
372
373@defun nbutlast x &optional n
374This is a version of @code{butlast} that works by destructively
375modifying the @code{cdr} of the appropriate element, rather than
376making a copy of the list.
377@end defun
378
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379@node Building Lists
380@comment node-name, next, previous, up
381@section Building Cons Cells and Lists
382@cindex cons cells
383@cindex building lists
384
385 Many functions build lists, as lists reside at the very heart of Lisp.
386@code{cons} is the fundamental list-building function; however, it is
387interesting to note that @code{list} is used more times in the source
388code for Emacs than @code{cons}.
389
390@defun cons object1 object2
a2fdaa28 391This function is the most basic function for building new list
73804d4b 392structure. It creates a new cons cell, making @var{object1} the
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393@sc{car}, and @var{object2} the @sc{cdr}. It then returns the new
394cons cell. The arguments @var{object1} and @var{object2} may be any
395Lisp objects, but most often @var{object2} is a list.
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396
397@example
398@group
399(cons 1 '(2))
400 @result{} (1 2)
401@end group
402@group
403(cons 1 '())
404 @result{} (1)
405@end group
406@group
407(cons 1 2)
408 @result{} (1 . 2)
409@end group
410@end example
411
412@cindex consing
413@code{cons} is often used to add a single element to the front of a
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414list. This is called @dfn{consing the element onto the list}.
415@footnote{There is no strictly equivalent way to add an element to
416the end of a list. You can use @code{(append @var{listname} (list
417@var{newelt}))}, which creates a whole new list by copying @var{listname}
418and adding @var{newelt} to its end. Or you can use @code{(nconc
419@var{listname} (list @var{newelt}))}, which modifies @var{listname}
420by following all the @sc{cdr}s and then replacing the terminating
421@code{nil}. Compare this to adding an element to the beginning of a
422list with @code{cons}, which neither copies nor modifies the list.}
423For example:
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424
425@example
426(setq list (cons newelt list))
427@end example
428
429Note that there is no conflict between the variable named @code{list}
430used in this example and the function named @code{list} described below;
431any symbol can serve both purposes.
432@end defun
433
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434@defmac push newelt listname
435This macro provides an alternative way to write
436@code{(setq @var{listname} (cons @var{newelt} @var{listname}))}.
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437
438@example
177c0ea7 439(setq l '(a b))
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440 @result{} (a b)
441(push 'c l)
442 @result{} (c a b)
443l
444 @result{} (c a b)
445@end example
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446@end defmac
447
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448@defun list &rest objects
449This function creates a list with @var{objects} as its elements. The
450resulting list is always @code{nil}-terminated. If no @var{objects}
451are given, the empty list is returned.
452
453@example
454@group
455(list 1 2 3 4 5)
456 @result{} (1 2 3 4 5)
457@end group
458@group
459(list 1 2 '(3 4 5) 'foo)
460 @result{} (1 2 (3 4 5) foo)
461@end group
462@group
463(list)
464 @result{} nil
465@end group
466@end example
467@end defun
468
469@defun make-list length object
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470This function creates a list of @var{length} elements, in which each
471element is @var{object}. Compare @code{make-list} with
472@code{make-string} (@pxref{Creating Strings}).
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473
474@example
475@group
476(make-list 3 'pigs)
477 @result{} (pigs pigs pigs)
478@end group
479@group
480(make-list 0 'pigs)
481 @result{} nil
482@end group
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483@group
484(setq l (make-list 3 '(a b))
485 @result{} ((a b) (a b) (a b))
486(eq (car l) (cadr l))
487 @result{} t
488@end group
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489@end example
490@end defun
491
492@defun append &rest sequences
493@cindex copying lists
494This function returns a list containing all the elements of
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495@var{sequences}. The @var{sequences} may be lists, vectors,
496bool-vectors, or strings, but the last one should usually be a list.
497All arguments except the last one are copied, so none of the arguments
498is altered. (See @code{nconc} in @ref{Rearrangement}, for a way to join
499lists with no copying.)
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500
501More generally, the final argument to @code{append} may be any Lisp
502object. The final argument is not copied or converted; it becomes the
503@sc{cdr} of the last cons cell in the new list. If the final argument
504is itself a list, then its elements become in effect elements of the
505result list. If the final element is not a list, the result is a
948caddf 506dotted list since its final @sc{cdr} is not @code{nil} as required
2b3fc6c3 507in a true list.
73804d4b 508
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509In Emacs 20 and before, the @code{append} function also allowed
510integers as (non last) arguments. It converted them to strings of
511digits, making up the decimal print representation of the integer, and
512then used the strings instead of the original integers. This obsolete
513usage no longer works. The proper way to convert an integer to a
514decimal number in this way is with @code{format} (@pxref{Formatting
515Strings}) or @code{number-to-string} (@pxref{String Conversion}).
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516@end defun
517
518 Here is an example of using @code{append}:
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519
520@example
521@group
522(setq trees '(pine oak))
523 @result{} (pine oak)
524(setq more-trees (append '(maple birch) trees))
525 @result{} (maple birch pine oak)
526@end group
527
528@group
529trees
530 @result{} (pine oak)
531more-trees
532 @result{} (maple birch pine oak)
533@end group
534@group
535(eq trees (cdr (cdr more-trees)))
536 @result{} t
537@end group
538@end example
539
7dd3d99f 540 You can see how @code{append} works by looking at a box diagram. The
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541variable @code{trees} is set to the list @code{(pine oak)} and then the
542variable @code{more-trees} is set to the list @code{(maple birch pine
543oak)}. However, the variable @code{trees} continues to refer to the
544original list:
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545
546@smallexample
547@group
548more-trees trees
549| |
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550| --- --- --- --- -> --- --- --- ---
551 --> | | |--> | | |--> | | |--> | | |--> nil
552 --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
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553 | | | |
554 | | | |
555 --> maple -->birch --> pine --> oak
556@end group
557@end smallexample
558
7dd3d99f 559 An empty sequence contributes nothing to the value returned by
73804d4b 560@code{append}. As a consequence of this, a final @code{nil} argument
7dd3d99f 561forces a copy of the previous argument:
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562
563@example
564@group
565trees
566 @result{} (pine oak)
567@end group
568@group
969fe9b5 569(setq wood (append trees nil))
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570 @result{} (pine oak)
571@end group
572@group
573wood
574 @result{} (pine oak)
575@end group
576@group
577(eq wood trees)
578 @result{} nil
579@end group
580@end example
581
582@noindent
583This once was the usual way to copy a list, before the function
584@code{copy-sequence} was invented. @xref{Sequences Arrays Vectors}.
585
7dd3d99f 586 Here we show the use of vectors and strings as arguments to @code{append}:
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587
588@example
589@group
590(append [a b] "cd" nil)
591 @result{} (a b 99 100)
592@end group
593@end example
594
7dd3d99f 595 With the help of @code{apply} (@pxref{Calling Functions}), we can append
a9f0a989 596all the lists in a list of lists:
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597
598@example
599@group
600(apply 'append '((a b c) nil (x y z) nil))
601 @result{} (a b c x y z)
602@end group
603@end example
604
7dd3d99f 605 If no @var{sequences} are given, @code{nil} is returned:
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606
607@example
608@group
609(append)
610 @result{} nil
611@end group
612@end example
613
7dd3d99f 614 Here are some examples where the final argument is not a list:
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615
616@example
617(append '(x y) 'z)
bfe721d1 618 @result{} (x y . z)
2b3fc6c3 619(append '(x y) [z])
bfe721d1 620 @result{} (x y . [z])
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621@end example
622
623@noindent
624The second example shows that when the final argument is a sequence but
625not a list, the sequence's elements do not become elements of the
626resulting list. Instead, the sequence becomes the final @sc{cdr}, like
627any other non-list final argument.
73804d4b 628
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629@defun reverse list
630This function creates a new list whose elements are the elements of
631@var{list}, but in reverse order. The original argument @var{list} is
632@emph{not} altered.
633
634@example
635@group
636(setq x '(1 2 3 4))
637 @result{} (1 2 3 4)
638@end group
639@group
640(reverse x)
641 @result{} (4 3 2 1)
642x
643 @result{} (1 2 3 4)
644@end group
645@end example
646@end defun
647
84c3f248 648@defun copy-tree tree &optional vecp
948caddf 649This function returns a copy of the tree @code{tree}. If @var{tree} is a
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650cons cell, this makes a new cons cell with the same @sc{car} and
651@sc{cdr}, then recursively copies the @sc{car} and @sc{cdr} in the
652same way.
653
654Normally, when @var{tree} is anything other than a cons cell,
655@code{copy-tree} simply returns @var{tree}. However, if @var{vecp} is
656non-@code{nil}, it copies vectors too (and operates recursively on
657their elements).
658@end defun
659
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660@defun number-sequence from &optional to separation
661This returns a list of numbers starting with @var{from} and
662incrementing by @var{separation}, and ending at or just before
663@var{to}. @var{separation} can be positive or negative and defaults
664to 1. If @var{to} is @code{nil} or numerically equal to @var{from},
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665the value is the one-element list @code{(@var{from})}. If @var{to} is
666less than @var{from} with a positive @var{separation}, or greater than
667@var{from} with a negative @var{separation}, the value is @code{nil}
668because those arguments specify an empty sequence.
669
670If @var{separation} is 0 and @var{to} is neither @code{nil} nor
671numerically equal to @var{from}, @code{number-sequence} signals an
672error, since those arguments specify an infinite sequence.
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673
674All arguments can be integers or floating point numbers. However,
675floating point arguments can be tricky, because floating point
676arithmetic is inexact. For instance, depending on the machine, it may
677quite well happen that @code{(number-sequence 0.4 0.6 0.2)} returns
948caddf 678the one element list @code{(0.4)}, whereas
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679@code{(number-sequence 0.4 0.8 0.2)} returns a list with three
680elements. The @var{n}th element of the list is computed by the exact
681formula @code{(+ @var{from} (* @var{n} @var{separation}))}. Thus, if
682one wants to make sure that @var{to} is included in the list, one can
683pass an expression of this exact type for @var{to}. Alternatively,
684one can replace @var{to} with a slightly larger value (or a slightly
685more negative value if @var{separation} is negative).
686
687Some examples:
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688
689@example
690(number-sequence 4 9)
691 @result{} (4 5 6 7 8 9)
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692(number-sequence 9 4 -1)
693 @result{} (9 8 7 6 5 4)
694(number-sequence 9 4 -2)
695 @result{} (9 7 5)
696(number-sequence 8)
697 @result{} (8)
698(number-sequence 8 5)
699 @result{} nil
700(number-sequence 5 8 -1)
701 @result{} nil
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702(number-sequence 1.5 6 2)
703 @result{} (1.5 3.5 5.5)
704@end example
705@end defun
706
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707@node Modifying Lists
708@section Modifying Existing List Structure
f1e2c45e 709@cindex destructive list operations
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710
711 You can modify the @sc{car} and @sc{cdr} contents of a cons cell with the
177c0ea7 712primitives @code{setcar} and @code{setcdr}. We call these ``destructive''
f1e2c45e 713operations because they change existing list structure.
73804d4b 714
0ff13af9 715@cindex CL note---@code{rplaca} vs @code{setcar}
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716@quotation
717@findex rplaca
718@findex rplacd
719@b{Common Lisp note:} Common Lisp uses functions @code{rplaca} and
720@code{rplacd} to alter list structure; they change structure the same
721way as @code{setcar} and @code{setcdr}, but the Common Lisp functions
722return the cons cell while @code{setcar} and @code{setcdr} return the
723new @sc{car} or @sc{cdr}.
724@end quotation
725
726@menu
727* Setcar:: Replacing an element in a list.
728* Setcdr:: Replacing part of the list backbone.
729 This can be used to remove or add elements.
730* Rearrangement:: Reordering the elements in a list; combining lists.
731@end menu
732
733@node Setcar
734@subsection Altering List Elements with @code{setcar}
735
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736 Changing the @sc{car} of a cons cell is done with @code{setcar}. When
737used on a list, @code{setcar} replaces one element of a list with a
738different element.
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739
740@defun setcar cons object
741This function stores @var{object} as the new @sc{car} of @var{cons},
74490e55 742replacing its previous @sc{car}. In other words, it changes the
b6954afd 743@sc{car} slot of @var{cons} to refer to @var{object}. It returns the
74490e55 744value @var{object}. For example:
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745
746@example
747@group
748(setq x '(1 2))
749 @result{} (1 2)
750@end group
751@group
752(setcar x 4)
753 @result{} 4
754@end group
755@group
756x
757 @result{} (4 2)
758@end group
759@end example
760@end defun
761
762 When a cons cell is part of the shared structure of several lists,
763storing a new @sc{car} into the cons changes one element of each of
764these lists. Here is an example:
765
766@example
767@group
768;; @r{Create two lists that are partly shared.}
769(setq x1 '(a b c))
770 @result{} (a b c)
771(setq x2 (cons 'z (cdr x1)))
772 @result{} (z b c)
773@end group
774
775@group
776;; @r{Replace the @sc{car} of a shared link.}
777(setcar (cdr x1) 'foo)
778 @result{} foo
779x1 ; @r{Both lists are changed.}
780 @result{} (a foo c)
781x2
782 @result{} (z foo c)
783@end group
784
785@group
786;; @r{Replace the @sc{car} of a link that is not shared.}
787(setcar x1 'baz)
788 @result{} baz
789x1 ; @r{Only one list is changed.}
790 @result{} (baz foo c)
791x2
792 @result{} (z foo c)
793@end group
794@end example
795
796 Here is a graphical depiction of the shared structure of the two lists
797in the variables @code{x1} and @code{x2}, showing why replacing @code{b}
798changes them both:
799
800@example
801@group
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802 --- --- --- --- --- ---
803x1---> | | |----> | | |--> | | |--> nil
804 --- --- --- --- --- ---
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805 | --> | |
806 | | | |
807 --> a | --> b --> c
808 |
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809 --- --- |
810x2--> | | |--
811 --- ---
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812 |
813 |
814 --> z
815@end group
816@end example
817
818 Here is an alternative form of box diagram, showing the same relationship:
819
820@example
821@group
822x1:
823 -------------- -------------- --------------
824| car | cdr | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
825| a | o------->| b | o------->| c | nil |
826| | | -->| | | | | |
827 -------------- | -------------- --------------
828 |
829x2: |
830 -------------- |
831| car | cdr | |
832| z | o----
833| | |
834 --------------
835@end group
836@end example
837
838@node Setcdr
839@subsection Altering the CDR of a List
840
841 The lowest-level primitive for modifying a @sc{cdr} is @code{setcdr}:
842
843@defun setcdr cons object
2b3fc6c3 844This function stores @var{object} as the new @sc{cdr} of @var{cons},
74490e55 845replacing its previous @sc{cdr}. In other words, it changes the
b6954afd 846@sc{cdr} slot of @var{cons} to refer to @var{object}. It returns the
74490e55 847value @var{object}.
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848@end defun
849
850 Here is an example of replacing the @sc{cdr} of a list with a
851different list. All but the first element of the list are removed in
852favor of a different sequence of elements. The first element is
853unchanged, because it resides in the @sc{car} of the list, and is not
854reached via the @sc{cdr}.
855
856@example
857@group
858(setq x '(1 2 3))
859 @result{} (1 2 3)
860@end group
861@group
862(setcdr x '(4))
863 @result{} (4)
864@end group
865@group
866x
867 @result{} (1 4)
868@end group
869@end example
870
871 You can delete elements from the middle of a list by altering the
872@sc{cdr}s of the cons cells in the list. For example, here we delete
873the second element, @code{b}, from the list @code{(a b c)}, by changing
74490e55 874the @sc{cdr} of the first cons cell:
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875
876@example
877@group
878(setq x1 '(a b c))
879 @result{} (a b c)
880(setcdr x1 (cdr (cdr x1)))
881 @result{} (c)
882x1
883 @result{} (a c)
884@end group
885@end example
886
bda144f4 887@need 4000
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888 Here is the result in box notation:
889
890@example
891@group
892 --------------------
893 | |
894 -------------- | -------------- | --------------
895| car | cdr | | | car | cdr | -->| car | cdr |
896| a | o----- | b | o-------->| c | nil |
897| | | | | | | | |
898 -------------- -------------- --------------
899@end group
900@end example
901
902@noindent
903The second cons cell, which previously held the element @code{b}, still
904exists and its @sc{car} is still @code{b}, but it no longer forms part
905of this list.
906
907 It is equally easy to insert a new element by changing @sc{cdr}s:
908
909@example
910@group
911(setq x1 '(a b c))
912 @result{} (a b c)
913(setcdr x1 (cons 'd (cdr x1)))
914 @result{} (d b c)
915x1
916 @result{} (a d b c)
917@end group
918@end example
919
920 Here is this result in box notation:
921
922@smallexample
923@group
924 -------------- ------------- -------------
925| car | cdr | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
926| a | o | -->| b | o------->| c | nil |
927| | | | | | | | | | |
928 --------- | -- | ------------- -------------
929 | |
930 ----- --------
931 | |
932 | --------------- |
933 | | car | cdr | |
934 -->| d | o------
935 | | |
936 ---------------
937@end group
938@end smallexample
939
940@node Rearrangement
941@subsection Functions that Rearrange Lists
942@cindex rearrangement of lists
943@cindex modification of lists
944
945 Here are some functions that rearrange lists ``destructively'' by
946modifying the @sc{cdr}s of their component cons cells. We call these
947functions ``destructive'' because they chew up the original lists passed
f1e2c45e
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948to them as arguments, relinking their cons cells to form a new list that
949is the returned value.
73804d4b 950
37680279 951@ifnottex
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RS
952 See @code{delq}, in @ref{Sets And Lists}, for another function
953that modifies cons cells.
37680279 954@end ifnottex
2b3fc6c3
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955@iftex
956 The function @code{delq} in the following section is another example
957of destructive list manipulation.
958@end iftex
959
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960@defun nconc &rest lists
961@cindex concatenating lists
962@cindex joining lists
963This function returns a list containing all the elements of @var{lists}.
964Unlike @code{append} (@pxref{Building Lists}), the @var{lists} are
965@emph{not} copied. Instead, the last @sc{cdr} of each of the
966@var{lists} is changed to refer to the following list. The last of the
967@var{lists} is not altered. For example:
968
969@example
970@group
971(setq x '(1 2 3))
972 @result{} (1 2 3)
973@end group
974@group
975(nconc x '(4 5))
976 @result{} (1 2 3 4 5)
977@end group
978@group
979x
980 @result{} (1 2 3 4 5)
981@end group
982@end example
983
984 Since the last argument of @code{nconc} is not itself modified, it is
985reasonable to use a constant list, such as @code{'(4 5)}, as in the
986above example. For the same reason, the last argument need not be a
987list:
988
989@example
990@group
991(setq x '(1 2 3))
992 @result{} (1 2 3)
993@end group
994@group
995(nconc x 'z)
996 @result{} (1 2 3 . z)
997@end group
998@group
999x
1000 @result{} (1 2 3 . z)
1001@end group
1002@end example
1003
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1004However, the other arguments (all but the last) must be lists.
1005
73804d4b
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1006A common pitfall is to use a quoted constant list as a non-last
1007argument to @code{nconc}. If you do this, your program will change
1008each time you run it! Here is what happens:
1009
1010@smallexample
1011@group
1012(defun add-foo (x) ; @r{We want this function to add}
1013 (nconc '(foo) x)) ; @r{@code{foo} to the front of its arg.}
1014@end group
1015
1016@group
1017(symbol-function 'add-foo)
1018 @result{} (lambda (x) (nconc (quote (foo)) x))
1019@end group
1020
1021@group
1022(setq xx (add-foo '(1 2))) ; @r{It seems to work.}
1023 @result{} (foo 1 2)
1024@end group
1025@group
1026(setq xy (add-foo '(3 4))) ; @r{What happened?}
1027 @result{} (foo 1 2 3 4)
1028@end group
1029@group
1030(eq xx xy)
1031 @result{} t
1032@end group
1033
1034@group
1035(symbol-function 'add-foo)
1036 @result{} (lambda (x) (nconc (quote (foo 1 2 3 4) x)))
1037@end group
1038@end smallexample
1039@end defun
1040
1041@defun nreverse list
1042@cindex reversing a list
1043 This function reverses the order of the elements of @var{list}.
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1044Unlike @code{reverse}, @code{nreverse} alters its argument by reversing
1045the @sc{cdr}s in the cons cells forming the list. The cons cell that
74490e55 1046used to be the last one in @var{list} becomes the first cons cell of the
2b3fc6c3 1047value.
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1048
1049 For example:
1050
1051@example
1052@group
a9749dab
RS
1053(setq x '(a b c))
1054 @result{} (a b c)
73804d4b
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1055@end group
1056@group
1057x
a9749dab 1058 @result{} (a b c)
73804d4b 1059(nreverse x)
a9749dab 1060 @result{} (c b a)
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1061@end group
1062@group
74490e55 1063;; @r{The cons cell that was first is now last.}
73804d4b 1064x
a9749dab 1065 @result{} (a)
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1066@end group
1067@end example
1068
1069 To avoid confusion, we usually store the result of @code{nreverse}
1070back in the same variable which held the original list:
1071
1072@example
1073(setq x (nreverse x))
1074@end example
1075
1076 Here is the @code{nreverse} of our favorite example, @code{(a b c)},
1077presented graphically:
1078
1079@smallexample
1080@group
1081@r{Original list head:} @r{Reversed list:}
1082 ------------- ------------- ------------
1083| car | cdr | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
1084| a | nil |<-- | b | o |<-- | c | o |
1085| | | | | | | | | | | | |
1086 ------------- | --------- | - | -------- | -
1087 | | | |
1088 ------------- ------------
1089@end group
1090@end smallexample
1091@end defun
1092
1093@defun sort list predicate
1094@cindex stable sort
1095@cindex sorting lists
1096This function sorts @var{list} stably, though destructively, and
1097returns the sorted list. It compares elements using @var{predicate}. A
1098stable sort is one in which elements with equal sort keys maintain their
1099relative order before and after the sort. Stability is important when
1100successive sorts are used to order elements according to different
1101criteria.
1102
1103The argument @var{predicate} must be a function that accepts two
1104arguments. It is called with two elements of @var{list}. To get an
c72c5004 1105increasing order sort, the @var{predicate} should return non-@code{nil} if the
73804d4b
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1106first element is ``less than'' the second, or @code{nil} if not.
1107
a9f0a989
RS
1108The comparison function @var{predicate} must give reliable results for
1109any given pair of arguments, at least within a single call to
1110@code{sort}. It must be @dfn{antisymmetric}; that is, if @var{a} is
1111less than @var{b}, @var{b} must not be less than @var{a}. It must be
1112@dfn{transitive}---that is, if @var{a} is less than @var{b}, and @var{b}
1113is less than @var{c}, then @var{a} must be less than @var{c}. If you
1114use a comparison function which does not meet these requirements, the
1115result of @code{sort} is unpredictable.
1116
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1117The destructive aspect of @code{sort} is that it rearranges the cons
1118cells forming @var{list} by changing @sc{cdr}s. A nondestructive sort
1119function would create new cons cells to store the elements in their
1120sorted order. If you wish to make a sorted copy without destroying the
1121original, copy it first with @code{copy-sequence} and then sort.
1122
1123Sorting does not change the @sc{car}s of the cons cells in @var{list};
1124the cons cell that originally contained the element @code{a} in
1125@var{list} still has @code{a} in its @sc{car} after sorting, but it now
1126appears in a different position in the list due to the change of
1127@sc{cdr}s. For example:
1128
1129@example
1130@group
1131(setq nums '(1 3 2 6 5 4 0))
1132 @result{} (1 3 2 6 5 4 0)
1133@end group
1134@group
1135(sort nums '<)
1136 @result{} (0 1 2 3 4 5 6)
1137@end group
1138@group
1139nums
1140 @result{} (1 2 3 4 5 6)
1141@end group
1142@end example
1143
1144@noindent
f9f59935
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1145@strong{Warning}: Note that the list in @code{nums} no longer contains
11460; this is the same cons cell that it was before, but it is no longer
1147the first one in the list. Don't assume a variable that formerly held
1148the argument now holds the entire sorted list! Instead, save the result
1149of @code{sort} and use that. Most often we store the result back into
1150the variable that held the original list:
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1151
1152@example
1153(setq nums (sort nums '<))
1154@end example
1155
1156@xref{Sorting}, for more functions that perform sorting.
1157See @code{documentation} in @ref{Accessing Documentation}, for a
1158useful example of @code{sort}.
1159@end defun
1160
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1161@node Sets And Lists
1162@section Using Lists as Sets
1163@cindex lists as sets
1164@cindex sets
1165
1166 A list can represent an unordered mathematical set---simply consider a
1167value an element of a set if it appears in the list, and ignore the
1168order of the list. To form the union of two sets, use @code{append} (as
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1169long as you don't mind having duplicate elements). You can remove
1170@code{equal} duplicates using @code{delete-dups}. Other useful
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1171functions for sets include @code{memq} and @code{delq}, and their
1172@code{equal} versions, @code{member} and @code{delete}.
1173
b5ef0e92 1174@cindex CL note---lack @code{union}, @code{intersection}
73804d4b
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1175@quotation
1176@b{Common Lisp note:} Common Lisp has functions @code{union} (which
1177avoids duplicate elements) and @code{intersection} for set operations,
1178but GNU Emacs Lisp does not have them. You can write them in Lisp if
1179you wish.
1180@end quotation
1181
1182@defun memq object list
1183@cindex membership in a list
1184This function tests to see whether @var{object} is a member of
1185@var{list}. If it is, @code{memq} returns a list starting with the
1186first occurrence of @var{object}. Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}.
1187The letter @samp{q} in @code{memq} says that it uses @code{eq} to
1188compare @var{object} against the elements of the list. For example:
1189
1190@example
1191@group
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1192(memq 'b '(a b c b a))
1193 @result{} (b c b a)
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1194@end group
1195@group
1196(memq '(2) '((1) (2))) ; @r{@code{(2)} and @code{(2)} are not @code{eq}.}
1197 @result{} nil
1198@end group
1199@end example
1200@end defun
1201
1202@defun delq object list
1203@cindex deletion of elements
1204This function destructively removes all elements @code{eq} to
1205@var{object} from @var{list}. The letter @samp{q} in @code{delq} says
1206that it uses @code{eq} to compare @var{object} against the elements of
f68446ef 1207the list, like @code{memq} and @code{remq}.
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1208@end defun
1209
1210When @code{delq} deletes elements from the front of the list, it does so
1211simply by advancing down the list and returning a sublist that starts
1212after those elements:
1213
1214@example
1215@group
1216(delq 'a '(a b c)) @equiv{} (cdr '(a b c))
1217@end group
1218@end example
1219
1220When an element to be deleted appears in the middle of the list,
1221removing it involves changing the @sc{cdr}s (@pxref{Setcdr}).
1222
1223@example
1224@group
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1225(setq sample-list '(a b c (4)))
1226 @result{} (a b c (4))
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RS
1227@end group
1228@group
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1229(delq 'a sample-list)
1230 @result{} (b c (4))
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1231@end group
1232@group
1233sample-list
2b3fc6c3 1234 @result{} (a b c (4))
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1235@end group
1236@group
2b3fc6c3 1237(delq 'c sample-list)
34e1af81 1238 @result{} (a b (4))
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RS
1239@end group
1240@group
1241sample-list
34e1af81 1242 @result{} (a b (4))
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1243@end group
1244@end example
1245
bfe721d1
KH
1246Note that @code{(delq 'c sample-list)} modifies @code{sample-list} to
1247splice out the third element, but @code{(delq 'a sample-list)} does not
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1248splice anything---it just returns a shorter list. Don't assume that a
1249variable which formerly held the argument @var{list} now has fewer
1250elements, or that it still holds the original list! Instead, save the
1251result of @code{delq} and use that. Most often we store the result back
1252into the variable that held the original list:
1253
1254@example
1255(setq flowers (delq 'rose flowers))
1256@end example
1257
1258In the following example, the @code{(4)} that @code{delq} attempts to match
1259and the @code{(4)} in the @code{sample-list} are not @code{eq}:
1260
1261@example
1262@group
1263(delq '(4) sample-list)
2b3fc6c3 1264 @result{} (a c (4))
73804d4b
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1265@end group
1266@end example
1267
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RS
1268@defun remq object list
1269This function returns a copy of @var{list}, with all elements removed
1270which are @code{eq} to @var{object}. The letter @samp{q} in @code{remq}
1271says that it uses @code{eq} to compare @var{object} against the elements
1272of @code{list}.
1273
1274@example
1275@group
1276(setq sample-list '(a b c a b c))
1277 @result{} (a b c a b c)
1278@end group
1279@group
1280(remq 'a sample-list)
1281 @result{} (b c b c)
1282@end group
1283@group
1284sample-list
1285 @result{} (a b c a b c)
1286@end group
1287@end example
1288@noindent
1289The function @code{delq} offers a way to perform this operation
1290destructively. See @ref{Sets And Lists}.
1291@end defun
1292
1293The following three functions are like @code{memq}, @code{delq} and
1294@code{remq}, but use @code{equal} rather than @code{eq} to compare
1295elements. @xref{Equality Predicates}.
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1296
1297@defun member object list
1298The function @code{member} tests to see whether @var{object} is a member
1299of @var{list}, comparing members with @var{object} using @code{equal}.
1300If @var{object} is a member, @code{member} returns a list starting with
1301its first occurrence in @var{list}. Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}.
1302
1303Compare this with @code{memq}:
1304
1305@example
1306@group
1307(member '(2) '((1) (2))) ; @r{@code{(2)} and @code{(2)} are @code{equal}.}
1308 @result{} ((2))
1309@end group
1310@group
1311(memq '(2) '((1) (2))) ; @r{@code{(2)} and @code{(2)} are not @code{eq}.}
1312 @result{} nil
1313@end group
1314@group
1315;; @r{Two strings with the same contents are @code{equal}.}
1316(member "foo" '("foo" "bar"))
1317 @result{} ("foo" "bar")
1318@end group
1319@end example
1320@end defun
1321
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1322@defun delete object sequence
1323If @code{sequence} is a list, this function destructively removes all
1324elements @code{equal} to @var{object} from @var{sequence}. For lists,
1325@code{delete} is to @code{delq} as @code{member} is to @code{memq}: it
1326uses @code{equal} to compare elements with @var{object}, like
1327@code{member}; when it finds an element that matches, it removes the
1328element just as @code{delq} would.
1329
1330If @code{sequence} is a vector or string, @code{delete} returns a copy
1331of @code{sequence} with all elements @code{equal} to @code{object}
1332removed.
1333
1334For example:
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RS
1335
1336@example
1337@group
1338(delete '(2) '((2) (1) (2)))
b5ef0e92 1339 @result{} ((1))
73804d4b 1340@end group
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1341@group
1342(delete '(2) [(2) (1) (2)])
1343 @result{} [(1)]
1344@end group
1345@end example
1346@end defun
1347
1348@defun remove object sequence
1349This function is the non-destructive counterpart of @code{delete}. If
1350returns a copy of @code{sequence}, a list, vector, or string, with
1351elements @code{equal} to @code{object} removed. For example:
1352
1353@example
1354@group
1355(remove '(2) '((2) (1) (2)))
1356 @result{} ((1))
1357@end group
1358@group
1359(remove '(2) [(2) (1) (2)])
1360 @result{} [(1)]
1361@end group
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1362@end example
1363@end defun
1364
1365@quotation
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1366@b{Common Lisp note:} The functions @code{member}, @code{delete} and
1367@code{remove} in GNU Emacs Lisp are derived from Maclisp, not Common
1368Lisp. The Common Lisp versions do not use @code{equal} to compare
1369elements.
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1370@end quotation
1371
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1372@defun member-ignore-case object list
1373This function is like @code{member}, except that @var{object} should
1374be a string and that it ignores differences in letter-case and text
1375representation: upper-case and lower-case letters are treated as
1376equal, and unibyte strings are converted to multibyte prior to
1377comparison.
42101e87
LT
1378@end defun
1379
1380@defun delete-dups list
1381This function destructively removes all @code{equal} duplicates from
efb47843
LT
1382@var{list}, stores the result in @var{list} and returns it. Of
1383several @code{equal} occurrences of an element in @var{list},
1384@code{delete-dups} keeps the first one.
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1385@end defun
1386
bfe721d1
KH
1387 See also the function @code{add-to-list}, in @ref{Setting Variables},
1388for another way to add an element to a list stored in a variable.
1389
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1390@node Association Lists
1391@section Association Lists
1392@cindex association list
1393@cindex alist
1394
1395 An @dfn{association list}, or @dfn{alist} for short, records a mapping
1396from keys to values. It is a list of cons cells called
74490e55 1397@dfn{associations}: the @sc{car} of each cons cell is the @dfn{key}, and the
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1398@sc{cdr} is the @dfn{associated value}.@footnote{This usage of ``key''
1399is not related to the term ``key sequence''; it means a value used to
1400look up an item in a table. In this case, the table is the alist, and
1401the alist associations are the items.}
1402
1403 Here is an example of an alist. The key @code{pine} is associated with
1404the value @code{cones}; the key @code{oak} is associated with
1405@code{acorns}; and the key @code{maple} is associated with @code{seeds}.
1406
1407@example
1408@group
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1409((pine . cones)
1410 (oak . acorns)
1411 (maple . seeds))
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1412@end group
1413@end example
1414
ece35e15
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1415 Both the values and the keys in an alist may be any Lisp objects.
1416For example, in the following alist, the symbol @code{a} is
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1417associated with the number @code{1}, and the string @code{"b"} is
1418associated with the @emph{list} @code{(2 3)}, which is the @sc{cdr} of
1419the alist element:
1420
1421@example
1422((a . 1) ("b" 2 3))
1423@end example
1424
1425 Sometimes it is better to design an alist to store the associated
1426value in the @sc{car} of the @sc{cdr} of the element. Here is an
a9749dab 1427example of such an alist:
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1428
1429@example
a9749dab 1430((rose red) (lily white) (buttercup yellow))
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1431@end example
1432
1433@noindent
1434Here we regard @code{red} as the value associated with @code{rose}. One
f9f59935 1435advantage of this kind of alist is that you can store other related
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1436information---even a list of other items---in the @sc{cdr} of the
1437@sc{cdr}. One disadvantage is that you cannot use @code{rassq} (see
1438below) to find the element containing a given value. When neither of
1439these considerations is important, the choice is a matter of taste, as
1440long as you are consistent about it for any given alist.
1441
ece35e15 1442 The same alist shown above could be regarded as having the
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1443associated value in the @sc{cdr} of the element; the value associated
1444with @code{rose} would be the list @code{(red)}.
1445
1446 Association lists are often used to record information that you might
1447otherwise keep on a stack, since new associations may be added easily to
1448the front of the list. When searching an association list for an
1449association with a given key, the first one found is returned, if there
1450is more than one.
1451
1452 In Emacs Lisp, it is @emph{not} an error if an element of an
1453association list is not a cons cell. The alist search functions simply
1454ignore such elements. Many other versions of Lisp signal errors in such
1455cases.
1456
1457 Note that property lists are similar to association lists in several
1458respects. A property list behaves like an association list in which
1459each key can occur only once. @xref{Property Lists}, for a comparison
1460of property lists and association lists.
1461
1462@defun assoc key alist
1463This function returns the first association for @var{key} in
1464@var{alist}. It compares @var{key} against the alist elements using
1465@code{equal} (@pxref{Equality Predicates}). It returns @code{nil} if no
1466association in @var{alist} has a @sc{car} @code{equal} to @var{key}.
1467For example:
1468
1469@smallexample
1470(setq trees '((pine . cones) (oak . acorns) (maple . seeds)))
1471 @result{} ((pine . cones) (oak . acorns) (maple . seeds))
1472(assoc 'oak trees)
1473 @result{} (oak . acorns)
1474(cdr (assoc 'oak trees))
1475 @result{} acorns
1476(assoc 'birch trees)
1477 @result{} nil
1478@end smallexample
1479
2b3fc6c3 1480Here is another example, in which the keys and values are not symbols:
73804d4b
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1481
1482@smallexample
1483(setq needles-per-cluster
1484 '((2 "Austrian Pine" "Red Pine")
1485 (3 "Pitch Pine")
1486 (5 "White Pine")))
1487
1488(cdr (assoc 3 needles-per-cluster))
1489 @result{} ("Pitch Pine")
1490(cdr (assoc 2 needles-per-cluster))
1491 @result{} ("Austrian Pine" "Red Pine")
1492@end smallexample
1493@end defun
1494
9f081286
RS
1495 The function @code{assoc-string} is much like @code{assoc} except
1496that it ignores certain differences between strings. @xref{Text
1497Comparison}.
a9f0a989 1498
22697dac
KH
1499@defun rassoc value alist
1500This function returns the first association with value @var{value} in
1501@var{alist}. It returns @code{nil} if no association in @var{alist} has
1502a @sc{cdr} @code{equal} to @var{value}.
1503
1504@code{rassoc} is like @code{assoc} except that it compares the @sc{cdr} of
1505each @var{alist} association instead of the @sc{car}. You can think of
1506this as ``reverse @code{assoc}'', finding the key for a given value.
1507@end defun
1508
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RS
1509@defun assq key alist
1510This function is like @code{assoc} in that it returns the first
1511association for @var{key} in @var{alist}, but it makes the comparison
1512using @code{eq} instead of @code{equal}. @code{assq} returns @code{nil}
1513if no association in @var{alist} has a @sc{car} @code{eq} to @var{key}.
1514This function is used more often than @code{assoc}, since @code{eq} is
1515faster than @code{equal} and most alists use symbols as keys.
1516@xref{Equality Predicates}.
1517
1518@smallexample
1519(setq trees '((pine . cones) (oak . acorns) (maple . seeds)))
1520 @result{} ((pine . cones) (oak . acorns) (maple . seeds))
1521(assq 'pine trees)
1522 @result{} (pine . cones)
1523@end smallexample
1524
1525On the other hand, @code{assq} is not usually useful in alists where the
1526keys may not be symbols:
1527
1528@smallexample
1529(setq leaves
1530 '(("simple leaves" . oak)
1531 ("compound leaves" . horsechestnut)))
1532
1533(assq "simple leaves" leaves)
1534 @result{} nil
1535(assoc "simple leaves" leaves)
1536 @result{} ("simple leaves" . oak)
1537@end smallexample
1538@end defun
1539
1540@defun rassq value alist
1541This function returns the first association with value @var{value} in
1542@var{alist}. It returns @code{nil} if no association in @var{alist} has
1543a @sc{cdr} @code{eq} to @var{value}.
1544
1545@code{rassq} is like @code{assq} except that it compares the @sc{cdr} of
1546each @var{alist} association instead of the @sc{car}. You can think of
1547this as ``reverse @code{assq}'', finding the key for a given value.
1548
1549For example:
1550
1551@smallexample
1552(setq trees '((pine . cones) (oak . acorns) (maple . seeds)))
1553
1554(rassq 'acorns trees)
1555 @result{} (oak . acorns)
1556(rassq 'spores trees)
1557 @result{} nil
1558@end smallexample
1559
ece35e15 1560@code{rassq} cannot search for a value stored in the @sc{car}
73804d4b
RS
1561of the @sc{cdr} of an element:
1562
1563@smallexample
1564(setq colors '((rose red) (lily white) (buttercup yellow)))
1565
1566(rassq 'white colors)
1567 @result{} nil
1568@end smallexample
1569
1570In this case, the @sc{cdr} of the association @code{(lily white)} is not
1571the symbol @code{white}, but rather the list @code{(white)}. This
1572becomes clearer if the association is written in dotted pair notation:
1573
1574@smallexample
1575(lily white) @equiv{} (lily . (white))
1576@end smallexample
1577@end defun
1578
a9749dab 1579@defun assoc-default key alist &optional test default
a46dba07
RS
1580This function searches @var{alist} for a match for @var{key}. For each
1581element of @var{alist}, it compares the element (if it is an atom) or
1582the element's @sc{car} (if it is a cons) against @var{key}, by calling
1583@var{test} with two arguments: the element or its @sc{car}, and
1584@var{key}. The arguments are passed in that order so that you can get
1585useful results using @code{string-match} with an alist that contains
1586regular expressions (@pxref{Regexp Search}). If @var{test} is omitted
1587or @code{nil}, @code{equal} is used for comparison.
1588
1589If an alist element matches @var{key} by this criterion,
1590then @code{assoc-default} returns a value based on this element.
1591If the element is a cons, then the value is the element's @sc{cdr}.
1592Otherwise, the return value is @var{default}.
1593
1594If no alist element matches @var{key}, @code{assoc-default} returns
1595@code{nil}.
1596@end defun
1597
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1598@defun copy-alist alist
1599@cindex copying alists
1600This function returns a two-level deep copy of @var{alist}: it creates a
1601new copy of each association, so that you can alter the associations of
1602the new alist without changing the old one.
1603
1604@smallexample
1605@group
1606(setq needles-per-cluster
1607 '((2 . ("Austrian Pine" "Red Pine"))
2b3fc6c3 1608 (3 . ("Pitch Pine"))
ec221d13 1609@end group
2b3fc6c3 1610 (5 . ("White Pine"))))
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1611@result{}
1612((2 "Austrian Pine" "Red Pine")
2b3fc6c3
RS
1613 (3 "Pitch Pine")
1614 (5 "White Pine"))
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RS
1615
1616(setq copy (copy-alist needles-per-cluster))
1617@result{}
1618((2 "Austrian Pine" "Red Pine")
2b3fc6c3
RS
1619 (3 "Pitch Pine")
1620 (5 "White Pine"))
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1621
1622(eq needles-per-cluster copy)
1623 @result{} nil
1624(equal needles-per-cluster copy)
1625 @result{} t
1626(eq (car needles-per-cluster) (car copy))
1627 @result{} nil
1628(cdr (car (cdr needles-per-cluster)))
2b3fc6c3 1629 @result{} ("Pitch Pine")
ec221d13 1630@group
73804d4b
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1631(eq (cdr (car (cdr needles-per-cluster)))
1632 (cdr (car (cdr copy))))
1633 @result{} t
1634@end group
3e099569 1635@end smallexample
2b3fc6c3
RS
1636
1637 This example shows how @code{copy-alist} makes it possible to change
1638the associations of one copy without affecting the other:
1639
3e099569 1640@smallexample
2b3fc6c3 1641@group
c74c521d 1642(setcdr (assq 3 copy) '("Martian Vacuum Pine"))
2b3fc6c3
RS
1643(cdr (assq 3 needles-per-cluster))
1644 @result{} ("Pitch Pine")
1645@end group
73804d4b
RS
1646@end smallexample
1647@end defun
1648
61b23410 1649@defun assq-delete-all key alist
8241495d 1650This function deletes from @var{alist} all the elements whose @sc{car}
66fd2c72 1651is @code{eq} to @var{key}, much as if you used @code{delq} to delete
19017752 1652each such element one by one. It returns the shortened alist, and
66fd2c72
RS
1653often modifies the original list structure of @var{alist}. For
1654correct results, use the return value of @code{assq-delete-all} rather
1655than looking at the saved value of @var{alist}.
73804d4b 1656
8241495d 1657@example
66fd2c72
RS
1658(setq alist '((foo 1) (bar 2) (foo 3) (lose 4)))
1659 @result{} ((foo 1) (bar 2) (foo 3) (lose 4))
1660(assq-delete-all 'foo alist)
8241495d 1661 @result{} ((bar 2) (lose 4))
66fd2c72
RS
1662alist
1663 @result{} ((foo 1) (bar 2) (lose 4))
8241495d
RS
1664@end example
1665@end defun
ab5796a9 1666
0e6fb1e6
LK
1667@defun rassq-delete-all value alist
1668This function deletes from @var{alist} all the elements whose @sc{cdr}
1669is @code{eq} to @var{value}. It returns the shortened alist, and
1670often modifies the original list structure of @var{alist}.
1671@code{rassq-delete-all} is like @code{assq-delete-all} except that it
1672compares the @sc{cdr} of each @var{alist} association instead of the
1673@sc{car}.
1674@end defun
1675
a99eb78d
RS
1676@node Rings
1677@section Managing a Fixed-Size Ring of Objects
1678
1679@cindex ring data structure
1680 This section describes functions for operating on rings. A
1681@dfn{ring} is a fixed-size data structure that supports insertion,
1682deletion, rotation, and modulo-indexed reference and traversal.
1683
1684@defun make-ring size
1685This returns a new ring capable of holding @var{size} objects.
1686@var{size} should be an integer.
1687@end defun
1688
1689@defun ring-p object
0ff13af9 1690This returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a ring, @code{nil} otherwise.
a99eb78d
RS
1691@end defun
1692
1693@defun ring-size ring
1694This returns the maximum capacity of the @var{ring}.
1695@end defun
1696
1697@defun ring-length ring
1698This returns the number of objects that @var{ring} currently contains.
1699The value will never exceed that returned by @code{ring-size}.
1700@end defun
1701
1702@defun ring-elements ring
eaf664cf 1703This returns a list of the objects in @var{ring}, in order, newest first.
a99eb78d
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1704@end defun
1705
1706@defun ring-copy ring
1707This returns a new ring which is a copy of @var{ring}.
0ff13af9 1708The new ring contains the same (@code{eq}) objects as @var{ring}.
a99eb78d
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1709@end defun
1710
1711@defun ring-empty-p ring
0ff13af9 1712This returns @code{t} if @var{ring} is empty, @code{nil} otherwise.
a99eb78d
RS
1713@end defun
1714
0ff13af9
LT
1715 The newest element in the ring always has index 0. Higher indices
1716correspond to older elements. Indices are computed modulo the ring
1717length. Index @minus{}1 corresponds to the oldest element, @minus{}2
1718to the next-oldest, and so forth.
a99eb78d
RS
1719
1720@defun ring-ref ring index
1721This returns the object in @var{ring} found at index @var{index}.
1722@var{index} may be negative or greater than the ring length. If
1723@var{ring} is empty, @code{ring-ref} signals an error.
1724@end defun
1725
1726@defun ring-insert ring object
1727This inserts @var{object} into @var{ring}, making it the newest
1728element, and returns @var{object}.
1729
1730If the ring is full, insertion removes the oldest element to
1731make room for the new element.
1732@end defun
1733
1734@defun ring-remove ring &optional index
1735Remove an object from @var{ring}, and return that object. The
1736argument @var{index} specifies which item to remove; if it is
1737@code{nil}, that means to remove the oldest item. If @var{ring} is
1738empty, @code{ring-remove} signals an error.
1739@end defun
1740
1741@defun ring-insert-at-beginning ring object
1742This inserts @var{object} into @var{ring}, treating it as the oldest
0ff13af9 1743element. The return value is not significant.
a99eb78d
RS
1744
1745If the ring is full, this function removes the newest element to make
1746room for the inserted element.
1747@end defun
1748
1749@cindex fifo data structure
1750 If you are careful not to exceed the ring size, you can
1751use the ring as a first-in-first-out queue. For example:
1752
1753@lisp
1754(let ((fifo (make-ring 5)))
1755 (mapc (lambda (obj) (ring-insert fifo obj))
1756 '(0 one "two"))
1757 (list (ring-remove fifo) t
1758 (ring-remove fifo) t
1759 (ring-remove fifo)))
1760 @result{} (0 t one t "two")
1761@end lisp
1762
ab5796a9
MB
1763@ignore
1764 arch-tag: 31fb8a4e-4aa8-4a74-a206-aa00451394d4
1765@end ignore