If you have two keyword lists, you can append them like so:
> a = [a: 1]
[a: 1]
> b = [b: 2]
[b: 2]
> a ++ b
[a: 1, b: 2]
But what if something a bit more programmatic is happening and you are building up the additions to the keyword list based on variables?
> x = :x
:x
> c = a ++ [x 5]
** (CompileError) iex:5: undefined function x/1
(stdlib) lists.erl:1353: :lists.mapfoldl/3
(stdlib) lists.erl:1354: :lists.mapfoldl/3
That makes elixir think x
is some function when in fact it is just a
variable containing the keyword :x
.
Simply adding a comma doesn't quite do it either.
> c = a ++ [x, 5]
[{:a, 1}, :x, 5]
We need to wrap the internal part with curly braces to create the tuple that
can then be appended to a
.
> c = a ++ [{x, 5}]
[a: 1, x: 5]