;; Make sure I is always less than 11 (two ways). ;; The FOR construct terminates these loops. (loop for i from 0 to 10 always (< i 11)) => T (loop for i from 0 to 10 never (> i 11)) => T ;; If I exceeds 10 return I; otherwise, return NIL. ;; The THEREIS construct terminates this loop. (loop for i from 0 thereis (when (> i 10) i) ) => 11 ;;; The FINALLY clause is not evaluated in these examples. (loop for i from 0 to 10 always (< i 9) finally (print "you won't see this")) => NIL (loop never t finally (print "you won't see this")) => NIL (loop thereis "Here is my value" finally (print "you won't see this")) => "Here is my value" ;; The FOR construct terminates this loop, so the FINALLY clause ;; is evaluated. (loop for i from 1 to 10 thereis (> i 11) finally (prin1 'got-here)) >> GOT-HERE => NIL ;; If this code could be used to find a counterexample to Fermat's ;; last theorem, it would still not return the value of the ;; counterexample because all of the THEREIS clauses in this example ;; only return T. But if Fermat is right, that won't matter ;; because this won't terminate. (loop for z upfrom 2 thereis (loop for n upfrom 3 below (log z 2) thereis (loop for x below z thereis (loop for y below z thereis (= (+ (expt x n) (expt y n)) (expt z n))))))