Difference between revisions of "Array Reference"

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[[Category:Papyrus]]
[[Category:Papyrus]]
[[Category:Papyrus Language Reference]]
[[Category:Papyrus Language Reference]]
[[Category:Arrays]]

Latest revision as of 20:21, 1 March 2018

Arrays are values that contain several other values, indexed by a 0-based number. (0 is the first element, 1 in the second, and so on).

Array Type[edit | edit source]

<array type> ::= <element type> '[' ']'

An array type is denoted by adding a pair of empty brackets after the type of the elements. The element type may only be a non-array type, so multi-dimentional arrays are not allowed. These types can be used anywhere else other types are used - as parameter, return, variable, and property types.

Examples[edit | edit source]

; An array of integers
int[]


; An array of MyObjects
MyObject[]

Array Creation[edit | edit source]

<array creation> ::= 'new' <element type> '[' <expression> ']'

To create an array, use the "new" keyword, followed by the type and size. The Size is denoted by the integer between the two square brackets, but that number may come from an expression or variable.

The initial value of each element will be the default value for the type.

If you make an array property, then the Creation Kit will determine the size of the array by how many elements are put into it.

Note that this cannot appear in the script outside of a function.

Examples[edit | edit source]

; Create an array of 20 floats
float[] x = new float[20]


; Create an array of 5*count MyScripts
MyScript[] x = new MyScript[5 * count]

Array Length[edit | edit source]

<array length> ::= <expression> '.' 'Length'

To get the length of an array, you can access the read-only length property on the variable holding the array. If the variable is None, the length will still succeed, but return 0. Note that the last valid index in an array is the length of the array, minus 1.

Examples[edit | edit source]

; Get the length of our array
int[] myArray = new int[10]
x = myArray.Length ; x will get 10


; Get the length of an uninitialized array (None)
float[] myArray
x = myArray.Length ; x will get 0

Array Elements[edit | edit source]

<array access> ::= <expression> '[' <expression> ']'

To get a specific array element, just put the index of the element you want between two square brackets. This value can also come from an expression, or a return value of a function, or something else. The valid elements in an array are from 0 to the length minus 1.

Examples[edit | edit source]

; get the first element in the array
x = myArray[0]


; get the last element of the array
x = myArray[myArray.Length - 1]

Array Functions[edit | edit source]

Several additional functions are available for arrays, listed below: