ldb
bytespec integer ⇒ byte
(setf ( ldb
bytespec place) new-byte)
pronounced ’lid ib or pronounced ’lid e b or pronounced ’el ’d\=e ’b\=e
bytespec | a byte specifier. |
integer | an integer. |
byte, new-byte | a non-negative integer. |
ldb extracts and returns the byte of integer specified by bytespec.
ldb returns an integer in which the bits with weights
2^(s-1) through 2^0 are the same as those in
integer with weights 2^(p+s-1)
through 2^p, and all other bits zero; s is
(byte-size bytespec)
and p is (byte-position bytespec)
.
setf may be used with ldb to modify a byte within the integer that is stored in a given place.
The order of evaluation, when an ldb form is supplied to setf, is exactly left-to-right.
The effect is to perform a dpb operation and then store the result back into the place.
(ldb (byte 2 1) 10) ⇒ 1
(setq a (list 8)) ⇒ (8)
(setf (ldb (byte 2 1) (car a)) 1) ⇒ 1
a ⇒ (10)
byte; byte-size; byte-position, byte-position, byte-size, dpb
(logbitp j (ldb (byte s p) n))
≡ (and (< j s) (logbitp (+ j p) n))
In general,
(ldb (byte 0 x) y) ⇒ 0
for all valid values of x and y.
Historically, the name "ldb" comes from a DEC PDP-10 assembly language instruction meaning "load byte."