171 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
171 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
# cheat-sheet-lua
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Here is the IO-Project cheat sheet to quickly learn the "Lua" programming language
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## Table of contents
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Use this table of contents to travel more easily through this cheat sheet.
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- [cheat-sheet-lua](#cheat-sheet-lua)
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- [Table of contents](#table-of-contents)
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- [The basics](#the-basics)
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- [Code comments](#code-comments)
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- [Variables and flow control](#variables-and-flow-control)
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- [Functions](#functions)
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- [Advanced](#advanced)
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- [Tables/array](#tablesarray)
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- [Metatables and metamethods](#metatables-and-metamethods)
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- [](#)
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## The basics
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### Code comments
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````lua
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-- Two dashes start a one-line comment.
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--[[
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by adding two "[" opening and two "]" closing,
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you define a multi-line commentary. ;-)
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--]]
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````
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### Variables and flow control
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Introduction to variables, basic conditions, some loops ([examples available here](support/while.lua)) and the equivalent of the ternary operator.
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````lua
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num = 42 -- All numbers are doubles.
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-- Don't freak out, 64-bit doubles have 52 bits for
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-- storing exact int values; machine precision is
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-- not a problem for ints that need < 52 bits.
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s = 'walternate' -- Immutable strings like in Python.
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t = "double-quotes are also fine"
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u = [[ Double brackets
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start and end
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multi-line strings]]
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t = nil -- Undefines t; Lua has garbage collection.
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-- Blocks are denoted with keywords like do/end:
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while num < 50 do
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num = num + 1 -- No ++ or += type operators.
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end
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-- If clauses:
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if num > 40 then
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print('over 40')
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elseif s ~= 'walternate' then -- ~= is not equals.
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-- Equality check is ==; ok for strs.
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io.write('not over 40\n') -- Defaults to stdout.
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else
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-- Variables are global by default.
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thisIsGlobal = 5 -- Camel case is common.
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-- How to make a variable local:
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local line = io.read() -- Reads next stdin line.
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-- String concatenation uses the .. operator:
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print('Winter is coming, ' .. line)
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end
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-- Undefined variables return nil.
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-- This is not an error:
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foo = anUnknownVariable -- Now foo = nil.
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aBoolValue = false
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-- Only nil and false are false; 0 and '' are true.
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if not aBoolValue then print('that was false') end
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-- 'or' and 'and' are short-circuited.
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-- This is similar to the a?b:c operator in C/js:
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ans = aBoolValue and 'yes' or 'no' --> 'no'
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karlSum = 0
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for i = 1, 100 do -- The range includes both ends.
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karlSum = karlSum + i
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end
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-- Use "100, 1, -1" as the range to count down:
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fredSum = 0
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for j = 100, 1, -1 do fredSum = fredSum + j end
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-- In general, the range is begin, end[, step].
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-- Another loop construct:
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repeat
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print('the way of the future')
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num = num - 1
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until num == 0
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````
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### Functions
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Abordons la définition de fonctions plus complètes, la récurcivité, les closures. Découverte de l'asignation d'une suite de valeur a une suite de variable.
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````lua
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-- The famous Fibonacci sequence.
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function fib(n)
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if n < 2 then return 1 end
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return fib(n - 2) + fib(n - 1)
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end
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-- Closures and anonymous functions are ok:
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function adder(x)
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-- The returned function is created when adder is
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-- called, and remembers the value of x:
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return function (y) return x + y end
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end
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a1 = adder(9)
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a2 = adder(36)
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print(a1(16)) --> 25
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print(a2(64)) --> 100
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-- Returns, func calls, and assignments all work
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-- with lists that may be mismatched in length.
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-- Unmatched receivers are nil;
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-- unmatched senders are discarded.
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x, y, z = 1, 2, 3, 4
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-- Now x = 1, y = 2, z = 3, and 4 is thrown away.
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function bar(a, b, c)
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print(a, b, c)
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return 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42
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end
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x, y = bar('zaphod') --> prints "zaphod nil nil"
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-- Now x = 4, y = 8, values 15..42 are discarded.
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-- Functions are first-class, may be local/global.
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-- (global) These are the same:
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function f(x) return x * x end
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f = function (x) return x * x end -- same of javascript definition
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-- (local) And so are these:
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local function g(x) return math.sin(x) end
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local g; g = function (x) return math.sin(x) end
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-- the 'local g' decl makes g-self-references ok.
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-- Trig funcs work in radians, by the way.
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-- Calls with one string param don't need parens:
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print 'hello' -- Works fine.
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````
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## Advanced
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### Tables/array
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````
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````
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#### Metatables and metamethods
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````
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````
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#### |