Overview of Arrays in Visual BasicĀ
An array is a set of values that are logically related to each other, such as the number of students in each grade in a grammar school.
An array allows you to refer to these related values by the same name and to use a number, called an index or subscript, to tell them apart. The individual values are called the elements of the array. They are contiguous from index 0 through the highest index value.
Example
The following example declares an array variable to hold the number of students in each grade in a grammar school.
Dim students(6) As Integer
The array students
in the preceding example contains 7 elements. The indexes of the elements range from 0 through 6. Having this array is simpler than declaring 7 different variables.
The following illustration shows the array students
. For each element of the array:
The index of the element represents the grade (index 0 represents kindergarten).
The value contained in the element represents the number of students in that grade.
Elements of the "students" array
The following example shows how to refer to the first, second, and last element of the array students
.
Dim kindergarten As Integer = students(0)
Dim firstGrade As Integer = students(1)
Dim sixthGrade As Integer = students(6)
MsgBox("Students in kindergarten = " & CStr(kindergarten))
MsgBox("Students in first grade = " & CStr(firstGrade))
MsgBox("Students in sixth grade = " & CStr(sixthGrade))
You can refer to the array as a whole by using just the array variable name without indexes.
Array Types and Other Types
Data Types
Every array has a data type, but it is not the same as the data type of its elements. For example, the array students
in the preceding example is of type Integer(), while each of its elements is of type Integer. The notation Integer() means an array of Integer elements. For more information, see Array Data Types in Visual Basic.
Every array inherits from the System.Array class, and you can declare a variable to be of type Array, but you cannot create an array of type Array. Also, the ReDim Statement (Visual Basic) cannot operate on a variable declared as type Array. For these reasons, and for type safety, it is advisable to declare every array as a specific type, such as Integer in the preceding example.
Array Dimensions
The array students
in the preceding example uses one index and is said to be one-dimensional. An array that uses more than one index or subscript is called multidimensional.
Another kind of array is one which holds other arrays as elements. This is known as an array of arrays or a jagged array. A jagged array can be either one-dimensional or multidimensional, and so can its elements.
Contrasting Types
In contrast to an array, a variable containing a single value is called a scalar variable.
An array is not the same as a collection. For more information, see Collections as an Alternative to Arrays.
See Also
Tasks
How to: Declare an Array Variable
How to: Create an Array
How to: Initialize an Array Variable
Troubleshooting Arrays
Concepts
Array Dimensions in Visual Basic
Multidimensional Arrays in Visual Basic
Jagged Arrays in Visual Basic
Array Data Types in Visual Basic