Lists
You can change lists with the cons
function, see (doc cons)
for details
(cons 5 ‘(1 2 3 4))
You will see that cons
does not change the existing list, it create a new list that contains the number 5 and a link to all the elements of the existing list.
You can also use cons on vectors (cons 5 [1 2 3 4])
(cons "fish" '("and" "chips"))
(conj '(1 2 3 4) 5)
(conj [1 2 3 4] 5)
;; Lets define a simple list and give it a name
(def list-one '(1 2 3))
;; the name evaluates to what we expect
list-one
;; If we add the number 4 using the cons function, then we
;; get a new list in return, with 4 added to the front (because thats how lists work with cons)
(cons 4 list-one)
;; If we want to keep the result of adding to the list, we can assign it a different name
(def list-two (cons 4 list-one))
;; and we get the result we want
list-two
;; we can also assing the original name we used for the list to the new list
(def list-one (cons 4 list-one))
;; If we re-evaluate the definition above, then each time we will get an extra
;; number 4 added to the list.
list-one
;; Again, this is not changing the original list, we have just moved the name
;; of the list to point to the new list.
;; Any other function working with this data structure before reassigning the name
;; will not be affected by the re-assignment and will use the unchanged list.
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