DELI
deli( table, index )
| table | the variable name of the table |
| index | the numbered key to remove from the table |
This function will remove an entry from a table that matches the index given. This only works for tables that have numbered keys, but it does not change tables that have named keys.
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We can create a table that is a list of color strings first and insert values immediately like this:
colors = { "red", "blue", "pink", "yellow" }
| Colors | |
| 1 | "red" |
| 2 | "blue" |
| 3 | "pink" |
| 4 | "yellow" |
These values are automatically indexed (given numbered keys) so we can use those indexes to remove an entry like this:
deli( colors, 2 )
| Colors | |
| 1 | "red" |
| 2 | "pink" |
| 3 | "yellow" |
Notice that "blue" was the value stored at index 2. Deleting "blue", also updated the rest of the list's keys so that there isn't a gap at index 2.
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Return Value
This function will return the deleted item. If the function did not delete anything, then it will return nil.
table = { "a", "b", "c" }
returned = deli(table,1)
print(returned) --prints a
print(table[1]) --prints b
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Images in this Guide by NerdyTeachers is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0

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5 May 2023

