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Challenges

Create a range grid

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This challenge is based on the i. verb from J.

A range grid is basically a range of m × n numbers fit into a rectangular grid with m rows and n columns.

A 2×3 range grid would be:

0 1 2
3 4 5

Challenge

Generate a range grid, given m and n. You can display it, or return an array.

This is code-golf. Shortest answer in each language wins.

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Input formats (3 comments)

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You are accessing this answer with a direct link, so it's being shown above all other answers regardless of its score. You can return to the normal view.

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Python 2, 46 bytes

lambda m,n:[range(n*_,n*_+n)for _ in range(m)]

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Ruby, 33 bytes

->n,m{[*(0...n*m).each_slice(m)]}

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C (gcc), 59 bytes

i;f(m,n){while(i<m*n){putchar(i%n?32:13);putchar(48+i++);}}

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  • m is the number of rows.
  • n is the number of columns.
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You will need to change the answer to take `m` and `n` only. `m*n` is not an allowed argument. (2 comments)
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Python 3, 49 bytes

lambda m,n:[[*range(n*_,n*_+n)]for _ in range(m)]

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BQN (CBQN), 10 bytes

Anonymous function that takes m on the left and n on the right.

{𝕨‿𝕩⥊↕𝕨×𝕩}
      ↕𝕨×𝕩  # list of range [0,m*n)
 𝕨‿𝕩⥊      # reshape list to m*n

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5 bytes: `⋈⥊↕∘×` (3 comments)
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Japt -m, 4 bytes

VÆT°

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MATL, 8 bytes

tp:qwPe!

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tp:qwPe!
t        : duplicate with implicit input (function args as array)
 p       : product [2 3]p -> 6
  :      : range 1..n
   q     : decrement
    w    : swap top of stack
     P   : flip [2 3]P -> [3 2]
      e  : reshape [1 2 3 4][2 2]e -> [1 3;2 4]
       ! : transpose

Reshape fills columns instead of rows, hence the flip and transpose.

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Lua 5.4, 76 bytes

function(m,n)for i=0,m*n-1 do _=(i%n==0)and print()or io.write(i,' ')end end

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Where are `m` and `n` coming from here? (4 comments)

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