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Strides

See generated documentation for the most up-to-date information.

Indexing and Slicing with Stride

One thing missing from default Nim is the ability to do strided slicing.

This is the ability to specify a range with a step parameter to select every nth element in the range, or to reverse the "direction" of the range in case of a negative step.

This package adds the @: operator to do just this:

import pkg/strides

let text = "hello world"

# Regular slice
assert text[ 2 .. ^3 ] == "llo wor"

# Strided slice with a step of 2.
assert text[ 2 .. ^3 @: 2 ] == "lowr"

# Strided slice with reversed direction.
assert text[ ^3 .. 2 @: -1 ] == "row oll"

# Just the stride, like `xs[::s]` in Python:
assert text[ @: -1 ] == "dlrow olleh"
assert text[ @: 2 ] == "hlowrd"

# Additionally, a third form of length+stride is supported:

# Positive stride works like `xs[:a:s]` in Python:
assert text[ 10 @: 1 ] == "hello worl"
assert text[ 10 @: 2 ] == "hlowr"
assert text[ 10 @: 3 ] == "hlwl"

# Negative stride works like `xs[a::s]` in Python:
assert text[ 10 @: -1 ] == "lrow olleh"
assert text[ 10 @: -2 ] == "lo le"
assert text[ 10 @: -3 ] == "lwlh"

These strides can also be used as iterators in lieu of countdown() and countup() if they do not contain any BackwardsIndexes.

let k1 = collect:
  for i in 0 ..< 10 @: 2:
    i

assert k1 == @[0, 2, 4, 6, 8]

let k2 = collect:
  for i in 20 .. -1 @: -7:
    i

assert k2 == @[20, 13, 6, -1]

Here's how they relate:

Nim iterator Python range() Python index Nim + Strides
countdown(a, b, s) range(a, b-1, -s) xs[a:b-1:-s] a .. b @: -s
countup(a, b, s) range(a, b+1, s) xs[a:b+1:s] a .. b @: s

Note that Nim convention is to be end-point inclusive1.

LinearSegment

There's more to this package than just @:.

The resolved type of StridedSlice (made with @:) is a LinearSegment. Resolved here means when any BackwardsIndex or StrideIndex has been translated into actual integers by interpreting them in the context of a length. And a LinearSegment is the finite version of a LinearSequence.

Check out the generated documentation for more.

Footnotes

  1. Unfortunately.

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Strided indexing and slicing for Nim

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