lsearch(n) Tcl Built-In Commands lsearch(n)


lsearch - See if a list contains a particular element

lsearch ?options? list pattern


This command searches the elements of list to see if one of them matches pattern. If so, the command returns the index of the first matching element (unless the options -all or -inline are specified.) If not, the command returns -1. The option arguments indicates how the elements of the list are to be matched against pattern and must have one of the values below:

If all matching style options are omitted, the default matching style is -glob. If more than one matching style is specified, the last matching style given takes precedence.

Pattern is a literal string that is compared for exact equality against each list element.
Pattern is a glob-style pattern which is matched against each list element using the same rules as the string match command.
Pattern is treated as a regular expression and matched against each list element using the rules described in the re_syntax reference page.
The list elements are in sorted order. If this option is specified, lsearch will use a more efficient searching algorithm to search list. If no other options are specified, list is assumed to be sorted in increasing order, and to contain ASCII strings. This option is mutually exclusive with -glob and -regexp, and is treated exactly like -exact when either -all or -not are specified.

These options may be given with all matching styles.

Changes the result to be the list of all matching indices (or all matching values if -inline is specified as well.) If indices are returned, the indices will be in numeric order. If values are returned, the order of the values will be the order of those values within the input list.
The matching value is returned instead of its index (or an empty string if no value matches.) If -all is also specified, then the result of the command is the list of all values that matched.
This negates the sense of the match, returning the index of the first non-matching value in the list.
The list is searched starting at position index. The interpretation of the index value is the same as for the command string index, supporting simple index arithmetic and indices relative to the end of the list.

These options describe how to interpret the items in the list being searched. They are only meaningful when used with the -exact and -sorted options. If more than one is specified, the last one takes precedence. The default is -ascii.

The list elements are to be examined as Unicode strings (the name is for backward-compatibility reasons.)
The list elements are to be compared using dictionary-style comparisons (see lsort for a fuller description). Note that this only makes a meaningful difference from the -ascii option when the -sorted option is given, because values are only dictionary-equal when exactly equal.
The list elements are to be compared as integers.
Causes comparisons to be handled in a case-insensitive manner. Has no effect if combined with the -dictionary, -integer, or -real options.
The list elements are to be compared as floating-point values.

These options (only meaningful with the -sorted option) specify how the list is sorted. If more than one is given, the last one takes precedence. The default option is -increasing.

The list elements are sorted in decreasing order. This option is only meaningful when used with -sorted.
The list elements are sorted in increasing order. This option is only meaningful when used with -sorted.

These options are used to search lists of lists. They may be used with any other options.

This option is designed for use when searching within nested lists. The indexList argument gives a path of indices (much as might be used with the lindex or lset commands) within each element to allow the location of the term being matched against.
If this option is given, the index result from this command (or every index result when -all is also specified) will be a complete path (suitable for use with lindex or lset) within the overall list to the term found. This option has no effect unless the -index is also specified, and is just a convenience short-cut.

Basic searching:

lsearch {a b c d e} c
      → 2
lsearch -all {a b c a b c} c
      → 2 5

Using lsearch to filter lists:

lsearch -inline {a20 b35 c47} b*
      → b35
lsearch -inline -not {a20 b35 c47} b*
      → a20
lsearch -all -inline -not {a20 b35 c47} b*
      → a20 c47
lsearch -all -not {a20 b35 c47} b*
      → 0 2

This can even do a “set-like” removal operation:

lsearch -all -inline -not -exact {a b c a d e a f g a} a
      → b c d e f g

Searching may start part-way through the list:

lsearch -start 3 {a b c a b c} c
      → 5

It is also possible to search inside elements:

lsearch -index 1 -all -inline {{a abc} {b bcd} {c cde}} *bc*
      → {a abc} {b bcd}

foreach(n), list(n), lappend(n), lindex(n), linsert(n), llength(n), lset(n), lsort(n), lrange(n), lreplace(n), string(n)

list, match, pattern, regular expression, search, string

8.5 Tcl