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The subrange assigment replaces a specified subsequence of a list or string with a supplied subsequence. The allowed forms are:
variable[start-index-expr..end-index-expr] = result-expr object-expr.name[start-index-expr..end-index-expr] = result-expr object-expr.(name-expr)[start-index-expr..end-index-expr] = result-expr $name[start-index-expr..end-index-expr] = result-expr |
As with indexed assigments, the first form writes into a variable, and the last
three forms write into a property. The same errors (E_TYPE
,
E_INVIND
, E_PROPNF
and E_PERM
for lack of read/write
permission on the property) may be raised. If variable does not yet have
a value (i.e., it has never been assigned to), E_VARNF
will be raised.
As before, the $
expression can be used in either start-index-expr
or end-index-expr, meaning the length of the original value of the
expression just before the [...]
part.
If start-index-expr or end-index-expr is not an integer, if the value
of variable or the property is not a list or string, or result-expr
is not the same type as variable or the property, E_TYPE
is
raised. E_RANGE
is raised if end-index-expr is less than zero
or if start-index-expr is greater than the length of the list or string
plus one. Note: the length of result-expr does not need to be the same
as the length of the specified range.
In precise terms, the subrange assigment
v[start..end] = value |
v = {@v[1..start - 1], @value, @v[end + 1..$]} |
v = v[1..start - 1] + value + v[end + 1..$] |
The assigment expression itself returns the value of result-expr. For
the following examples, assume that l
initially contains the list
{1, 2, 3}
and that s
initially contains the string "foobar":
l[5..6] = {7, 8} error--> E_RANGE l[2..3] = 4 error--> E_TYPE l[#2..3] = {7} error--> E_TYPE s[2..3] = {6} error--> E_TYPE l[2..3] = {6, 7, 8, 9} => {6, 7, 8, 9} l => {1, 6, 7, 8, 9} l[2..1] = {10, "foo"} => {10, "foo"} l => {1, 10, "foo", 6, 7, 8, 9} l[3][2..$] = "u" => "u" l => {1, 10, "fu", 6, 7, 8, 9} s[7..12] = "baz" => "baz" s => "foobarbaz" s[1..3] = "fu" => "fu" s => "fubarbaz" s[1..0] = "test" => "test" s => "testfubarbaz" |
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