Hello,
after a short exchange in the thread tables for dummies, I started to write some material for a tutorial intended for the wiki. One chapter out of four planned is completed (however probably the biggest), plus an introduction, all in rough form. It is there (there is a file with the source text, and one with little pieces of code, so that we can run them and avoid polluting the tutorial with too many bugs ).
All comments, critics, and contributions welcome (reason why I uploaded). I don't intend to create the wiki page before more raw material is there, because i have a plan and content in mind: it would be stupid to invite everyone to edit directly already just to revert or rewrite because it does not fit. However, you can see a bit of the plan (section titles with empty content at the end of the text.) Probably it will be too big for a single page: we could let the introduction as portal, and from there point to sections on other pages.
In any case, if you feel motivated, you will have work: a tutorial is never good enough; Lua table form a big (and somewhat confused) topic; and english is a foreign language for me. (Also, I take the opportunity to restate my conviction that beginners are in the best situation to explain to other beginners: so, if you are one of them, you will be warmly invited to improve the tutorial.)
Denis
PS: seems would be really helpful: there are constantly questions directly or indirectly related to tables or data structuring, or manipulation of such beasts.
tutorial on lua tables & data structures
Forum rules
Before you make a thread asking for help, read this.
Before you make a thread asking for help, read this.
tutorial on lua tables & data structures
Last edited by spir on Wed Nov 14, 2012 9:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
... la vita e estrany ...
- Roland_Yonaba
- Inner party member
- Posts: 1563
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2011 6:08 pm
- Location: Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso)
- Contact:
Re: tutorial on lua tables & data structures
All the links you gave point to that same thread, and I can't find those said tutorial files.
Or I may have missed something...I didn't have coffee since this morning...
Or I may have missed something...I didn't have coffee since this morning...
Re: tutorial on lua tables & data structures
It's me missing coffee! Sh*it! Corrected the link to the online repo, thanks for telling,Roland_Yonaba wrote:All the links you gave point to that same thread, and I can't find those said tutorial files.
Or I may have missed something...I didn't have coffee since this morning...
Denis
... la vita e estrany ...
Re: tutorial on lua tables & data structures
Hi spir,
Very nice and short tutorial, I enjoyed it . It was a little bit hard to read, though, as the source file does not have format, but I understand is a raw first version.
Let me try to suggest something. One property I find very important and very usefull is that tables are stored by reference, so we can manipulate multiple references to a single object, for example:
Very nice and short tutorial, I enjoyed it . It was a little bit hard to read, though, as the source file does not have format, but I understand is a raw first version.
Let me try to suggest something. One property I find very important and very usefull is that tables are stored by reference, so we can manipulate multiple references to a single object, for example:
Code: Select all
table1 = {1,2,3,4}
table2 = table1 -- new reference to previous table
table2[3] = 5 -- we modify the reference's third item
for i=1, #table1, 1 do
print("item #"..i.." from table1 is "..table1[i]) -- we see that the original item has been modified as well!
print("item #"..i.." from table2 is "..table2[i])
end
Re: tutorial on lua tables & data structures
Yes, you are right! A very important property, and topic for a tutorial. I take the opportunity to remind it is for the wiki: thus, when posted there, people like you are very welcome to contribute and improve. Actually, you are in the best situation for that. For instance on the topic of references, probably it's so obvious (and "natural", meaning what I'm used to) that talking about it dod not even come to my (poor ) mindverilog wrote:Hi spir,
Very nice and short tutorial, I enjoyed it . It was a little bit hard to read, though, as the source file does not have format, but I understand is a raw first version.
Let me try to suggest something. One property I find very important and very usefull is that tables are stored by reference, so we can manipulate multiple references to a single object, for example:
Code: Select all
table1 = {1,2,3,4} table2 = table1 -- new reference to previous table table2[3] = 5 -- we modify the reference's third item for i=1, #table1, 1 do print("item #"..i.." from table1 is "..table1[i]) -- we see that the original item has been modified as well! print("item #"..i.." from table2 is "..table2[i]) end
Let me suggest an example for references: a palette of colors used to draw or design. When the user modifies the "red" (an rgb triple) then the whole image must adapt.
What you have read is the first part of a plan, the one on tables "in general". There are 3-4 other parts planned:
2. tables used as arrays and others collections (set, map)
3. tables used as objects (records) and associated topics (tuples, classes)
4. tables for "linked structures" (graphs, trees, lists)
5 shortly back to tables in general
I just finished the part on arrays, and (since it's big compared to the rest) hope to finish part 2 in a while, maybe post it tonight. Thanks for reading and your comments, anyway.
Denis
... la vita e estrany ...
collections
Hello,
I have completed a very rough version of the section on collections; with arrays, sets, maps. If you like, you can have a look the source (file tabstruct') there! (Checked the pointer, this time.) If ever I have enough time tomorrow and this week-end (and energy, this job sucks my ch'i !), I may finish this rough and create the wiki page before you can back from skiing.
Thank you,
Denis
I have completed a very rough version of the section on collections; with arrays, sets, maps. If you like, you can have a look the source (file tabstruct') there! (Checked the pointer, this time.) If ever I have enough time tomorrow and this week-end (and energy, this job sucks my ch'i !), I may finish this rough and create the wiki page before you can back from skiing.
Thank you,
Denis
... la vita e estrany ...
objects....
Posted start of part about objects, with section on objects properly: source there (tutorial text still in wiki lang; and there is now a mini Löve app).
Denis
Denis
... la vita e estrany ...
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot], Semrush [Bot] and 2 guests