Any one-dimensional array is a vector.
The type vector is a subtype of type array;
for all types x
, (vector x)
is the same as (array x (*))
.
The type (vector t)
, the type string, and the type bit-vector
are disjoint subtypes of type vector.
Specializing.
size | a non-negative fixnum. |
element-type | a type specifier. |
This denotes the set of specialized vectors whose element type and dimension match the specified values. Specifically:
If element-type is the symbol *, vectors are not excluded on the basis of their element type. Otherwise, only those vectors are included whose actual array element type
is the result of upgrading element-type; see Array Upgrading.
If a size is specified, the set includes only those vectors whose only dimension is size. If the symbol * is specified instead of a size, the set is not restricted on the basis of dimension.
Required Kinds of Specialized Arrays, Sharpsign Left-Parenthesis, Printing Other Vectors, Sharpsign A
The type (vector e s)
is equivalent to the type (array e (s))
.
The type (vector bit)
has the name bit-vector.
The union of all types (vector C)
,
where C is any subtype of character,
has the name string.
(vector *)
refers to all vectors
regardless of element type, (vector type-specifier)
refers only to those vectors
that can result from giving type-specifier as the
:element-type
argument to make-array.