Warning: This is the manual of the legacy Guile 2.2 series. You may want to read the manual of the current stable series instead.
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The procedures for searching elements in lists either accept a predicate or a comparison object for determining which elements are to be searched.
Return the first element of lst which satisfies the predicate
pred and #f
if no such element is found.
Return the first pair of lst whose CAR satisfies the
predicate pred and #f
if no such element is found.
Return the longest initial prefix of lst whose elements all satisfy the predicate pred.
take-while!
is allowed, but not required to modify the input
list while producing the result.
Drop the longest initial prefix of lst whose elements all satisfy the predicate pred.
span
splits the list lst into the longest initial prefix
whose elements all satisfy the predicate pred, and the remaining
tail. break
inverts the sense of the predicate.
span!
and break!
are allowed, but not required to modify
the structure of the input list lst in order to produce the
result.
Note that the name break
conflicts with the break
binding established by while
(see while do). Applications
wanting to use break
from within a while
loop will need
to make a new define under a different name.
Test whether any set of elements from lst1 lst2 …
satisfies pred. If so, the return value is the return value from
the successful pred call, or if not, the return value is
#f
.
If there are n list arguments, then pred must be a predicate
taking n arguments. Each pred call is (pred
elem1 elem2 … )
taking an element from each
lst. The calls are made successively for the first, second, etc.
elements of the lists, stopping when pred returns non-#f
,
or when the end of the shortest list is reached.
The pred call on the last set of elements (i.e., when the end of the shortest list has been reached), if that point is reached, is a tail call.
Test whether every set of elements from lst1 lst2 …
satisfies pred. If so, the return value is the return from the
final pred call, or if not, the return value is #f
.
If there are n list arguments, then pred must be a predicate
taking n arguments. Each pred call is (pred
elem1 elem2 …)
taking an element from each
lst. The calls are made successively for the first, second, etc.
elements of the lists, stopping if pred returns #f
, or when
the end of any of the lists is reached.
The pred call on the last set of elements (i.e., when the end of the shortest list has been reached) is a tail call.
If one of lst1 lst2 …is empty then no calls to
pred are made, and the return value is #t
.
Return the index of the first set of elements, one from each of lst1 lst2 …, which satisfies pred.
pred is called as (elem1 elem2 …)
.
Searching stops when the end of the shortest lst is reached.
The return index starts from 0 for the first set of elements. If no
set of elements pass, then the return value is #f
.
(list-index odd? '(2 4 6 9)) ⇒ 3 (list-index = '(1 2 3) '(3 1 2)) ⇒ #f
Return the first sublist of lst whose CAR is equal to
x. If x does not appear in lst, return #f
.
Equality is determined by equal?
, or by the equality predicate
= if given. = is called (= x elem)
,
ie. with the given x first, so for example to find the first
element greater than 5,
(member 5 '(3 5 1 7 2 9) <) ⇒ (7 2 9)
This version of member
extends the core member
(see List Searching) by accepting an equality predicate.
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