The central type in Apache Arrow are arrays, which are a known-length sequence of values
all having the same type. This crate provides concrete implementations of each type, as
well as an [Array
] trait that can be used for type-erasure.
Downcasting an Array
Arrays are often passed around as a dynamically typed &dyn Array
or [ArrayRef
].
For example, RecordBatch
stores columns as [ArrayRef
].
Whilst these arrays can be passed directly to the compute
, csv
, json
, etc... APIs,
it is often the case that you wish to interact with the data directly.
This requires downcasting to the concrete type of the array:
# use ;
// Note: the values for positions corresponding to nulls will be arbitrary
Additionally, there are convenient functions to do this casting
such as [cast::as_primitive_array<T>
] and [cast::as_string_array
]:
# use Array;
# use as_primitive_array;
# use Float32Type;
Building an Array
Most [Array
] implementations can be constructed directly from iterators or [Vec
]
# use ;
# use Int32Type;
from;
from;
from_iter;
from_iter;
from;
from;
from_iter;
from_iter_values;
;
Additionally ArrayBuilder
implementations can be
used to construct arrays with a push-based interface
# use Int16Array;
#
// Create a new builder with a capacity of 100
let mut builder = builder;
// Append a single primitive value
builder.append_value;
// Append a null value
builder.append_null;
// Append a slice of primitive values
builder.append_slice;
// Build the array
let array = builder.finish;
assert_eq!;
assert_eq!;
assert_eq!
Zero-Copy Slicing
Given an [Array
] of arbitrary length, it is possible to create an owned slice of this
data. Internally this just increments some ref-counts, and so is incredibly cheap
# use Arc;
# use ;
let array = new as ArrayRef;
// Slice with offset 1 and length 2
let sliced = array.slice;
let ints = sliced.as_any..unwrap;
assert_eq!;
Internal Representation
Internally, arrays are represented by one or several Buffer
, the number and meaning of
which depend on the array’s data type, as documented in the Arrow specification.
For example, the type [Int16Array
] represents an array of 16-bit integers and consists of:
Similarly, the type [StringArray
] represents an array of UTF-8 strings and consists of: