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I feel like I'm missing something with CoffeeScript and 2 dimensional arrays. I'm simply attempting to make a grid of spaces (think checkers). After some searching and a discovery with the arrays.map function, I came up with this:

@spaces = [0...20].map (x)->
  [0...20].map (y) ->
    new Elements.Space()

And this seems to work great, I have a nice 2 dimensional array with my Space object created in each. But now I want to send the created space constructor the x,y location. Because I'm two layers deep, I lost the x variable when I entered the map function for y.

Ideally I would want to do something like:

@spaces = [0...20].map (x)->
  [0...20].map (y) ->
    new Elements.Space(x, y)

or something that feels more natural to me like:

for row in rows
  for column in row
    @spaces[row][column] = new Elements.Space(row, column)

I'm really open to any better way of doing this. I know how I would do it in standard JavaScript, but really would like to learn how to do it in CoffeeScript.

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1 Answer 1

7

Your first attempt with map is a valid way to do it. You don't actually lose x, because closures. So there's nothing wrong with your second code block:

@spaces = [0...20].map (x)->
  [0...20].map (y) ->
    new Elements.Space(x, y)

The for loop version of this is also pretty simple:

@spaces = for x in [0...20]
  for y in [0...20]
    new Elements.Space(x, y)

Remember, everything is an expression. So this works (and might be a bit clearer than the map version).

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  • 1
    The for-loop version also doesn't have to create the arrays just to call map on them, the for x in [0...20] translate directly into JavaScript for-loops. Sep 27, 2012 at 3:38
  • Thank you! Me translating what I had to something simpler for this question ended up fixing it. From what I saw in the Chrome debugger, x was undefined. But it works!
    – Chris
    Sep 27, 2012 at 3:45

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