Attention: Here be dragons (unstable version)
This is the latest
(unstable) version of this documentation, which may document features
not available in or compatible with released stable versions of Redot.
Checking the stable version of the documentation...
PackedInt64Array
A packed array of 64-bit integers.
Description
An array specifically designed to hold 64-bit integer values. Packs data tightly, so it saves memory for large array sizes.
Note: This type stores signed 64-bit integers, which means it can take values in the interval [-2^63, 2^63 - 1]
, i.e. [-9223372036854775808, 9223372036854775807]
. Exceeding those bounds will wrap around. If you only need to pack 32-bit integers tightly, see PackedInt32Array for a more memory-friendly alternative.
Differences between packed arrays, typed arrays, and untyped arrays: Packed arrays are generally faster to iterate on and modify compared to a typed array of the same type (e.g. PackedInt32Array versus Array[int]
). Also, packed arrays consume less memory. As a downside, packed arrays are less flexible as they don't offer as many convenience methods such as Array.map. Typed arrays are in turn faster to iterate on and modify than untyped arrays.
Note: Packed arrays are always passed by reference. To get a copy of an array that can be modified independently of the original array, use duplicate. This is not the case for built-in properties and methods. The returned packed array of these are a copies, and changing it will not affect the original value. To update a built-in property you need to modify the returned array, and then assign it to the property again.
Note
There are notable differences when using this API with C#. See C# API differences to GDScript for more information.
Constructors
PackedInt64Array(from: PackedInt64Array) |
|
PackedInt64Array(from: Array) |
Methods
void |
append_array(array: PackedInt64Array) |
void |
clear() |
void |
|
is_empty() const |
|
void |
|
void |
reverse() |
void |
|
size() const |
|
void |
sort() |
to_byte_array() const |
Operators
operator !=(right: PackedInt64Array) |
|
operator +(right: PackedInt64Array) |
|
operator ==(right: PackedInt64Array) |
|
operator [](index: int) |
Constructor Descriptions
PackedInt64Array PackedInt64Array() 🔗
Constructs an empty PackedInt64Array.
PackedInt64Array PackedInt64Array(from: PackedInt64Array)
Constructs a PackedInt64Array as a copy of the given PackedInt64Array.
PackedInt64Array PackedInt64Array(from: Array)
Constructs a new PackedInt64Array. Optionally, you can pass in a generic Array that will be converted.
Method Descriptions
Appends an element at the end of the array (alias of push_back).
void append_array(array: PackedInt64Array) 🔗
Appends a PackedInt64Array at the end of this array.
int bsearch(value: int, before: bool = true) 🔗
Finds the index of an existing value (or the insertion index that maintains sorting order, if the value is not yet present in the array) using binary search. Optionally, a before
specifier can be passed. If false
, the returned index comes after all existing entries of the value in the array.
Note: Calling bsearch on an unsorted array results in unexpected behavior.
void clear() 🔗
Clears the array. This is equivalent to using resize with a size of 0
.
Returns the number of times an element is in the array.
PackedInt64Array duplicate() 🔗
Creates a copy of the array, and returns it.
Assigns the given value to all elements in the array. This can typically be used together with resize to create an array with a given size and initialized elements.
int find(value: int, from: int = 0) const 🔗
Searches the array for a value and returns its index or -1
if not found. Optionally, the initial search index can be passed.
Returns the 64-bit integer at the given index
in the array. This is the same as using the []
operator (array[index]
).
Returns true
if the array contains value
.
int insert(at_index: int, value: int) 🔗
Inserts a new integer at a given position in the array. The position must be valid, or at the end of the array (idx == size()
).
Returns true
if the array is empty.
Appends a value to the array.
Removes an element from the array by index.
Sets the size of the array. If the array is grown, reserves elements at the end of the array. If the array is shrunk, truncates the array to the new size. Calling resize once and assigning the new values is faster than adding new elements one by one.
void reverse() 🔗
Reverses the order of the elements in the array.
int rfind(value: int, from: int = -1) const 🔗
Searches the array in reverse order. Optionally, a start search index can be passed. If negative, the start index is considered relative to the end of the array.
void set(index: int, value: int) 🔗
Changes the integer at the given index.
Returns the number of elements in the array.
PackedInt64Array slice(begin: int, end: int = 2147483647) const 🔗
Returns the slice of the PackedInt64Array, from begin
(inclusive) to end
(exclusive), as a new PackedInt64Array.
The absolute value of begin
and end
will be clamped to the array size, so the default value for end
makes it slice to the size of the array by default (i.e. arr.slice(1)
is a shorthand for arr.slice(1, arr.size())
).
If either begin
or end
are negative, they will be relative to the end of the array (i.e. arr.slice(0, -2)
is a shorthand for arr.slice(0, arr.size() - 2)
).
void sort() 🔗
Sorts the elements of the array in ascending order.
PackedByteArray to_byte_array() const 🔗
Returns a copy of the data converted to a PackedByteArray, where each element have been encoded as 8 bytes.
The size of the new array will be int64_array.size() * 8
.
Operator Descriptions
bool operator !=(right: PackedInt64Array) 🔗
Returns true
if contents of the arrays differ.
PackedInt64Array operator +(right: PackedInt64Array) 🔗
Returns a new PackedInt64Array with contents of right
added at the end of this array. For better performance, consider using append_array instead.
bool operator ==(right: PackedInt64Array) 🔗
Returns true
if contents of both arrays are the same, i.e. they have all equal ints at the corresponding indices.
Returns the int at index index
. Negative indices can be used to access the elements starting from the end. Using index out of array's bounds will result in an error.