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Insert row to 2d Array

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Dear Friends,

I would like to add row to 2d array, I have developed below logic and unfortunately it gives me weird output and some how it changes the dimension of my array

it would be great if you can take a look to it and any help from your side is highly appreciated

Input array

3 6 6

9 8 5

5 6 7

row to insert zero: 2

Out put array

3 6 6

0 0 0

9 8 5

5 6 7

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Message 1 of 5
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Right-click the Insert into Array function, select Help, and read the Help.  It will explain that the second input (the black solid square) is "index 0, the point in the array at which you want to insert the row".  You don't put your array there, but you would put "1" if you want to insert at Array Position 1 (i.e. the second row).

 

It always helps to know how the function works, and reading the Help on the Function tells you.

 

Bob Schor

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This looks exactly like what you are doing in your other thread, except Inserting rather than deleting.

 

Delete row (index is comming from an array) from source array

 

You should try to figure out the solutions given in that message thread before starting a new message thread asking about the exact same problems.

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Solution
Accepted by arvin1947

Use a shift register for your source array instead of autoindexing.


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Message 4 of 5
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Also:

  • The array of rows should be integer (blue).
  • You typically should not autoindex on two arrays of different size (in the indexing dimension). The shorter one will determine the number of iterations and the size of the output.
  • You are not inserting a row, but extending an existing row or get nothing new (depending on the value of the insert point).
  • Unless you expect the "array" to change during the execution of the loop, the control belongs before the loop (if it is always three zeroes, use a diagram constant instead).
  • When attaching code, put typical values into your controls and make the value default so we don't need to guess.
  • From the number of (unique) rows, you can calculate the final size before the loop starts, so try to find an "in-place" solution that does not require incremental allocation of memory.

 

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