# Working With Arrays RETRO offers a number of words for operating on statically sized arrays. ## Namespace The words operating on arrays are kept in an `array:` namespace. ## Creating Arrays The easiest way to create an array is to wrap the values in a `{` and `}` pair: ``` { #1 #2 #3 #4 } { 'this 'is 'an 'array 'of 'strings } { 'this 'is 'a 'mixed 'array #1 #2 #3 } ``` You can also make an array from a quotation which returns values and the number of values to store in the array: ``` [ #1 #2 #3 #3 ] array:counted-results [ #1 #2 #3 #3 ] array:make ``` ## Accessing Elements You can access a specific value with `array:nth` and `fetch` or `store`: ``` { #1 #2 #3 #4 } #3 array:nth fetch ``` ## Find The Length Use `array:length` to find the size of the array. ``` { #1 #2 #3 #4 } array:length ``` ## Duplicate Use `array:dup` to make a copy of an array: ``` { #1 #2 #3 #4 } array:dup ``` ## Filtering RETRO provides `array:filter` which extracts matching values from an array. This is used like: ``` { #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 } [ n:even? ] array:filter ``` The quote will be passed each value in the array and should return TRUE or FALSE. Values that lead to TRUE will be collected into a new array. ## Mapping `array:map` applies a quotation to each item in an array and constructs a new array from the returned values. Example: ``` { #1 #2 #3 } [ #10 * ] array:map ``` ## Reduce `array:reduce` takes an array, a starting value, and a quote. It executes the quote once for each item in the array, passing the item and the value to the quote. The quote should consume both and return a new value. ``` { #1 #2 #3 } #0 [ + ] array:reduce ``` ## Search RETRO provides `array:contains?` and `array:contains-string?` to search an array for a value (either a number or string) and return either TRUE or FALSE. ``` #100 { #1 #2 #3 } array:contains? 'test { 'abc 'def 'test 'ghi } array:contains-string? ```