5

I cannot figure out how to add values to an empty array in Swift. I have tried started with empty array in two different ways:

var emptyArray : Int[]?
emptyArray = Int[]()

and

var emptyArray = []

(by the way, what is the difference with these two ways of creating empty arrays?)

I have tried to add an integer to the array with emptyArray.append(1), emptyArray += [1] but none works nor it is in the guide book (or maybe, it is hidden some where that I couldn't figure out). Both of these work if there is one or more values in it and this is driving me crazy! Please let me know how to if you know how to do it. Thank you!

2
  • The difference: #1 creates a generic array that will contain Int's and only Int's. #2 creates a non-generic array that can contain items of any class. Jun 15, 2014 at 12:47
  • Thank you, can you please tell me why when I create an empty array using #1, neither emptyArray.append(1) nor emptyArray += [1] work?
    – Fried Rice
    Jun 15, 2014 at 14:16

3 Answers 3

15

First, create empty Int array:

var emptyArray : Int[] = []

or:

var emptyArray = Int[]()

Add number to that array (two ways):

emptyArray += [1]
emptyArray.append(2)

Array now contains [1, 2]

4
  • Whats the difference between "+=" and "append"?
    – frankzk
    Jun 10, 2015 at 5:38
  • @frankzk it's the same.
    – Suisse
    Nov 29, 2015 at 20:12
  • @frankzk (1/2) Functionality wise they are identical. But I don't believe they are 100% the same. I believe append is better/faster. Why? Because the + operator is overloaded. Meaning every time the compiler sees + it has to go through series of checks. Like first identify the left had side's type. Is it an Int or a String or Array or whatever? Then let's just make sure the right hand side also has the same type.
    – mfaani
    Sep 18, 2018 at 10:50
  • (2/2) This extra type checking takes time. See stackoverflow.com/questions/29707622/… and stackoverflow.com/a/48916182/5175709 @Suisse
    – mfaani
    Sep 18, 2018 at 10:53
6

You need to first declare the empty array in Swift like this:

 var emptyArray = [Int]()

You can then append that array with whatever value/variable you so choose like this:

emptyArray.append(6)

just be sure you keep in mind that trying to append a type that mismatches your array declaration will give you a compile error. For example, trying to append a string would error since this array was declared using the Int type.

Playgrounds in XCode are an excellent resource for testing things like this.

0

Swift

     var arrName = [String]()
     arrName = ["Deep", "Hemant", "Yash"]
     print("old array--> ", arrName)
     arrName.append("Jay")
     print("new array--> ", arrName)

Output:- old array--> ["Deep", "Hemant", "Yash"]

new array--> ["Deep", "Hemant", "Yash", "Jay"]

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