I use Visual Studio Code and I want to print all of the array data, but it only shows ... more items message.
Is there any ways to show it all?
I search it on stackoverflow but I can't find the solution.
I user default cmd terminal and it runs with Node.js
You may be trying iterate over every element inside the array and printing then individually. See the code below:
arr = [2, 54, 72, ... ] // your big array
arr.forEach(e => console.log(e))
See also https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/node-js-foreach-function/ where above code was taken
You can stringify the array and print it, just like a json object.
You can do something like
console.log(JSON.stringify(arr))
This will print the stringified version of the array which can be beautified in any editor
Related
guys.
I know we can watch an array in the VS debug mode by adding the array into the watch window, but how do we view a column of a matrix (2D array)? Let's say we have a matrix A[3][3], and I only want to see all elements in the third column in the debug mode. I tried to type A[][2] or A[:][2] or A[,][2] in the watch window, but neither of these 3 are recognizable.
Please help!
Thanks!
We can't get column values in debug mode for now, at least
not directly.
The watch window is designed to watch variables and expressions during debug mode. It can't recognize the variable which is not recognized by compiler.
e.g: Let's say we have a matrix A[3][3],compiler can recognize A variable, A[2] variable, but not for something like A[][2](It's an invalid variable). Correspondingly, it won't be recognized by watch window.
If you have a scenario in which you have a large 2-D matrix, and you do need the column value for some reason. You could create a single-dimensional array,iterate your 2-D array and put the 3rd column value into it. Then add the single-dimensional array variable into watch window.
We do have many workarounds to get the column value in debug mode, but to watch the column of array in debug mode directly, I'm afraid the answer is negative.This option is not supported in vs2017 now.
In addition:Not sure what language you use, but if you use .net(C#,VB), the A[3][3] is A jagged array, not a two-dimensional array.
This is not a real matrix, but just array of arrays, so I think there is no build in method to get this.
But with linq you can try something like this:
A.select(a => a[2]).toArray()
To use linq in the watch window, you'll need to add the following line to the top of the code:
using System.Linq;
If you have a statically allocated array, the Visual Studio debugger can easily display all of the array elements. However, if you have an array allocated dynamically and pointed to by a pointer, it will only display the first element of the array when you click the + to expand it. Is there an easy way to tell the debugger, show me this data as an array of type Foo and size X?
Yes, simple.
say you have
char *a = new char[10];
writing in the debugger:
a,10
would show you the content as if it were an array.
There are two methods to view data in an array m4x4:
float m4x4[16]={
1.f,0.f,0.f,0.f,
0.f,2.f,0.f,0.f,
0.f,0.f,3.f,0.f,
0.f,0.f,0.f,4.f
};
One way is with a Watch window (Debug/Windows/Watch). Add watch =
m4x4,16
This displays data in a list:
Another way is with a Memory window (Debug/Windows/Memory). Specify a memory start address =
m4x4
This displays data in a table, which is better for two and three dimensional matrices:
Right-click on the Memory window to determine how the binary data is visualized. Choices are limited to integers, floats and some text encodings.
In a watch window, add a comma after the name of the array, and the amount of items you want to be displayed.
a revisit:
let's assume you have a below pointer:
double ** a; // assume 5*10
then you can write below in Visual Studio debug watch:
(double(*)[10]) a[0],5
which will cast it into an array like below, and you can view all contents in one go.
double[5][10] a;
For,
int **a; //row x col
add this to watch
(int(**)[col])a,row
Yet another way to do this is specified here in MSDN.
In short, you can display a character array as several types of string. If you've got an array declared as:
char *a = new char[10];
You could print it as a unicode string in the watch window with the following:
a,su
See the tables on the MSDN page for all of the different conversions possible since there are quite a few. Many different string variants, variants to print individual items in the array, etc.
You can find a list of many things you can do with variables in the watch window in this gem in the docs:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/75w45ekt.aspx
For a variable a, there are the things already mentioned in other answers like
a,10
a,su
but there's a whole lot of other specifiers for format and size, like:
a,en (shows an enum value by name instead of the number)
a,mb (to show 1 line of 'memory' view right there in the watch window)
For MFC arrays (CArray, CStringArray, ...)
following the next link in its Tip #4
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/469416/10-More-Visual-Studio-Debugging-Tips-for-Native-De
For example for "CArray pArray", add in the Watch windows
pArray.m_pData,5
to see the first 5 elements .
If pArray is a two dimensional CArray you can look at any of the elements of the second dimension using the next syntax:
pArray.m_pData[x].m_pData,y
I haven't found a way to use this with a multidimensional array. But you can at least (if you know the index of your desired entry) add a watch to a specific value. Simply use the index-operator.
For an Array named current, which has an Array named Attribs inside, which has an Array named Attrib inside, it should look like this if you like to have to position 26:
((*((*current).Attribs)).Attrib)[26]
You can also use an offset
((*((*current).Attribs)).Attrib)+25
will show ne "next" 25 elements.
(I'm using VS2008, this shows only 25 elements maximum).
I'm parsing a very large json output from an application API and end up with a ruby array similar to the sanitized version below:
{"log_entries"=>
[{"id=>"SDF888B2B2KAZZ0AGGB200",
"type"=>"warning",
"summary"=>"Things happened",
"created"=>"2017-07-11T18:40:31Z",
"person"=>
{"id"=>"44bAN8",
"name"=>"Harry"}
"system"=>"local",
"service"=>"syslog"
{"id=>"HMB001NBALLB81MMLLABLK",
"type"=>"info",
"summary"=>"Notice",
"created"=>"2017-06-02T11:23:21Z",
"person"=>
{"id"=>"372z1j",
"name"=>"Sally"}
"system"=>"local",
"service"=>"syslog"}]},
"other"=>200,
"set"=>0,
"more"=>false,
"total"=nil}
I just need to be able to print the value of the "created" key only in the first block. Meaning, when the program exits, I need it to print "2017-07-11T18:40:31Z." I've googled a lot but wasn't successful in finding anything. I've tried something like:
puts ["log_entries"]["id"]["created"]
My expectation was to print all of them to start somewhere and even that yields an error. Forgive me, I don't use ruby much.
Since log_entries is an array you can just access the first element and get its created value.
Assuming the variable result holds the whole hash (the JSON you parse from the API):
puts result['log_entries'][0]['created']
will print out the first date. Now you might want to guard that for cases where log_entries empty, so wrap it in a if:
if result['log_entries'].any?
puts result['log_entries'][0]['created']
end
Your json is not in valid format. But assuming you have the right format, following should work
result["log_entries"].collect{|entry| entry["created"]}
=> ["2017-07-11T18:40:31Z", "2017-06-02T11:23:21Z"]
Above code will collect all the created date and give you an array
In pandoc, I can iterate through an array like this:
$for(author)$
$author$
$endfor$
Which works fine. What is the best way to get the size of the array? The reason is that in my template, I would like to do one thing if there is only a single author, and do something else if there are more than one authors.
According to a message from September 2015, a length attribute of arrays is not available within the Pandoc template language.
Source: https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/issues/2416
I need some help with a Ruby script I can call from the console. The script needs to parse a simple .txt file with comma separated values.
value 1, value2, value3, etc...
The values needs to be added to the database.
Any suggestions?
array = File.read("csv_file.txt").split(",").map(&:strip)
You will get the values in the array and use it to store to database. If you want more functions, you can make use of FasterCSV gem.
Ruby 1.9.2 has a very good CSV library which is useful for this stuff: http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib/libdoc/csv/rdoc/index.html
On earlier versions of Ruby you could use http://fastercsv.rubyforge.org/ (which essentially became CSV in 1.9.2)
You could do it manually by reading the file into a string and using .split(',') but I'd go with one of the libraries above.
Quick and dirty solution:
result = []
File.open("<path-to-file>","r") do |handle|
handle.each_line do |line|
result << line.split(",").strip
end
end # closes automatically when EOF reached
result.flatten!
result # => big array of values
Now you can iterate the result array and save the values to the database.
This simple file iteration doesn't take care for order or special fields, because it wasn't mentioned in the question.
Something easy to get you started:
IO.readlines("csv_file.txt", '').each do |line|
values = line.split(",").collect(&:strip)
# do something with the values?
end
Hope this helps.