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The following functions can be used to manipulate property lists.
They all compare property names using eq
.
This returns the value of the property property stored in the
property list plist. It accepts a malformed plist
argument. If property is not found in the plist, it
returns nil
. For example,
(plist-get '(foo 4) 'foo) ⇒ 4 (plist-get '(foo 4 bad) 'foo) ⇒ 4 (plist-get '(foo 4 bad) 'bad) ⇒ nil (plist-get '(foo 4 bad) 'bar) ⇒ nil
This stores value as the value of the property property in the property list plist. It may modify plist destructively, or it may construct a new list structure without altering the old. The function returns the modified property list, so you can store that back in the place where you got plist. For example,
(setq my-plist '(bar t foo 4)) ⇒ (bar t foo 4) (setq my-plist (plist-put my-plist 'foo 69)) ⇒ (bar t foo 69) (setq my-plist (plist-put my-plist 'quux '(a))) ⇒ (bar t foo 69 quux (a))
Like plist-get
except that it compares properties
using equal
instead of eq
.
Like plist-put
except that it compares properties
using equal
instead of eq
.
This returns non-nil
if plist contains the given
property. Unlike plist-get
, this allows you to distinguish
between a missing property and a property with the value nil
.
The value is actually the tail of plist whose car
is
property.
Previous: Plists and Alists, Up: Property Lists [Contents][Index]