Arrays¶
Unlike the data types previously covered, arrays can hold multiple values.
Their size is dynamic and you can add and remove elements at will.
The type keyword is array
.
By default, uninitialized arrays are empty.
Arrays are always zero indexed with [ <expression> ]
. The indexes are always numbers. If you index an array with a key that does not exist, an error will get thrown.
Literals¶
Array literals are a comma or newline seperated sequence of expressions delimited by an opening bracket [
and a corresponding closing bracket ]
.
array a = [ 1, 2, 3 ]
array b = [
1
2
3
]
Primitive Arrays¶
Primitive arrays are arrays that can hold any value. Their content is therefore untyped.
array a
a.append( 1 ) // add a number
a.append( "str" ) // add a string
a.append( [] ) // add an empty array
// because the content type of the array is not defined, all content will be var
var n = a[0]
var str = a[1]
var arr = a[2]
Complex Arrays¶
Complex Arrays are arrays that can only hold values that have a specific type.
The content type needs to be specified within <
and >
brackets.
There is no way to define a complex array that holds multiple different types.
array<int> a
a.append( 1 )
a.append( 0x2 )
a.append( "3" ) // this will throw a compile error because the array can only contain integers
Static Arrays¶
Static arrays are a different kind of complex type. Like complex arrays they can only hold values of one specific type. However unlike complex arrays static arrays have a set length that cannot be changed.
The typing for static arrays is type[size]
, where type
is the content type of the array and size
is an integer literal of the total size of the array.
Uninitialized static arrays have their size by default and all content values are the default values of their content type.
You can index and change content values like with regular arrays.
When initializing a static array you can omit all values after your initial values with ...
. All following values will get default initialized with the content's default.
float[3] v1
float[8] v2 = [ 1.0, 2.0, ... ]
v2[2] = 3.0
print( v1[0] ) // notice how no value needs to be pushed into the vector
print( v2[7] ) // will print 0.0 because it has been default initialized
Compatability¶
It is not possible to cast or convert an array between their different forms. For example you can't assign an array<string>
variable to a different variable that has the type array
or the other way around.
Instead you need to create an entirely new array with the target type or add all contents manually.
array<string> orig = [ "a", "b", "c" ]
array target
target.clear() // clear all contents from the target array
foreach( v in orig ) // iterate over the original array and add all contents to the target array
target.append( v )
Furthermore it's important to understand that array
and array<var>
behave the same but are not identical.