Recital Arrays
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Revision as of 12:35, 27 January 2010 by Yvonnemilne (Talk | contribs)
Contents
- 1 Recital Arrays
- 1.1 An Overview of Arrays in Recital
- 1.2 How to Create a Static Array in Recital
- 1.3 How to Create an Associative Array in Recital
- 1.4 Accessing Elements in a Static Array
- 1.5 Accessing Elements in an Associative Array
- 1.6 Changing, Adding and Removing Elements From Arrays
- 1.7 Looping Through Arrays
- 1.8 Replacing Sections of an Array
- 1.9 Sorting an Array
- 1.10 Passing Arrays as Function Arguments
- 1.11 Miscellaneous Array Functions
- 1.12 Summary
Recital Arrays
An Overview of Arrays in Recital
How to Create a Static Array in Recital
Static Arrays
A static array is an ordered list of elements (variables) that is of a fixed size (number of elements). You declare a static array by specifying the number of elements when you declare a variable.
private tab[ 20 ] // declare a static array of 20 elements all initialized to False // iterate through the array (note the use of the alen( ) function to find the length of the array for i=1 to alen( tab ) // change each array element to hold a numeric value tab[ i ] = i endfor
You can initialize a static array with one statement.
// declare the array and init all elements to false declare tab[10, 10] // init all elements to zero tab = 0
You can create and initialize static arrays using static array initializers.
// simple one dimensional array with 2 elements private tab = { "Hello", "world" } // two-dimensional array of two rows with three columns in each row private tab2 = { { "Hello", 10, date() ], { "world", 20, date()+1 } } // create an array on the fly mytab = { 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 }
You can view the contents of a static array using the echo or ? commands.
? tab