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The following predicates test whether a Lisp object is an
atom, whether it is a cons cell or is a list, or whether it is
the distinguished object nil. (Many of these
predicates can be defined in terms of the others, but they are
used so often that it is worth having them.)
This function returns t if object
is a cons cell, nil otherwise. nil
is not a cons cell, although it is a list.
This function returns t if object
is an atom, nil otherwise. All objects except
cons cells are atoms. The symbol nil is an atom
and is also a list; it is the only Lisp object that is
both.
(atom object) ≡ (not (consp object))
This function returns t if object
is a cons cell or nil. Otherwise, it returns
nil.
(listp '(1))
⇒ t
(listp '())
⇒ t
This function is the opposite of listp: it
returns t if object is not a list.
Otherwise, it returns nil.
(listp object) ≡ (not (nlistp object))
This function returns t if object
is nil, and returns nil otherwise.
This function is identical to not, but as a
matter of clarity we use null when
object is considered a list and not
when it is considered a truth value (see not in
Combining
Conditions).
(null '(1))
⇒ nil
(null '())
⇒ t
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