Created
July 2, 2019 20:16
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Mainly a proof of concept. There are better ways to do this, but it was a quick experiment to create something like Python’s slicing in Kotlin.
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import kotlin.math.min | |
object start { | |
infix fun to(other: Int) = RangeTuple(0, other) | |
infix fun to(other: end) = RangeTuple(0, Int.MAX_VALUE) | |
} | |
object end | |
infix fun Int.to(other: end) = RangeTuple(this, Int.MAX_VALUE) | |
class RangeTuple(val first: Int, val last: Int) | |
fun <T> effectiveIndex(index: Int, list: List<T>): Int { | |
return min(list.size, if (index < 0) list.size + index else index) | |
} | |
operator fun <T> List<T>.get(range: RangeTuple): List<T> { | |
return this.subList(effectiveIndex(range.first, this), effectiveIndex(range.last, this)) | |
} | |
infix fun Int.to(other: Int): RangeTuple { | |
return RangeTuple(this, other) | |
} | |
fun main() { | |
val list = listOf(1, 2, 3, 4) | |
println(list[1 to 3]) // [2, 3] | |
println(list[0 to -1]) // [1, 2, 3] | |
println(list[-2 to -1]) // [3] | |
println(list[start to end]) // [1, 2, 3, 4] | |
println(list[start to 3]) // [1, 2, 3] | |
println(list[-2 to end]) // [3, 4] | |
} |
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