How would I get the first n elements of a list?
CL-USER> (equal (some-function 2 '(1 20 300))
'(1 20))
T
I am absolutely certain this is elementary, but help a brother newb out.
|
How would I get the first
I am absolutely certain this is elementary, but help a brother newb out. |
|||||||||||||||
|
|
Check out the
It may not be immediately obvious, but in Lisp, indexing starts from 0, and the you're always taking half-open intervals, so this takes all the elements of the list with indices in the interval [0, 2). |
|||||||||
|
|
The above answer is of course perfectly correct, but note that if you're using this just to compare against another list, it would be more performance-efficient to walk both lists in-place, rather than consing up a new list just to compare. For example, in the above case, you might say:
Love, |
|||
|
|
|
Had to download a lisp command line... but:
so:
|
|||
|
(butlast '(1 20 300) (- (list-length '(1 20 300)) 2)) Should be made into a function/macro. P.S. This page might be useful. See function 'extrude'. |
|||||||
|