char=
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char/=
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char<
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char>
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char<=
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char>=
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char-equal
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char-not-equal
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char-lessp
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char-greaterp
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char-not-greaterp
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
char-not-lessp
&rest characters^+ ⇒ generalized-boolean
character | a character. |
generalized-boolean | a generalized boolean. |
These predicates compare characters.
char= returns true if all characters are the same; otherwise, it returns false.
If two characters differ in any implementation-defined attributes, then they are not char=.
char/= returns true if all characters are different; otherwise, it returns false.
char< returns true if the characters are monotonically increasing; otherwise, it returns false.
If two characters
have identical implementation-defined attributes,
then their ordering by char< is
consistent with the numerical ordering by the predicate <
on their codes.
char> returns true if the characters are monotonically decreasing; otherwise, it returns false.
If two characters have
identical implementation-defined attributes,
then their ordering by char> is
consistent with the numerical ordering by the predicate >
on their codes.
char<= returns true if the characters are monotonically nondecreasing; otherwise, it returns false.
If two characters have
identical implementation-defined attributes,
then their ordering by char<= is
consistent with the numerical ordering by the predicate <=
on their codes.
char>= returns true if the characters are monotonically nonincreasing; otherwise, it returns false.
If two characters have
identical implementation-defined attributes,
then their ordering by char>= is
consistent with the numerical ordering by the predicate >=
on their codes.
char-equal, char-not-equal, char-lessp, char-greaterp, char-not-greaterp, and char-not-lessp are similar to char=, char/=, char<, char>, char<=, char>=, respectively, except that they ignore differences in case and
might have an implementation-defined behavior for non-simple characters. For example, an implementation might define that char-equal, etc. ignore certain implementation-defined attributes. The effect, if any, of each implementation-defined attribute upon these functions must be specified as part of the definition of that attribute.
(char= #\d #\d) ⇒ true
(char= #\A #\a) ⇒ false
(char= #\d #\x) ⇒ false
(char= #\d #\D) ⇒ false
(char/= #\d #\d) ⇒ false
(char/= #\d #\x) ⇒ true
(char/= #\d #\D) ⇒ true
(char= #\d #\d #\d #\d) ⇒ true
(char/= #\d #\d #\d #\d) ⇒ false
(char= #\d #\d #\x #\d) ⇒ false
(char/= #\d #\d #\x #\d) ⇒ false
(char= #\d #\y #\x #\c) ⇒ false
(char/= #\d #\y #\x #\c) ⇒ true
(char= #\d #\c #\d) ⇒ false
(char/= #\d #\c #\d) ⇒ false
(char< #\d #\x) ⇒ true
(char<= #\d #\x) ⇒ true
(char< #\d #\d) ⇒ false
(char<= #\d #\d) ⇒ true
(char< #\a #\e #\y #\z) ⇒ true
(char<= #\a #\e #\y #\z) ⇒ true
(char< #\a #\e #\e #\y) ⇒ false
(char<= #\a #\e #\e #\y) ⇒ true
(char> #\e #\d) ⇒ true
(char>= #\e #\d) ⇒ true
(char> #\d #\c #\b #\a) ⇒ true
(char>= #\d #\c #\b #\a) ⇒ true
(char> #\d #\d #\c #\a) ⇒ false
(char>= #\d #\d #\c #\a) ⇒ true
(char> #\e #\d #\b #\c #\a) ⇒ false
(char>= #\e #\d #\b #\c #\a) ⇒ false
(char> #\z #\A) ⇒ implementation-dependent
(char> #\Z #\a) ⇒ implementation-dependent
(char-equal #\A #\a) ⇒ true
(stable-sort (list #\b #\A #\B #\a #\c #\C) #'char-lessp)
⇒ (#\A #\a #\b #\B #\c #\C)
(stable-sort (list #\b #\A #\B #\a #\c #\C) #'char<)
⇒ (#\A #\B #\C #\a #\b #\c) ;Implementation A
⇒ (#\a #\b #\c #\A #\B #\C) ;Implementation B
⇒ (#\a #\A #\b #\B #\c #\C) ;Implementation C
⇒ (#\A #\a #\B #\b #\C #\c) ;Implementation D
⇒ (#\A #\B #\a #\b #\C #\c) ;Implementation E
Should signal an error of type program-error if at least one character is not supplied.
If characters differ in their code attribute or any implementation-defined attribute, they are considered to be different by char=.
There is no requirement that (eq c1 c2)
be true merely because
(char= c1 c2)
is true. While eq can distinguish two
characters
that char= does not, it is distinguishing them not
as characters, but in some sense on the basis of a lower level
implementation characteristic.
If (eq c1 c2)
is true,
then (char= c1 c2)
is also true.
eql and equal
compare characters in the same
way that char= does.
The manner in which case is used by
char-equal,
char-not-equal,
char-lessp,
char-greaterp,
char-not-greaterp,
and char-not-lessp
implies an ordering for standard characters such that
A=a
, B=b
, and so on, up to Z=z
, and furthermore either
9<A
or Z<0
.