'How to get the last element of a slice?
What is the Go way for extracting the last element of a slice?
var slice []int
slice = append(slice, 2)
slice = append(slice, 7)
slice[len(slice)-1:][0] // Retrieves the last element
The solution above works, but seems awkward.
Solution 1:[1]
For just reading the last element of a slice:
sl[len(sl)-1]
For removing it:
sl = sl[:len(sl)-1]
See this page about slice tricks
Solution 2:[2]
You can use the len(arr)
function, although it will return the length of the slice starting from 1, and as Go arrays/slices start from index 0 the last element is effectively len(arr)-1
Example:
arr := []int{1,2,3,4,5,6} // 6 elements, last element at index 5
fmt.Println(len(arr)) // 6
fmt.Println(len(arr)-1) // 5
fmt.Println(arr[len(arr)-1]) // 6 <- element at index 5 (last element)
Solution 3:[3]
If you can use Go 1.18 or above and you often need to access the last element of a slice of some arbitrary element type, the use of a small custom function can improve readability at call sites:
package main
import "fmt"
func Last[E any](s []E) (E, bool) {
if len(s) == 0 {
var zero E
return zero, false
}
return s[len(s)-1], true
}
func main() {
var numbers []int
fmt.Println(Last(numbers)) // 0 false
numbers = []int{4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42}
fmt.Println(Last(numbers)) // 42 true
}
No need to create a library for that Last
function, though; a little copying is better than a little dependency.
Solution 4:[4]
What is even more awkward is your program crashing on empty slices!
To contend with empty slices -- zero length causing panic: runtime error
, you could have an if/then/else sequence, or you can use a temporary slice to solve the problem.
package main
import (
"fmt"
)
func main() {
// test when slice is not empty
itemsTest1 := []string{"apple", "grape", "orange", "peach", "mango"}
tmpitems := append([]string{"none"},itemsTest1...)
lastitem := tmpitems[len(tmpitems)-1]
fmt.Printf("lastitem: %v\n", lastitem)
// test when slice is empty
itemsTest2 := []string{}
tmpitems = append([]string{"none"},itemsTest2...) // <--- put a "default" first
lastitem = tmpitems[len(tmpitems)-1]
fmt.Printf("lastitem: %v\n", lastitem)
}
which will give you this output:
lastitem: mango
lastitem: none
For []int
slices you might want a -1
or 0
for the default value.
Thinking at a higher level, if your slice always carries a default value then the "tmp" slice can be eliminated.
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
Solution | Source |
---|---|
Solution 1 | Benjamin W. |
Solution 2 | |
Solution 3 | |
Solution 4 | warrens |