Retrieving an Element of an Array
This task is obsolete. Please do not add new code, and merge existing code to the Arrays task.
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
In this task, the goal is to retrieve an element of an array.
4D
` first element $elem:=$array{1}
ActionScript
<lang actionscript> var arr:Array = new Array(1,2,3); var myVar:Number = arr[1]; // the value of myVar is: 2 </lang>
Ada
Array indexed by an enumerated type. Ada enumerated types are discrete non-numeric types. <lang ada> type Days is (Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun); type Daily_Counts is array(Days) of Natural; This_week : Daily_Counts := (200, 212, 175 220, 201, 120, 0); Monday_Sales : Natural; Monday_Sales := This_Week(Mon); </lang> Monday_Sales is assigned 200
ALGOL 68
ELLA ALGOL 68 translator has restrictions on the number of dimensions and hence cannot compile this code. <lang algol>main:(
PROC get item = (REF [] INT array, INT index)INT:( array[index] ); [4]INT array := (222,444,666,888); print((get item(array, 3), newline));
OP INIT = (REF[]REAL array)REF[]REAL:( FOR i FROM LWB array TO UPB array DO array[i]:=0.0 OD; array); OP INIT = (REF[,]REAL array)REF[,]REAL:( FOR i FROM LWB array TO UPB array DO INIT array[i,] OD; array);
[-10:20]REAL a; INIT a; # a one-dimensional real array indexed from -10 to 20 # REAL x, y, z; [5,4]REAL p, q, r; INIT p; # two-dimensional arrays row-indexed from 1 to 5, column-indexed from 1 to 3 # [2,3,2,2,3,4,2]REAL f; # a seven-dimensional array (max dimensions allowed is 7) # x := a[-5]; # gets element at index -5 # y := a[0]; # gets element at index 0 # z := a[20]; # gets element at index 20 # z := p[5,2]; # gets element in row 5, column 2 # p := q; # gets all elements of Q into P # p[:,2] := a[1:5]; # gets elements at indices 1 to 5 of A into the 2nd column of P #
# Note: ALGOL 68 does not have the concept of a slice with a stride #
r[1:4,] := p[2:5,]; # gets 4x4 subarray of P starting in 2nd row into 4x4 subarray of R starting in 1st row # r[3:5,] := f[1,1,1,1,,,1] # gets a 3x4 subarray of F into a 3x4 subarray of R starting in row 3 #
)</lang> Output:
+666
AppleScript
on getArrayValue(array, location) -- very important -- The list index starts at 1 not 0 return item location in array end getArrayValue
AutoHotkey
Arrays use one-based indexing. Array0 contains the number of elements. <lang autohotkey>string = abcde StringSplit, array, string Loop, % array0
MsgBox, % array%A_Index%</lang>
AWK
This shows how a string is split into elements of the array a, which is iterated over, and its elements printed to stdout. Note that the order is not as original, because the array is implemented as a hash table.
$ awk 'BEGIN{split("a b c d",a);for(i in a)print a[i]}' d a b c
C
<lang c> int array_index(int array[], int index) {
return array[index]; }</lang>
C#
int getArrayValue( int values[], int index ) { return values[index]; }
C++
<lang cpp> template<typename T>
T array_index(T array[], size_t index) { return array[index]; }</lang>
ColdFusion
<cfset arr = ArrayNew(1)> <cfset arr[1] = "one"> <cfset arr[2] = "2"> <cfset arr[3] = 3> <cfset var = arr[1]>
The value of var is "one"
ColdFusion Arrays are NOT zero-based, their index begins at 1
Common Lisp
(defun array-value (array index) (aref array index))
D
Generic, template-based method. Allows retriving elements of arrays and objects having opIndex method implemented.
<lang D> // GetElem.d module GetElem;
import tango.core.Variant; import tango.core.Traits;
/// objects must have opIndex method template GetItemType(T) { alias ReturnTypeOf!(T.opIndex) GetItemType; } // specialization for arrays template GetItemType(T : T[]) { alias T GetItemType; }
GetItemType!(T) GetElem(T, U)(T array, U idx) {
return array[idx];
} </lang>
Sample usage: <lang D> import tango.io.Stdout;
import GetElem;
class SampleContainer {
static char[][] data = [ "lazy", "fox" "jumped", "over", "dog" ];
public:
char[] opIndex(uint pos) { return data[pos]; }
}
void main() {
auto y = new SampleContainer; auto x = [5, 1, 7, 3, 6, 4, 2 ];
Stdout (GetElem(x, 3)).newline; Stdout (GetElem(y, 3)).newline;
// generate exception Stdout (GetElem(x, -1)).newline;
} </lang>
Delphi/Object Pascal/Standard Pascal
Arrays in all the flavors of pascal can be of any valid base type, or user defined type (which are all made up of base types) and are multi-dimensional. With Delphi dynamic arrays were defined but had been used in pascal since its inception.
A Static array definition: <lang pascal> foo : array[1..10] of integer; { The base index is ONE }</lang> The base index can be freely chosen: <lang pascal> foo: array[7 .. 16] of integer; { The base index is 7 }</lang> Indeed, the "1 .. 10" resp. "7 .. 16" are actually types: they are integer subrange types. Arrays can also be indexed by enumeration types or enumeration subrange types: <lang pascal> type
rainbowcolor = (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet); var foo: array[rainbowcolor] of integer; bar: array[yellow .. blue] of integer; i: integer begin i := foo[red]; { allowed indices are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet } i := bar[green]; { allowed indices are yellow, green, blue } end;</lang>
A Dynamic Array type in Delphi: <lang delphi> foo : array of integer ; // The base index is ZERO</lang> An "old school" dynamic array in the various flavors of pascal <lang delphi> foo : array[0..0] of integer; // The base index is ZERO</lang> A dynamic array in Extended Pascal: <lang pascal> type
intarray(n: integer) = array[1 .. n] of integer; { base index 1 } var foo: ^intarray; begin new(foo, 10); { foo now has index 1 to 10 } i := foo[2]; dispose(foo); { get rid of the array } end;</lang>
In the case of the static array, the compiler generates the code to allocate the required memory to hold 10 integers.
In the Delphi style ---dynamic--- array you must set its length: <lang delphi> SetLength(foo,10); // this array will no hold 10 integers</lang> In the "old school" style of dynamic arrays, you created a point to the zero length declaration and then allocated memory to it with GetMem <lang pascal> pFoo : ^Foo ;
Foo : array[0..0] of integer ;</lang>
All arrays are accessed the same way regardless of declaration method.
<lang pascal> i : integer ;
i := foo[n] ;</lang>
where n is the array index who's base is either 1 or 0 depending on how it was declared.
E
<lang e>def value := array[index]</lang>
Erlang
- Array module work with arrays:
Value = array:get(Index, Array).
Fortran
In ANSI Fortran 90 or later:
real, dimension(-10:20) :: a ! a one-dimensional real array indexed from -10 to 20 real :: x, y, z real, dimension(5,4) :: p, q, r ! two-dimensional arrays row-indexed from 1 to 5, column-indexed from 1 to 3 real, dimension(2,3,2,2,3,4,2) :: f ! a seven-dimensional array (max dimensions allowed is 7) x = a(-5) ! gets element at index -5 y = a(0) ! gets element at index 0 z = a(20) ! gets element at index 20 z = p(5,2) ! gets element in row 5, column 2 p = q ! gets all elements of Q into P p(:,2) = a(1:5) ! gets elements at indices 1 to 5 of A into the 2nd column of P q(1,:) = a(-10:20:10) ! gets elements at indices -10, 0, 10, and 20 into the 1st row of Q (stride of 10) q(1,:) = a(::10) ! gets same elements previous assignment (implicit first and last elements, stride of 10) r(1:4,:) = p(2:5,:) ! gets 4x4 subarray of P starting in 2nd row into 4x4 subarray of R starting in 1st row a(0:-10:-1) = a(5:15) ! gets elements at indices 5 through 15 and places them in elements at indices 0 through -10 ! (in reverse order, stride of -1) r(3:5,:) = f(1,1,1,1,:,:,1) ! gets a 3x4 subarray of F into a 3x4 subarray of R starting in row 3
Groovy
Define an array
arr = ['groovy', 'is', 'a', 'great', 'language']
First element
arr[0] // *** 'groovy'
Last element, negative indexes
arr[-1] // *** 'language'
Ranges
arr[-3..-1] // *** ['a', 'great', 'language']
Mix n Match
arr[0..2, -1] // *** ['groovy', 'is', 'a', 'language']
Haskell
Arrays can have arbitrary bounds (not restricted to integer values, any instance of Ix will do):
import Data.Array example = listArray (2,5) ["This", "is", "an", example"] result = example ! 4
Here, result will be equal to "an". It should be noted that in Haskell lists are often used instead of arrays.
IDL
; this is allowed: result = arr(5) ; but this is preferred: result = arr[5]
The form with square brackets is preferred as it unambiguously constitutes array access, while the version with round ones can conflict with a function call if there are both a function and an array with the same name arr.
J
Arrays are the only way J handles data, so every program that produces a portion of a given array is relevant here. In these few examples emphasis is on the primary verb { ("from").
The natural unit of access in J is the item. (Every piece of data can be treated as a list of [zero or more] items):
NB. Define example one-axis array, in which each item is an atom ]ex1=: 10+ i. 6 NB. ] means display the full array (after =: defines it) 10 11 12 13 14 15 4 { ex1 NB. Single specific item 14 _1 { ex1 NB. Last item, using negative indexing 15 {: ex1 NB. {: is another way to specify the final item 15 0 5 2 { ex1 NB. Multiple specific items 10 15 12 NB. Two-axis array, in which each item is a one-axis array ]ex2=: 4 6 $ 10+i. 24 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 3 0 { ex2 NB. Item selection is the same as in prior examples 28 29 30 31 32 33 10 11 12 13 14 15 (<3 4) { ex2 NB. Atom selection (index list length equals array shape length) 32 NB. Four-axis array, shaped 5 by 3 by 2 by 2 ex4=: 5 3 2 2 $ i. 60 (<2 1) { ex4 NB. Subarray selection: table at given indexing of top two axes 28 29 30 31
Java
Object element = array[index];
Mathematica
<lang Mathematica>
element = arrayindex
</lang> First index is 1, negative indices count from the back, -1 being the last element. [ [ 0 ] ] returns the head. The [ [ ] ]-command (Part) works not only on a list, it works on everything: graphics, equations, matrices of any dimension et cetera. To dig deeper you can specifiy multiple indices [ [ a, b, c ] ] to get the cth element of the bth element of the ath element. For any level you can specify a range using ;;, i.e.: a;;b;;c would give elements a through b in steps of c. If a is not given it will assume 1, if b is not give it will be -1, if c is not given it will be 1.
MAXScript
item = arr[index]
mIRC Scripting Language
alias readmyarray { echo -a $array_read(MyArray, 2, 3) }
Modula-3
VAR arr := ARRAY [1..3] OF INTEGER {1, 2, 3}; VAR myVar := a[2];
Nial
Nial is an array programming language. Thus it has a variety of ways to retrieve elements of an (even multi-dimensional) array.
Define example one-axis array
myarr := count 6 = 1 2 3 4 5 6
retrieve a specific item
myarr@0 = 1
use pick (pick allows specifying another array as the index for a multidimensional array)
1 pick myarr = 2
scheme like operations
first myarr =1 rest myarr =2 3 4 5 6 front myarr =1 2 3 4 5
There are quite a few others (too large to list here).
Objective-C
<lang objc> NSArray *array;
//... id element = [array objectAtIndex:index];</lang>
OCaml
let element = array.(index)
Octave
<lang octave>a = [1:10]; disp(a(3)); % display third element of the vector disp(a(3:6)); % display elements from 3 to 6 ("subarray") disp(a(1:2:10)); % display elements at odd indexes (1, 3, 5...) disp(a(2:2:10)); % display elements at even indexes (2, 4, 6...) disp(a(10:-1:1)); % display elements in reversed order</lang>
Perl
$elem = $array[0];
PHP
<lang php> $array = array('php', 'has', 'arrays');
// First element $elem = $array[0];</lang>
Pop11
lvars ar = {1 two 'three'}; lvars elem; ;;; Access second element and assign to variable elem ar(2) -> elem;
This example uses the simplest possible array (a vector). Pop11 has more general arrays, but in all cases access follows the same pattern, and look the same as procedure (function) call.
Python
The item is an element in a list at a given index
item = aList[index]
or
To use a list like a stack be it FIFO/LIFO
aList.pop() # Pop last item in a list aList.pop(0) # Pop first item in a list
Note: When using the pop() method, the element is removed from the list.
R
An element from a vector can be retrieved with the []; slices can be taken using ranges or another vector of indexes.
<lang R>a <- 1:10 # create a vector made of number from 1 to 10 print(a[1]) # print the first element print(a[4:6]) # print elements from 4 to 6 print(a[c(1,8, 9)]) # print element 1, 8 and 9</lang>
Comma separated indexes can be used to index matrix, e.g. <lang R>a <- matrix(c(1,2,3,4), 2, 2) print(a[2,1])</lang>
Ruby
<lang ruby> ary = ['Ruby','rules','big','time']
#the first element element = ary[0] #or element = ary.first # => element = 'Ruby'
#the last element element = ary[-1] #or element = ary.last # => element = 'time'
#retrieving different values at once elements = ary.values_at(0,2,3) # => elements = ['Ruby','big','time']
#select the first element of length 3 element = ary.find{|el|el.length==3} # => element = "big"</lang>
Scheme
Lists are more often used in Scheme than vectors <lang scheme> (vector-ref array index)</lang>
Slate
<lang slate>{$a. #(1 2). 'b'. True} at: 2</lang>
Smalltalk
<lang smalltalk> #($a $b $c) at: 2</lang>
Standard ML
val element = Array.sub (array, index)
Tcl
All arrays in Tcl are associative. If "key" is the variable that holds the key of the element to be retrieved, then <lang tcl>set result $array($key)</lang> If you are looking for a collection of values that are indexed by number, you want a list. List are indexed into with the lindex command: <lang tcl>set result [lindex $list $index]</lang>
Toka
This retrieves the value 20 from the second item in the array:
3 cells is-array table ( Populate the array ) 10 0 table array.put 20 1 table array.put 30 2 table array.put table 1 array.get
X86 assembly
This retrieves the third 32bit element of an array made of 4-bytes long (32bit) elements. <lang asm> mov esi, array_offset
mov ebx, 2 mov eax, [esi+ebx*4]</lang>