If *print-array* is true and *print-readably* is false, any vector other than a string or bit vector is printed using general-vector syntax; this means that information about specialized vector representations does not appear. The printed representation of a zero-length vector is #(). The printed representation of a non-zero-length vector begins with #(. Following that, the first element of the vector is printed. If there are any other elements, they are printed in turn, with each such additional element preceded by a space if *print-pretty* is false, or whitespace[1] if *print-pretty* is true. A right-parenthesis after the last element terminates the printed representation of the vector. The printing of vectors is affected by *print-level* and *print-length*. If the vector has a fill pointer, then only those elements below the fill pointer are printed.
If both *print-array* and *print-readably* are false, the vector is not printed as described above, but in a format (using #<) that is concise but not readable.
If *print-readably* is true, the vector prints in an implementation-defined manner; see the variable *print-readably*.
For information on how the Lisp reader parses these ``other vectors,'' see Section 2.4.8.3 (Sharpsign Left-Parenthesis).