Difference between revisions of "Lua"
(→If Statement) |
(→Variables) |
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Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
start and end | start and end | ||
multi-line strings.]] | multi-line strings.]] | ||
+ | -- String concatenation uses the .. operator: | ||
+ | print('Winter is coming, ' .. line) | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
Line 28: | Line 30: | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang=lua> | <syntaxhighlight lang=lua> | ||
t = nil -- Undefines t; Lua has garbage collection. | t = nil -- Undefines t; Lua has garbage collection. | ||
+ | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Global Variables=== | ||
+ | <syntaxhighlight lang=lua> | ||
+ | -- Variables are global by default. | ||
+ | thisIsGlobal = 5 -- Camel case is common. | ||
+ | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Local Variables=== | ||
+ | <syntaxhighlight lang=lua> | ||
+ | -- How to make a variable local: | ||
+ | local line = io.read() -- Reads next stdin line. | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
Revision as of 15:24, 2 June 2019
Contents
Comments
-- Two dashes start a one-line comment.
--[[
Adding two ['s and ]'s makes it a
multi-line comment.
--]]
Variables
Numbers
num = 42 -- All numbers are doubles.
Strings
s = 'walternate' -- Immutable strings like Python.
t = "double-quotes are also fine"
u = [[ Double brackets
start and end
multi-line strings.]]
-- String concatenation uses the .. operator:
print('Winter is coming, ' .. line)
Empty / Null
t = nil -- Undefines t; Lua has garbage collection.
Global Variables
-- Variables are global by default.
thisIsGlobal = 5 -- Camel case is common.
Local Variables
-- How to make a variable local:
local line = io.read() -- Reads next stdin line.
If Statement
if num < 40 then
print('below 40')
elseif name ~= 'wayne' then
-- ~= is not equals.
-- Equality check is == like Python; ok for strs.
io.write('over 40 and Name is wayne\n') -- Defaults to stdout.
else
print('above 40')
end
-- Undefined variables return nil. -- This is not an error: foo = anUnknownVariable -- Now foo = nil.
aBoolValue = false
-- Only nil and false are falsy; 0 and are true! if not aBoolValue then print('twas false') end
-- 'or' and 'and' are short-circuited. -- This is similar to the a?b:c operator in C/js: ans = aBoolValue and 'yes' or 'no' --> 'no'
Loops
While
-- Blocks are denoted with keywords like do/end:
while num < 50 do
num = num + 1 -- No ++ or += type operators.
end
For
karlSum = 0
for i = 1, 100 do -- The range includes both ends.
karlSum = karlSum + i
end
-- Use "100, 1, -1" as the range to count down:
fredSum = 0
for j = 100, 1, -1 do fredSum = fredSum + j end
-- In general, the range is begin, end[, step].
Repeat / Do While
-- Another loop construct:
repeat
print('the way of the future')
num = num - 1
until num == 0