The functions in this section test for numbers, or for a specific
type of number. The functions integerp
and floatp
can
take any type of Lisp object as argument (they would not be of much
use otherwise), but the zerop
predicate requires a number as
its argument. See also integer-or-marker-p
and
number-or-marker-p
, in Predicates on Markers.
This predicate tests whether its argument is a large integer, and
returns t
if so, nil
otherwise. Unlike small integers,
large integers can be =
or eql
even if they are not eq
.
This predicate tests whether its argument is a small integer, and
returns t
if so, nil
otherwise. Small integers can be
compared with eq
.
This predicate tests whether its argument is floating point
and returns t
if so, nil
otherwise.
This predicate tests whether its argument is an integer, and returns
t
if so, nil
otherwise.
This predicate tests whether its argument is a number (either integer or
floating point), and returns t
if so, nil
otherwise.
This predicate (whose name comes from the phrase “natural number”)
tests to see whether its argument is a nonnegative integer, and
returns t
if so, nil
otherwise. 0 is considered
non-negative.
wholenump
is a synonym for natnump
.
This predicate tests whether its argument is zero, and returns t
if so, nil
otherwise. The argument must be a number.
(zerop x)
is equivalent to (= x 0)
.