In Peter Seibel's Practical Common Lisp, he gives this example:

(do ((nums nil) (i 1 (1+ i)))
    ((> i 10) (nreverse nums))
  (push i nums))

I can see how it works, using nums inside the loop but not giving it a step-form. Why would you put nums in the variable-definition rather than do this:

(let (nums) (do ((i 1 (+ i 1)))
         ((> i 10) (nreverse nums))
       (push i nums)))

I'm sure there's a good reason, but I don't get it yet.

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1 Answer

up vote 12 down vote accepted

Because it's convenient and saves indentation. Furthermore, the accumulator conceptually belongs to the loop, so why not put it there?

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