rassoc item alist &key key test test-not => entry
rassoc-if predicate alist &key key => entry
rassoc-if-not predicate alist &key key => entry
item—an object.
alist—an association list.
predicate—a designator for a function of one argument that returns a generalized boolean.
test—a designator for a function of two arguments that returns a generalized boolean.
test-not—a designator for a function of two arguments that returns a generalized boolean.
key—a designator for a function of one argument, or nil.
entry—a cons that is an element of the alist, or nil.
rassoc, rassoc-if, and rassoc-if-not return the first cons whose cdr satisfies the test. If no such cons is found, nil is returned.
If nil appears in alist in place of a pair, it is ignored.
(setq alist '((1 . "one") (2 . "two") (3 . 3)))
=> ((1 . "one") (2 . "two") (3 . 3))
(rassoc 3 alist) => (3 . 3)
(rassoc "two" alist) => NIL
(rassoc "two" alist :test 'equal) => (2 . "two")
(rassoc 1 alist :key #'(lambda (x) (if (numberp x) (/ x 3)))) => (3 . 3)
(rassoc 'a '((a . b) (b . c) (c . a) (z . a))) => (C . A)
(rassoc-if #'stringp alist) => (1 . "one")
(rassoc-if-not #'vectorp alist) => (3 . 3)
assoc ,
Traversal Rules and Side Effects
The :test-not parameter is deprecated.
The function rassoc-if-not is deprecated.
It is possible to rplaca the result of rassoc, provided that it is not nil, in order to “update” alist.
The expressions
(rassoc item list :test fn)
and
(find item list :test fn :key #'cdr)
are equivalent in meaning, except when the item is nil and nil appears in place of a pair in the alist. See the function assoc.