Operations for a dynamic List data structure.

Examples Filter
Go slices are commonly used to represent a List.
package main

import "fmt"

func main() {
    // Initializing a slice.
    s := make([]string, 3)
    fmt.Println("emp:", s)

    // Setting and getting values by index.
    s[0] = "a"
    s[1] = "b"
    s[2] = "c"
    fmt.Println("set:", s)
    fmt.Println("get:", s[2])

    // len returns the length of the slice as expected.
    fmt.Println("len:", len(s))

    // Adding elements to the end of the slice.
    s = append(s, "d")
    s = append(s, "e", "f")
    fmt.Println("apd:", s)

    // Copying slices.
    c := make([]string, len(s))
    copy(c, s)
    fmt.Println("cpy:", c)

    // Slices support a "slice" operator with the syntax slice[low:high]
    l := s[2:5]
    fmt.Println("sl1:", l)

    l = s[:5]
    fmt.Println("sl2:", l)

    l = s[2:]
    fmt.Println("sl3:", l)

    t := []string{"g", "h", "i"}
    fmt.Println("dcl:", t)

    // Slices can be composed into multi-dimensional data structures.
    twoD := make([][]int, 3)
    for i := 0; i < 3; i++ {
        innerLen := i + 1
        twoD[i] = make([]int, innerLen)
        for j := 0; j < innerLen; j++ {
            twoD[i][j] = i + j
        }
    }
    fmt.Println("2d: ", twoD)
}
Last Run  :
emp: [  ]
set: [a b c]
get: c
len: 3
apd: [a b c d e f]
cpy: [a b c d e f]
sl1: [c d e]
sl2: [a b c d e]
sl3: [c d e f]
dcl: [g h i]
2d:  [[0] [1 2] [2 3 4]]