--- title: "Arrays and ranges" excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio." layout: manual --- Arrays are sequences of values. Arrays can be written out as *array literals* using a sequence of expressions surrounded by square brackets, e.g., `['hello', 'world']` is an array of strings, `[x, x + 1, x + 2]` is an array of numbers (assuming `x` is a number), `[]` is an empty array, and `['hello', 42, true]` is a mixed array. A value in an array can be accessed by indexing using square brackets where the index is a number, for example, `arr[0]`, `arr[42]`, `arr[i]` (where `arr` is an array and `i` is a (whole) number). There are some useful functions for working with arrays in the standard library, see [std::array](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-array) for details. ## Array types Arrays have their own types: `[T]` where `T` is the type of the elements of the array, for example, `[string]` means an array of `string`s and `[any]` means an array of any values. Array types can also include length information: `[T; n]` denotes an array of length `n` (where `n` is a number literal) and `[T; n+]` denotes an array whose length is at least `n`. The common case for that is `[T; 1+]`, i.e., a non-empty array. E.g., `[string; 1+]` and `[number(mm); 3]` are valid array types. ## Ranges Ranges are a succinct way to create an array of sequential numbers. The syntax is `[start .. end]` where `start` and `end` evaluate to whole numbers (integers). Ranges are inclusive of the start and end. The end must be greater than the start. A range which is exclusive of its end is written with `