[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [Plus haut] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Table des matières] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
A sequence is a Lisp object that represents an ordered set of elements. There are two kinds of sequence in Emacs Lisp, lists and arrays. Thus, an object of type list or of type array is also considered a sequence.
Arrays are further subdivided into strings, vectors, char-tables and
bool-vectors. Vectors can hold elements of any type, but string elements
must be characters, and bool-vector elements must be t
or
nil
. Char-tables are like vectors except that they are indexed by
any valid character code. The characters in a string can have text
properties like characters in a buffer (voir la section Text Properties), but
vectors do not support text properties, even when their elements happen to
be characters.
Lists, strings and the other array types are different, but they have
important similarities. For example, all have a length l, and all
have elements which can be indexed from zero to l minus one. Several
functions, called sequence functions, accept any kind of sequence. For
example, the function elt
can be used to extract an element of a
sequence, given its index. Voir la section Sequences, Arrays, and Vectors.
It is generally impossible to read the same sequence twice, since sequences
are always created anew upon reading. If you read the read syntax for a
sequence twice, you get two sequences with equal contents. There is one
exception: the empty list ()
always stands for the same object,
nil
.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.