Makes an array by replacing all ranges of elements that equal ElementsToReplace with Replacement in Input.
When there are multiple overlapping instances of ElementsToReplace in Input, only the position with the lowest index is replaced.
Verse using statement |
using { /Verse.org/Verse } |
(Input:[]t).ReplaceAll<public>(ElementsToReplace:[]t, Replacement:[]t where t:comparable)<transacts>:[]t
Parameters
ReplaceAll takes the following parameters:
| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
Input |
[]t |
|
ElementsToReplace |
[]t |
|
Replacement |
[]t |
|
t |
comparable |
Attributes, Specifiers, and Effects
The following attributes, specifiers, and effects determine how you can interact with ReplaceAll in your programs, as well as how it behaves in your programs and UEFN. For the complete list of attributes, specifiers, and effects; see the Specifiers Page.
Specifiers
| Specifier | Meaning |
|---|---|
public |
The identifier is universally accessible. You can use this on modules, classes, interfaces, structs, enums, methods, and data. |
Effects
| Effect | Meaning |
|---|---|
transacts |
This effect indicates that any actions performed by the function can be rolled back. The transacts effect is required any time a mutable variable (var) is written. You'll be notified when you compile your code if the transacts effect was added to a function that can't be rolled back. Note that this check is not done for functions with the native specifier. |