[b]Note:[/b] This type is passed by value and not by reference.
[b]Note:[/b] This type is limited to signed 32-bit integers, which means it can only take values in the interval [code][-2^31, 2^31 - 1][/code], i.e. [code][-2147483648, 2147483647][/code]. Exceeding those bounds will wrap around. In comparison, [int] uses signed 64-bit integers which can hold much larger values.
Assigns the given value to all elements in the array. This can typically be used together with [method resize] to create an array with a given size and initialized elements.
Inserts a new int at a given position in the array. The position must be valid, or at the end of the array ([code]idx == size()[/code]).
</description>
</method>
<methodname="invert">
<description>
Reverses the order of the elements in the array.
</description>
</method>
<methodname="push_back">
<argumentindex="0"name="integer"type="int"/>
<description>
Appends a value to the array.
</description>
</method>
<methodname="remove">
<argumentindex="0"name="idx"type="int"/>
<description>
Removes an element from the array by index.
</description>
</method>
<methodname="resize">
<argumentindex="0"name="idx"type="int"/>
<description>
Sets the size of the array. If the array is grown, reserves elements at the end of the array. If the array is shrunk, truncates the array to the new size.
[b]Note:[/b] Added elements are not automatically initialized to 0 and will contain garbage, i.e. indeterminate values.