| Allegro CL version 10.0 Unrevised from 9.0 to 10.0. 9.0 version |
This document contains the following sections:
1.0 Operators in the util-string moduleThe util-string module is designed to contain operators which extend standard Common-Lisp string functionality in ways that are faster, more efficient, or more convenient.
Symbols in the util-string module are in the util.string package. You load the module with the form
(require :util-string)
Arguments: &rest objects
string+ returns a fresh
simple string that contains the printed representation of all the
individual objects passed as arguments in the order that they are
supplied. Actual strings among objects are
copied into the result string. Other objects are made into strings as
if they were passed to
princ-to-string (although the
actual mechanism may be different for some types of objects),
with *print-pretty*
bound to
nil
. This function is designed to allow string
to be used as identifiers or labels to be created quickly and
efficiently.
string+ called with no arguments returns the null string "".
If any arguments are provided, all occurrances
of nil
are converted to the null string "",
so this function acts as if the nil
arguments
were not provided at all. Symbols other
than nil
contribute their symbol name to the
result string. If you want the symbol name
of nil
(i.e. "nil" in a modern lisp, "NIL" in
an ANSI Lisp) in the result string, apply symbol-name
to nil
prior to passing the value
to string+.
The aim of string+ is to be much more
efficient than (format nil "..." ...)
and more
flexible than cl:concatenate. string+
is highly optimized for the following types:
You may not see the same speed or space efficiencies if other types of objects are included.
string+ is also optimized for smaller strings. Creating large strings will also not show much speed improvement over cl:format although it is easier to call.
No action is taken by string+ to ensure that the
values of the various print variables other
than *print-pretty*
(like, for example, *print-array*
) are appropriate for providing
information about the associated object in the string (see the example
using *print-array*
). If
you want better control over how objects of types other than those
listed above, such as arrays, floats (which are also affected by
variables like *read-default-float-format*
), lists, and so on,
are included, consider passing the desired print representation as an
argument rather than the object or using format in place of
string+.
(use-package :util.string) (string+ 1 2 3 4 5) RETURNS "12345" (string+) RETURNS "" (setq a "new string") (setq b (string+ a)) RETURNS "new string" (eq a b) RETURNS nil (string+ 1 #\space 2 #\- 3 "=" 4 :x 5) RETURNS "1 2-3=4x5" (let ((*print-base* 8)) (string+ 16)) RETURNS "20" ;; *print-base* etc. are respected ;; How more complex objects are stringified depends on things, ;; like print variables, which are not set by STRING+, ;; as this vector example shows: (setq my-vec (vector 1 2 3 4)) (let ((*print-array* t)) (string+ my-vec)) RETURNS "#(1 2 3 4)" (let ((*print-array* nil)) (string+ my-vec)) RETURNS "#<Vector>" ;; Treatment of NIL as an argument (examples from a modern Lisp ;; so symbol names are case-sensitive). NIL is converted to the ;; null string while all other symbols are converted to their ;; SYMBOL-NAME. (string+) RETURNS "" (string+ nil) RETURNS "" (string+ "foo" nil 'bar) RETURNS "foobar" (string+ "foo" (symbol-name nil) 'bar nil) RETURNS "foonilbar"
Copyright (c) 1998-2019, Franz Inc. Oakland, CA., USA. All rights reserved.
This page was not revised from the 9.0 page.
Created 2015.5.21.
| Allegro CL version 10.0 Unrevised from 9.0 to 10.0. 9.0 version |