Difference between revisions of "Remove"
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map: removes one key/value pair by key; the map is mutated in place; | map: removes one key/value pair by key; the map is mutated in place; | ||
| − | returns 1 if key was found, 0 otherwise string: returns a new string with the first occurrence of k removed. | + | returns 1 if key was found, 0 otherwise. |
| + | |||
| + | string: returns a new string with the first occurrence of k removed. | ||
May be called with function syntax or dot syntax. | May be called with function syntax or dot syntax. | ||
Revision as of 21:55, 2 May 2021
remove removes part of a list, map, or string.
See also: indexOf
Arguments
| Parameter Name | Default Value | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| self | list, map, or string | object to remove something from |
Usage Notes
Exact behavior of remove depends on the data type of self:
list: removes one element by its index; the list is mutated in place; returns null, and throws an error if the given index out of range.
map: removes one key/value pair by key; the map is mutated in place; returns 1 if key was found, 0 otherwise.
string: returns a new string with the first occurrence of k removed.
May be called with function syntax or dot syntax.
Example
a=["a","b","c"]; a.remove 1 // leaves a == ["a", "c"]
d={"ichi":"one"}; d.remove "ni" // returns 0
"Spam".remove("S") // returns "pam"