How do you write empty arrays when they have multiple dimensions? Answer in a comment or in the twitter poll below π
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How do you write empty arrays when they have multiple dimensions? Answer in a comment or in the twitter poll below π
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For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
Nik Dyankov -
Gaurav D. Lohar -
Kafeel Ahmad (kaf shekh) -
Ayoola Damilare -
Top comments (8)
If the challenge/problem specified the cardinality of the sets each of the dimensions span, we could use a recursive function, something like:
Let's say you want that three-dimensional array to be Rubik's cube-like, filled with zeros:
Otherwise, I'd simply go for the solution @wingkwong posted:
[]
π€·ββοΈThe samplist way is :
let myArr = [[],[],[]]
With spread operator:
let arr1 = [[],[]]
let arr2 = [[],...arr1]
We can use it with new Array(3) fill() and map()
I like it. Very empty
Did I get the challenge wrong? It Isn't about creating empty multidimensional array?
It's an interesting challenge. Your answer isn't wrong per-se, as how you represent the empty array depends on the code that processes the value. I think your answer however may show a mix-up between the dimension of an array vs. the length of an array. A multidimensional array is nested according to the number of dimensions. So a two dimensional array with two rows and two columns might look like:
The number of row and columns are the lengths of the arrays in each dimension. A three dimensional array with one element might look like
So when I see an array
[[],[],[]]
I see a two dimensional array, with a length of three in the first dimension. Make sense?Thank you Ryan!!! You teach me something new. i think here in this example: [[],[],[]] it's a 3d array?!
You can tell how many dimensions an array has by how many individual indices you need to access the values. let's add some values to the above array and access one:
Notice that we need two indices to access the values. An array of three dimensions would be nested such that you need three indices. For example:
Thanks so much Ryan, it makes a lot of sense now.