Open In App

Cond Construct in LISP

Last Updated : 09 Nov, 2021
Improve
Improve
Like Article
Like
Save
Share
Report

In this article, we will discuss cond construct in LISP. The cond is a decision-making statement used to make n number of test conditions. It will check all the conditions.

Syntax:

(cond   (condition1 statements)
(condition2 statements)
(condition3 statements)
...
(conditionn statements)
)

Here,

  1. The conditions specify different conditions – if condition1 is not satisfied, then it goes for next condition  IE condition until the last condition.
  2. The statements specify the work done based on the condition.

Note: It will execute only one statement.

Example 1: LISP program to check whether a number is greater than 200 or not

Lisp




;set value1 to 500
(setq val1 500)
  
;check whether the val1 is greater than 200
(cond ((> val1 200)
   (format t "Greater than 200"))
   (t (format t "Less than 200")))


Output:

Greater than 200

Example 2: Demo with comparison operators

Lisp




;set value1 to 500
(setq val1 500)
  
;check whether the val1 is greater  than 200
(cond ((> val1 200)
   (format t "Greater than 200"))
   (t (format t "Not")))
     
 (terpri)
   
;check whether the val1 is equal to 500
(cond ((= val1 500)
   (format t "equal to 500"))
   (t (format t "Not")))
     
 (terpri)
   
;check whether the val1 is equal to 600
(cond ((= val1 600)
   (format t "equal to 500"))
   (t (format t "Not")))
 (terpri)
   
 ;check whether the val1 is greater than or equal to 400
(cond ((>= val1 400)
   (format t "greater than or equal to 400"))
   (t (format t "Not")))
     
 (terpri)
   
;check whether the val1 is less than or equal to 600
(cond ((<= val1 600)
   (format t "less than or equal to 600"))
   (t (format t "Not")))


Output:

Greater than 200
equal to 500
Not
greater than or equal to 400
less than or equal to 600


Like Article
Suggest improvement
Share your thoughts in the comments

Similar Reads