Iteration Clauses
Loop Facility
Other Clauses
These clauses cause the loop to accumulate information about the
specified Lisp form. The accumulated result is returned
from the loop unless overridden, say, by a return
clause.
collect form
|
This clause collects the values of form into a list. Several
examples of
The word |
append form
|
This clause collects lists of values into a result list using
|
nconc form
|
This clause collects lists of values into a result list by destructively modifying the lists rather than copying them. |
concat form
|
This clause concatenates the values of the specified form into a string. (It and the following clause are extensions to standard Common Lisp.) |
vconcat form
|
This clause concatenates the values of the specified form into a vector. |
count form
|
This clause counts the number of times the specified form
evaluates to a non- |
sum form
|
This clause accumulates the sum of the values of the specified form, which must evaluate to a number. |
maximize form
|
This clause accumulates the maximum value of the specified form,
which must evaluate to a number. The return value is undefined if
|
minimize form
|
This clause accumulates the minimum value of the specified form. |
Accumulation clauses can be followed by `into var
' to
cause the data to be collected into variable var (which is
automatically let
-bound during the loop) rather than an
unnamed temporary variable. Also, into
accumulations do
not automatically imply a return value. The loop must use some
explicit mechanism, such as finally return
, to return
the accumulated result.
It is legal for several accumulation clauses of the same type to accumulate into the same place. From Steele:
(loop for name in '(fred sue alice joe june) for kids in '((bob ken) () () (kris sunshine) ()) collect name append kids) => (fred bob ken sue alice joe kris sunshine june)