LTRIM
Syntax
LTRIM key start stop
Time complexity: O(N) where N is the number of elements to be removed by the operation.
Trim an existing list so that it will contain only the specified range of
elements specified.
Both start
and stop
are zero-based indexes, where 0
is the first element
of the list (the head), 1
the next element and so on.
For example: LTRIM foobar 0 2
will modify the list stored at foobar
so that
only the first three elements of the list will remain.
start
and end
can also be negative numbers indicating offsets from the end
of the list, where -1
is the last element of the list, -2
the penultimate
element and so on.
Out of range indexes will not produce an error: if start
is larger than the
end of the list, or start > end
, the result will be an empty list (which
causes key
to be removed).
If end
is larger than the end of the list, Dragonfly will treat it like the last
element of the list.
A common use of LTRIM
is together with LPUSH
/ RPUSH
.
For example:
LPUSH mylist someelement
LTRIM mylist 0 99
This pair of commands will push a new element on the list, while making sure
that the list will not grow larger than 100 elements. It is important to note that when
used in this way LTRIM
is an O(1) operation, because in the average case just one element
is removed from the tail of the list.
Return
Examples
dragonfly> RPUSH mylist "one"
(integer) 1
dragonfly> RPUSH mylist "two"
(integer) 2
dragonfly> RPUSH mylist "three"
(integer) 3
dragonfly> LTRIM mylist 1 -1
"OK"
dragonfly> LRANGE mylist 0 -1
1) "two"
2) "three"