Return the specified elements of the list stored at the specified key. Start and end are zero-based indexes. 0 is the first element of the list (the list head), 1 the next element and so on.
For example LRANGE foobar 0 2 will return the first three elements of the list.
start and end can also be negative numbers indicating offsets from the end of the list. For example -1 is the last element of the list, -2 the penultimate element and so on.
Consistency with range functions in various programming languages
Note that if you have a list of numbers from 0 to 100, LRANGE 0 10 will return 11 elements, that is, rightmost item is included. This may or may not be consistent with behavior of range-related functions in your programming language of choice (think Ruby's Range.new, Array#slice or Python's range() function).
LRANGE behavior is consistent with one of Tcl.
Out-of-range indexes
Indexes out of range will not produce an error: if start is over the end of the list, or start > end, an empty list is returned. If end is over the end of the list Redis will threat it just like the last element of the list.
Time complexity: O(start+n) (with n being the length of the range and start being the start offset)
@param key
@param start
@param end
@return Multi bulk reply, specifically a list of elements in thespecified range.