Is there a concise notation to access last element of an array, similar to std::vector::back() in C++? Do I have to write:
veryLongArrayName.[veryLongArrayName.Length-1]
each time?
Expanding from comment
The built-in option is Seq.last veryLongArrayName
, but note that this is O(N) rather than O(1), so for all but the smallest arrays probably too inefficient for practical use.
That said, there's no harm in abstracting this functionality yourself:
[<CompilationRepresentation(CompilationRepresentationFlags.ModuleSuffix)>]
[<RequireQualifiedAccess>]
module Array =
let inline last (arr:_[]) = arr.[arr.Length - 1]
Now you can do Array.last veryLongArrayName
with no overhead whatsoever, while keeping the code very idiomatic and readable.
Array
module has them. Essentially the first attribute causes the Array
module to be named ArrayModule
in IL (i.e. that's how other languages will see it if it's public), and the second attribute prohibits doing open Array
.
I can not find it in the official documents, but F# 4 seems to have Array.last
implemented out of the box:
/// Returns the last element of the array.
/// array: The input array.
val inline last : array:'T [] -> 'T
As an alternative to writing a function for _[], you can also write an extension property for IList<'T>:
open System.Collections.Generic
[<AutoOpen>]
module IListExtensions =
type IList<'T> with
member self.Last = self.[self.Count - 1]
let lastValue = [|1; 5; 13|].Last // 13
Seq.last veryLongArrayName
, but it won't be anywhere near as efficient. Why not just write an inline function for this once and call that each time?Seq.last
already sets the precedent here;back
is a C++ism, largely due to the standard library's need to distinguish between iterators and values (i.e.end
vs.back
).