Two questions:
1.I want a function to insert an element inside a list in-place (in any position but the start of the list, see question 2 for the reason) such that:
CL> (defun insert-in-place (the-list after-position new-element) .... ) => ...
CL> (setf testy-list (list '开发者_JS百科a 'b 'c 'd)) => ...
CL> testy-list => ('A 'B 'C 'D)
CL> (insert-in-place testy-list 1 'BOOOO) => ...
CL> testy-list => ('A 'B 'BOOOO 'C 'D)
2.I think that inserting an element into the start of the list in-place is impossible through a function because the args are passed by value, so since the first cons cell of the list is passed, it is passed by value and it is a copy and so changing its car only changes a copy car, not the original, although the following cons cells are shared and change in place is possible. Am I correct?
1) here it is:
(defun insert-after (lst index newelt)
(push newelt (cdr (nthcdr index lst)))
lst)
(insert-after '(a c d) 0 'b) => (A B C D)
2) destructive modification of cons cells:
(setf testy-list '(a bar))
(defun modify (list)
(setf (first list) 'foo))
(modify testy-list)
testy-list => (FOO BAR)
This sets the car of the first cons cell to 'foo.
I made this for a project of mine, handles index 0 and if index is greater than length of list, the new item is appended at end of list. Be aware that it creates a new list so it may not applicable for you. I include it hoping it would be useful for someone.
(defun list-insert-at (lst index new-value)
(let ((retval nil))
(loop for i from 0 to (- (length lst) 1) do
(when (= i index)
(push new-value retval))
(push (nth i lst) retval))
(when (>= index (length lst))
(push new-value retval))
(nreverse retval)))
CL-USER> test
(1 2 3 4 5)
CL-USER> (list-insert-at test 5 'a)
(1 2 3 4 5 A)
CL-USER> (list-insert-at test 0 'a)
(A 1 2 3 4 5)
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