Function reverse, nreverse

Syntax:

reverse sequence reversed-sequence

nreverse sequence reversed-sequence

Arguments and Values:

sequence—a proper sequence.

14.1.0 10reversed-sequence—a sequence.

Description:

reverse and nreverse return a new sequence of the same kind as sequence, containing the same elements, but in reverse order.

reverse and nreverse differ in that reverse always creates and returns a new sequence, whereas nreverse might modify and return the given sequence. reverse never modifies the given sequence.

Moon's suggested interpretation follows:

For reverse, if sequence is a vector, the result is a fresh simple array of rank one that has the same actual array element type as sequence. If sequence is a list, the result is a fresh list.

For nreverse, if sequence is a vector, the result is a vector that has the same actual array element type as sequence. If sequence is a list, the result is a list.

End Moon's suggested interpretation.

14.1.0 11For nreverse, sequence might be destroyed and re-used to produce the result. The result might or might not be identical to sequence. Specifically, when sequence is a list, nreverse is permitted to setf any part, car or cdr, of any cons that is part of the list structure of sequence. When sequence is a vector, nreverse is permitted to re-order the elements of sequence in order to produce the resulting vector.

Examples:

 (setq str "abc") → "abc"
 (reverse str) → "cba"
 str → "abc"
 (setq str (copy-seq str)) → "abc"
 (nreverse str) → "cba"
 str → implementation-dependent
 (setq l (list 1 2 3)) → (1 2 3)
 (nreverse l) → (3 2 1)
 l → implementation-dependent

Side Effects:

nreverse might either create a new sequence, modify the argument sequence, or both. \funref{reverse} returns a \term{potential copy} of \param{sequence}.(reverse does not modify sequence.)

Affected By:

None.

Exceptional Situations:

Should be prepared to signal an error of type type-error if sequence is not a proper sequence.

See Also:

None.

Notes:

None.