Common LISP and Emacs LISP have the atom type predicate. Scheme and Clojure don’t have it. http://hyperpolyglot.wikidot.com/lisp
Is there a design reason for this – or is it just not an essential function to include in the API?
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In Clojure, the atom predicate isn’t so important because Clojure emphasizes various other types of (immutable) data structures rather than focusing on cons cells / lists.
It could also cause confusion. How would you expect this function to behave when given a hashmap, a set or a vector for example? Or a Java object that represents some complex mutable data structure?
Also the name “atom” is used for something completely different – it’s one of Clojure’s core concurrency mechanisms to manage shared, synchronous, independent state.