To represent shared or circular structures within a complex of Lisp objects, you can use the reader constructs ‘#n=’ and ‘#n#’.
Use #n= before an object to label it for later reference; subsequently, you can use #n# to refer the same object in another place. Here, n is some integer. For example, here is how to make a list in which the first element recurs as the third element: 
(#1=(a) b #1#)
This differs from ordinary syntax such as this
((a) b (a))
which would result in a list whose first and third elements look alike but are not the same Lisp object. This shows the difference:
(prog1 nil
  (setq x '(#1=(a) b #1#)))
(eq (nth 0 x) (nth 2 x))
     ⇒ t
(setq x '((a) b (a)))
(eq (nth 0 x) (nth 2 x))
     ⇒ nil
You can also use the same syntax to make a circular structure, which appears as an element within itself. Here is an example:
#1=(a #1#)
This makes a list whose second element is the list itself. Here’s how you can see that it really works:
(prog1 nil
  (setq x '#1=(a #1#)))
(eq x (cadr x))
     ⇒ t
The Lisp printer can produce this syntax to record circular and shared structure in a Lisp object, if you bind the variable print-circle to a non-nil value. See Output Variables. 
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    https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Circular-Objects.html