They're used for indexing and slicing.
From Microsoft's blog:
Indexing:
Index i1 = 3; // number 3 from beginning
Index i2 = ^4; // number 4 from end
int[] a = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 };
Console.WriteLine($"{a[i1]}, {a[i2]}"); // "3, 6"
Range (slicing):
We’re also introducing a Range type, which consists of two Indexes,
one for the start and one for the end, and can be written with a x..y
range expression. You can then index with a Range in order to produce
a slice:
var slice = a[i1..i2]; // { 3, 4, 5 }
You can use them in Array
, String
, [ReadOnly]Span
and [ReadOnly]Memory
types, so you have another way to make substrings:
string input = "This a test of Ranges!";
string output = input[^7..^1];
Console.WriteLine(output); //Output: Ranges
You can also omit the first or last Index of a Range:
output = input[^7..]; //Equivalent of input[^7..^0]
Console.WriteLine(output); //Output: Ranges!
output = input[..^1]; //Equivalent of input[0..^1]
Console.WriteLine(output); //Output: This a test of Ranges
You can also save ranges to variables and use them later:
Range r = 0..^1;
output = input[r];
Console.WriteLine(output);
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