Node:Keep, Previous:Accumulate, Up:Recursive Patterns
A third recursive pattern is called the keep pattern.
In the keep recursive pattern, each element of a list is tested;
the element is acted on and the results are kept only if the element
meets a criterion.
Again, this is very like the `every' pattern, except the element is skipped unless it meets a criterion.
The pattern has three parts:
nil.
cons with
Here is an example that uses cond:
(defun keep-three-letter-words (word-list)
"Keep three letter words in WORD-LIST."
(cond
;; First do-again-test: stop-condition
((not word-list) nil)
;; Second do-again-test: when to act
((eq 3 (length (symbol-name (car word-list))))
;; combine acted-on element with recursive call on shorter list
(cons (car word-list) (keep-three-letter-words (cdr word-list))))
;; Third do-again-test: when to skip element;
;; recursively call shorter list with next-step expression
(t (keep-three-letter-words (cdr word-list)))))
(keep-three-letter-words '(one two three four five six))
=> (one two six)
It goes without saying that you need not use nil as the test for
when to stop; and you can, of course, combine these patterns.