GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual
The functions in this section test whether the argument is a number or
whether it is a certain sort of number. The functions integerp
and floatp can take any type of Lisp object as argument (the
predicates would not be of much use otherwise); but the zerop
predicate requires a number as its argument. See also
integer-or-marker-p and number-or-marker-p, in
Predicates on Markers.
t if so, nil otherwise.
floatp does not exist in Emacs versions 18 and earlier.
t if so, nil otherwise.
t if so, nil otherwise.
wholenump predicate (whose name comes from the phrase
``whole-number-p'') tests to see whether its argument is a nonnegative
integer, and returns t if so, nil otherwise. 0 is
considered non-negative.
natnump is an obsolete synonym for wholenump.
t
if so, nil otherwise. The argument must be a number.
These two forms are equivalent: (zerop x) == (= x 0).