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In Go, an array is a numbered sequence of elements of a specific length. In typical Go code, slices are much more common; arrays are useful in some special scenarios. |
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package main |
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import "fmt" |
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func main() { |
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Here we create an array |
var a [5]int
fmt.Println("emp:", a)
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We can set a value at an index using the
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a[4] = 100
fmt.Println("set:", a)
fmt.Println("get:", a[4])
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The builtin |
fmt.Println("len:", len(a))
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Use this syntax to declare and initialize an array in one line. |
b := [5]int{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
fmt.Println("dcl:", b)
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Array types are one-dimensional, but you can compose types to build multi-dimensional data structures. |
var twoD [2][3]int
for i := 0; i < 2; i++ {
for j := 0; j < 3; j++ {
twoD[i][j] = i + j
}
}
fmt.Println("2d: ", twoD)
}
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Note that arrays appear in the form |
$ go run arrays.go emp: [0 0 0 0 0] set: [0 0 0 0 100] get: 100 len: 5 dcl: [1 2 3 4 5] 2d: [[0 1 2] [1 2 3]] |
Next example: Slices.