Syntax:
peek-char &optional peek-type input-stream eof-error-p eof-value recursive-p => char
Arguments and Values:
peek-type---a character or t or nil.
input-stream---input stream designator. The default is standard input.
eof-error-p---a generalized boolean. The default is true.
eof-value---an object. The default is nil.
recursive-p---a generalized boolean. The default is false.
char---a character or the eof-value.
Description:
peek-char obtains the next character in input-stream without actually reading it, thus leaving the character to be read at a later time. It can also be used to skip over and discard intervening characters in the input-stream until a particular character is found.
If peek-type is not supplied or nil, peek-char returns the next character to be read from input-stream, without actually removing it from input-stream. The next time input is done from input-stream, the character will still be there. If peek-type is t, then peek-char skips over whitespace[2] characters, but not comments, and then performs the peeking operation on the next character. The last character examined, the one that starts an object, is not removed from input-stream. If peek-type is a character, then peek-char skips over input characters until a character that is char= to that character is found; that character is left in input-stream.
If an end of file[2] occurs and eof-error-p is false, eof-value is returned.
If recursive-p is true, this call is expected to be embedded in a higher-level call to read or a similar function used by the Lisp reader.
When input-stream is an echo stream, characters that are only peeked at are not echoed. In the case that peek-type is not nil, the characters that are passed by peek-char are treated as if by read-char, and so are echoed unless they have been marked otherwise by unread-char.
Examples:
(with-input-from-string (input-stream " 1 2 3 4 5") (format t "~S ~S ~S" (peek-char t input-stream) (peek-char #\4 input-stream) (peek-char nil input-stream))) >> #\1 #\4 #\4 => NIL
Affected By:
*readtable*, *standard-input*, *terminal-io*.
Exceptional Situations:
If eof-error-p is true and an end of file[2] occurs an error of type end-of-file is signaled.
If peek-type is a character, an end of file[2] occurs, and eof-error-p is true, an error of type end-of-file is signaled.
If recursive-p is true and an end of file[2] occurs, an error of type end-of-file is signaled.
See Also: None.
Notes: None.