I have a list of elements '(a b c) and I want to find if (true or false) x is in it, where x can be 'a or 'd, for instance. Is there a built in function for this?
|
|
If you need to compare using one of the build in equivalence operators, you can use
As you can see, these functions return the sublist starting at the first matching element if they find an element. This is because if you are searching a list that may contain booleans, you need to be able to distinguish the case of finding a
What is the difference between the three different functions? It's based on which equivalence function they use for comparison.
(Note that some behavior of the functions is undefined by the specification, and thus may differ from implementation to implementation; I have included examples that should work in any R5RS compatible Scheme that implements exact rational numbers) If you need to search for an item in a list using an equivalence predicate different than one of the built in ones, then you may want
|
||||
|
|
|
Here's one way:
member returns everything starting from where the element is, or #f. A cond is used to convert this to true or false. |
|||
|
|
|
You are looking for "find" Basics - The simplest case is just (find Entry List), usually used as a predicate: "is Entry in List?". If it succeeds in finding the element in question, it returns the first matching element instead of just "t". (Taken from second link.) http://www.cs.cmu.edu/Groups/AI/html/cltl/clm/node145.html -or- |
|||||||||
|
|
I don't know if there is a built in function, but you can create one:
Ỳou will get in return the number of occurrences of |
||||
|
|