37.4 Using multiple-value
list variables
In addition to single-value macro variables (see §37.3 Using macro variables),
you can use multiple-value list variables. A list variable is
a macro variable that contains an ordered, indexable collection of items,
each of the form index=value, much
like an array in the C programming language. A list variable can hold
up to 64K items.
In this section:
§37.4.1
Understanding list-variable syntax
§37.4.2
Assigning a value to a list-variable item
§37.4.3
Initializing list variables
§37.4.4
Using macros to process lists
§37.4.5
Using pointers to process lists
§37.4.6
Using a list instead of a conditional expression
Previous Topic: 37.3.5.3 Understanding
why TextStore and CodeStore work differently
Next Topic: 37.4.1 Understanding
list-variable syntax
Parent Topic: 37. Working with macros
Sibling Topics:
37.1 Defining and invoking macros
37.2 Accessing DITA2Go macro libraries
37.3 Using macro variables
37.5 Accessing
settings with configuration macros
37.6 Using
expressions in macros
37.7 Passing
a parameter to a macro
37.8 Debugging
macros
37.9 Deploying macros and macro variables
37.10 Using
macros to fine-tune HTML or XML output