Hey David, (mind blown). Very interesting and useful trick! My c++ brain didn't allow for this possibility. Esthetically the misrepresentation of the array "shape" bothered me. I found that I could be less bothered by changing one line and it still works!
int meta[2][0]; Thanks for playing! Dana On Fri, Jan 7, 2022 at 10:06 AM David Loberg Code <d.loberg.c...@wmich.edu> wrote: > Dana, > > I realize that this example is a 2D array, but does this workaround > accomplish what you want? > > > > int meta[2][2]; > > > [0, 1, 2, 3] @=> int b[]; > > [10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15] @=> int c[]; > > > b @=> meta[0]; > > c @=> meta[1]; > > > for (int i; i< b.size(); i++) > > { <<< " b["+i+"] ==", meta[0][i] >>>; } > > > for (int i; i< c.size(); i++) > > { <<< "c["+i+"] ==", meta[1][i] >>>; } > > > Santé, > davd > > ----------------- > > David Loberg Code > > School of Music > > Western Michigan > > c...@wmich.edu > > *any pronouns* > > ------------------------------ > > > _______________________________________________ > chuck-users mailing list > chuck-users@lists.cs.princeton.edu > https://lists.cs.princeton.edu/mailman/listinfo/chuck-users >
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