A vector is a general-purpose array whose elements can be any Lisp objects. (By contrast, the elements of a string can only be characters. See Strings and Characters.) Vectors are used in Emacs for many purposes: as key sequences (see Key Sequences), as symbol-lookup tables (see Creating Symbols), as part of the representation of a byte-compiled function (see Byte Compilation), and more.
Like other arrays, vectors use zero-origin indexing: the first element has index 0.
Vectors are printed with square brackets surrounding the elements. Thus, a vector whose elements are the symbols a
, b
and a
is printed as [a b a]
. You can write vectors in the same way in Lisp input.
A vector, like a string or a number, is considered a constant for evaluation: the result of evaluating it is the same vector. This does not evaluate or even examine the elements of the vector. See Self-Evaluating Forms. Vectors written with square brackets should not be modified via aset
or other destructive operations. See Mutability.
Here are examples illustrating these principles:
(setq avector [1 two '(three) "four" [five]]) ⇒ [1 two '(three) "four" [five]] (eval avector) ⇒ [1 two '(three) "four" [five]] (eq avector (eval avector)) ⇒ t
Copyright © 1990-1996, 1998-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU GPL license.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Vectors.html