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I have seen the hash character '#' being added to the front of variables a lot in Lua.

What does it do?

EXAMPLE

-- sort AIs in currentlevel
table.sort(level.ais, function(a,b) return a.y < b.y end)
local curAIIndex = 1
local maxAIIndex = #level.ais
for i = 1,#currentLevel+maxAIIndex do
    if level.ais[curAIIndex].y+sprites.monster:getHeight() < currentLevel[i].lowerY then
        table.insert(currentLevel, i, level.ais[curAIIndex])
        curAIIndex = curAIIndex + 1
        if curAIIndex > maxAIIndex then
            break
        end
    end
end

Apologies if this has already been asked, I've searched around on the internet a lot but I haven't seem to have found an answer. Thanks in advance!

question from:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17974622/what-does-mean-in-lua

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1 Answer

That is the length operator:

The length operator is denoted by the unary operator #. The length of a string is its number of bytes (that is, the usual meaning of string length when each character is one byte).

The length of a table t is defined to be any integer index n such that t[n] is not nil and t[n+1] is nil; moreover, if t[1] is nil, n can be zero. For a regular array, with non-nil values from 1 to a given n, its length is exactly that n, the index of its last value. If the array has "holes" (that is, nil values between other non-nil values), then #t can be any of the indices that directly precedes a nil value (that is, it may consider any such nil value as the end of the array).


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