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For each basic type, Concert Technology defines a corresponding array
 class.  IloNumExprArray is the array class of the numeric
 expressions class (IloNumExpr) for a model.
Instances of
 IloNumExprArray are extensible. That is, you can add more
 elements to such an array. References to an array change whenever an element
 is added to or removed from the array.
| Constructor Summary | |
|---|---|
public  | IloNumExprArray(IloDefaultArrayI * i=0) | 
public  | IloNumExprArray(const IloEnv env, IloInt n=0) | 
| Method Summary | |
|---|---|
public void | add(IloInt more, const IloNumExpr x) | 
public void | add(const IloNumExpr x) | 
public void | add(const IloNumExprArray array) | 
public void | endElements() | 
public IloNumExprArg | operator[](IloIntExprArg anIntegerExpr) const | 
Inherited Methods from IloExtractableArray | 
|---|
add, add, add, endElements, setNames | 
| Constructor Detail | 
|---|
This constructor creates an empty array of numeric expressions for use in
 a model.  You cannot create instances of the undocumented class
 IloDefaultArrayI.  As an argument in this default constructor,
 it allows you to pass 0 (zero) as a value to an optional argument in
 functions and member functions that accept an array as an argument. 
This constructor creates an array of n elements. Initially,
 the n elements are empty handles.
| Method Detail | 
|---|
This member function appends x to the invoking array. The
 argument more specifies how many times.
This member function appends x to the invoking array.
This member function appends the elements in array to the
 invoking array.
This member function calls IloExtractable::end for
 each of the elements in the invoking array. This deletes all the extractables
 identified by the array, leaving the handles in the array intact.
 This member function is
 the recommended way to delete the elements of an array.
This subscripting operator returns an expression argument for use in a
 constraint or expression. For clarity, let's call A the
 invoking array. When anIntegerExpr is bound to the value
 i, the domain of the expression is the domain of
 A[i]. More generally, the domain of the expression is the union
 of the domains of the expressions A[i] where the i
 are in the domain of anIntegerExpr. 
This operator is also known as an element expression.