I have not found any examples of how to replace the nth element of a list without first adding every element (one-by-one) with the function add-to-ordered-list -- e.g., (add-to-ordered-list 'the-list 'a 1). That requires subsequently deleting the element -- e.g., (delq a the-list). The third step in the process is to add the new element -- e.g., (add-to-ordered-list 'the-list "HELLO-WORLD!" 1). As the following function named variable-list-example uses 26 elements, I'm looking for a better way than first adding all 26 elements (one-by-one) to essentially assign each element a position number. The function add-to-ordered-list uses a number assignment that is one digit different than the standard nth element approach where the first element has a value of 0, whereas add-to-ordered-list uses the value of 1 for the first element. Here is the link to the documentation for add-to-ordered-list: http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/List-Variables.html
In addition, using the combination '( at the beginning of a list seems to prevent using a let-bound variable inside the list -- e.g., the let-bound variable appears in the list as my-variable instead of HELLO-WORLD!. The only work-around I have found is the above-mentioned example using add-to-ordered-list -- which is a lengthy three-step process (i.e., adding each element one-by-one at the outset).
To resolve both issues, I am looking for some assistance please to replace the 17th element of the-list (which is the letter r) with my-variable (which is HELLO-WORLD!).
(defun variable-list-example ()
(interactive)
(let* (
(my-variable "HELLO-WORLD!")
(the-list '(a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z)))
;; replace the 17th element of `the-list` with `my-variable`
(message "Presto -- this is your new list: %s" the-list)
))
THE LIST
'(a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z)
nth ELEMENT -- CHEAT SHEET / LEGEND
element 0: a
element 1: b
element 2: c
element 3: d
element 4: e
element 5: f
element 6: g
element 7: h
element 8: i
element 9: j
element 10: k
element 11: l
element 12: m
element 13: n
element 14: o
element 15: p
element 16: q
element 17: r
element 18: s
element 19: t
element 20: u
element 21: v
element 22: w
element 23: x
element 24: y
element 25: z
You need to use setcar and nthcdr:
(setcar (nthcdr 17 the-list) my-variable)
The more common-lisp-like approach is to use Generalized Variables:
(setf (nth 17 the-list) my-variable)
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