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find
item sequence &key from-end test test-not start end key ⇒ element
find-if
predicate sequence &key from-end start end key ⇒ element
find-if-not
predicate sequence &key from-end start end key ⇒ element
item—an object.
sequence—a proper sequence.
predicate—a designator for a function of one argument that returns a generalized boolean.
from-end—a generalized boolean. The default is false.
test—a designator for a function of two arguments that returns a generalized boolean.
test-not—a designator for a function of two arguments that returns a generalized boolean.
start, end—bounding index designators of sequence. The defaults for start and end are 0 and nil, respectively.
key—a designator for a function of one argument, or nil.
element—an element of the sequence, or nil.
find, find-if, and find-if-not each search for an element of the sequence bounded by start and end that satisfies the predicate predicate or that satisfies the test test or test-not, as appropriate.
If from-end is true, then the result is the rightmost element that satisfies the test.
If the sequence contains an element that satisfies the test, then the leftmost or rightmost sequence element, depending on from-end, is returned; otherwise nil is returned.
(find #\d "here are some letters that can be looked at" :test #'char>) ⇒ #\Space (find-if #'oddp '(1 2 3 4 5) :end 3 :from-end t) ⇒ 3 (find-if-not #'complexp '#(3.5 2 #C(1.0 0.0) #C(0.0 1.0)) :start 2) ⇒ NIL
Should be prepared to signal an error of type type-error if sequence is not a proper sequence.
position , Rules about Test Functions,
Traversal Rules and Side Effects
The :test-not argument is deprecated.
The function find-if-not is deprecated.
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