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    • A
      aaronventure
      last edited by

      Array.reverse()


      Reverses the order of the elements in the array.

      Array.reverse()
      

      _

      const var arr1 = [1, 2, 3];
      arr1.reverse();
      Console.print(trace(arr1)); // [3, 2, 1]
      
      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • A
        aaronventure
        last edited by

        Array.remove()


        Removes all instances of the given element.

        Array.remove(var elementToRemove)
        
        const var arr1 = [1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 5,];
        arr1.remove(2);
        
        Console.print(trace(arr1)); // [1, 3, 4, 5]
        
        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • A
          aaronventure
          last edited by

          Array.removeElement()


          Removes the element at the given position.

          Array.removeElement(int index)
          
          const var arr1 = [1, 2, 3];
          Console.print(arr1[1]); // 2
          
          arr1.removeElement(1);
          Console.print(arr1[1]); // 3
          
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          • A
            aaronventure
            last edited by

            Array,sortNatural()

            Sorts array of numbers, objects, or strings with "number in string" priority. Can also sort a combination of all types

            Array.sortNatural()
            

            It puts arrays first in index order (doesn't sort them), followed by a mix of int, double and string variables. If a string starts with a number, it'll get thrown in the mix.

            JSON objects go last.

            const var arr1 = [5.2, 3, "1", "17", [4, 2], [1, 12], "word", "with2", "3LittlePigs", {"prop1": 12, "prop2": 55}];
            arr1.sortNatural();
            Console.print(trace(arr1)); // [[4, 2], [1, 12], "1", 3, "3LittlePigs", 5.2, "17", {"prop1": 12, "prop2": 55} ]
            
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            • A
              aaronventure
              last edited by

              Array.pushIfNotAlreadyThere()


              Adds the given element at the end and returns the size.

              Array.pushIfNotAlreadyThere(var elementToInsert)
              

              The method will not add an element to an array if a matching element already exists inside the array. If an argument is an element that already exists, the return will still be the first index beyond the end of an array (not an index of a first/any matching element).

              const arr1 = [0, 1];
              
              arr1.pushIfNotAlreadyThere(2);
              Console.print(trace(arr1)); // [0, 1, 2]
              
              // It won't add an element if it already exists in the array
              arr1.pushIfNotAlreadyThere(2);
              Console.print(trace(arr1)); // [0, 1, 2]
              
              arr1.pushIfNotAlreadyThere(1);
              Console.print(trace(arr1)); // [0, 1, 2]
              
              Console.print(arr1.pushIfNotAlreadyThere(1)); // 3
              
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              • A
                aaronventure
                last edited by aaronventure

                Array.map ()

                Calls the given function for every array element, and returns an array of individual function returns.

                Array.map(var testFunction, var optionalThisObject)
                

                The function takes one argument: the element it's currently processing. This is useful if you want to perform an operation for every single element of an array by passing in a premade function.

                An alternative would be to use a for(x in array) loop, but the map method allows for cleaner multidimensional processing.

                const arr1 = [0, 1];
                
                arr1.map(function(element)
                {
                	Console.print(element);
                });
                
                Interface: 0
                Interface: 1
                

                The method returns an array of individual function returns. If no return exists, the element will be undefined/null.

                const arr1 = [0, 1];
                
                const arr2 = arr1.map(function(element)
                {
                	return element + 10;
                });
                
                Console.print(trace(arr2)); // [10, 11]
                

                I think that the optional this is broken, or I'm just not using it correctly (even though this is how it's used for other methods):

                const test = 10;
                const arr1 = [0, 1];
                
                arr1.map(function(element)
                {
                	Console.print(this); // error: API call with undefined parameter 0;
                }, test);
                
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                • A
                  aaronventure
                  last edited by

                  Array.clone()

                  Return a clone of the array, instantiating a separate data set in the memory.

                  Array.clone()
                  

                  If you assign an array object reference to another constant or variable, you're only setting the reference. Making any changes to the array B by referencing it will also make changes to array A. If you need a separate set of data to work on, you need to clone it.

                  const arr1 = [0, 1];
                  
                  var arr2 = arr1;
                  
                  // Changing any element in arr2 will also change it in arr1
                  arr2[0] = 22;
                  Console.print(trace(arr1)); // [22, 1]
                  
                  // Reset the element 0 back to 0
                  arr1[0] = 0;
                  
                  // Cloning the array creates a new dataset in memory, separate from the original array
                  arr2 = arr1.clone();
                  Console.print(trace(arr1)); [0, 1]
                  arr2[0] = 22;
                  Console.print(trace(arr2)); [22, 1]
                  

                  Because arrays in HISE are effectively objects (which is hinted at by them having a bunch of class methods we're looking at here), this method will also work with any other object, including JSON objects, component references etc.

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                  • A
                    aaronventure
                    last edited by

                    Alright, this is about done. Onto the fun stuff.

                    alt text

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • A
                      aaronventure
                      last edited by aaronventure

                      AUDIOFILE

                      Link Preview Image
                      HISE | Docs

                      favicon

                      (docs.hise.dev)

                      This is mostly covered, with only two methods

                      • :question_mark: linkTo
                      • :question_mark: loadFile

                      loadFile() is covered in the beginning of the chapter, so we can just paste the example from there

                      // Load the example assets
                      FileSystem.loadExampleAssets();
                      
                      // Grab whatever asset is first
                      const var firstAsset = Engine.loadAudioFilesIntoPool()[0];
                      Console.print(firstAsset); // {PROJECT_FOLDER}breakbeat_44k.wav
                      
                      // Create a audio file slot
                      const var audioFile = Engine.createAndRegisterAudioFile(0);
                      
                      // load the first asset
                      audioFile.loadFile(firstAsset);
                      

                      For linkTo, I have no idea what it does. How is it different than just assigning the reference? Does it let you have another audiofile, and linking it will then have it react to the callbacks of the linked audiofile?

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                      • A
                        aaronventure
                        last edited by

                        Array.filter()


                        Creates a new array filled with elements that pass the function test.

                        Array.filter(var testFunction, var optionalThisObject)
                        

                        The function needs one argument which will be a reference to the array element. If returned true, the element will be pushed to the array to be returned by the method.

                        const arr = [1, 2, 3, 1];
                        const arr2 = arr.filter(function(element)
                        {
                        	if (element == 2 || element == 3)
                        		return true;
                        });
                        
                        Console.print(trace(arr2)); // [2, 3]
                        
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