nth
The nthcdr function takes the CDR of a list repeatedly. The nth function takes the CAR of the result returned by nthcdr. It returns the Nth element of the list.
Thus, if it were not defined in C for speed, the definition of nth would be:
(defun nth (n list)
"Returns the Nth element of LIST.
N counts from zero. If LIST is not that long, nil is returned."
(car (nthcdr n list)))(Originally, nth was defined in Emacs Lisp in subr.el, but its definition was redone in C in the 1980s.)
The nth function returns a single element of a list. This can be very convenient.
Note that the elements are numbered from zero, not one. That is to say, the first element of a list, its CAR is the zeroth element. This zero-based counting often bothers people who are accustomed to the first element in a list being number one, which is one-based.
For example:
(nth 0 '("one" "two" "three"))
⇒ "one"
(nth 1 '("one" "two" "three"))
⇒ "two"It is worth mentioning that nth, like nthcdr and cdr, does not change the original list—the function is non-destructive. This is in sharp contrast to the setcar and setcdr functions.