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docs: document negative indexed slices, add example for a 'list comprehension' (#12986)

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@ -1030,6 +1030,42 @@ println(a) // `[2, 2, 2, 13, 2, 3, 4]`
println(b) // `[2, 3, 13]`
```
### Slices with negative indexes
V supports array and string slices with negative indexes.
Negative indexing starts from the end of the array towards the start,
for example `-3` is equal to `array.len - 3`.
Negative slices have a different syntax from normal slices, i.e. you need
to add a `gate` between the array name and the square bracket: `a#[..-3]`.
The `gate` specifies that this is a different type of slice and remember that
the result is "locked" inside the array.
The returned slice is always a valid array, though it may be empty:
```v
a := [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
println(a#[-3..]) // [7, 8, 9]
println(a#[-20..]) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
println(a#[-20..-8]) // [0, 1]
println(a#[..-3]) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
// empty arrays
println(a#[-20..-10]) // []
println(a#[20..10]) // []
println(a#[20..30]) // []
```
### Array method chaining
You can chain the calls of array methods like `.filter()` and `.map()` and use
the `it` built-in variable to achieve a classic `map/filter` functional paradigm:
```v
// using filter, map and negatives array slices
a := ['pippo.jpg', '01.bmp', '_v.txt', 'img_02.jpg', 'img_01.JPG']
res := a.filter(it#[-4..].to_lower() == '.jpg').map(fn (w string) (string, int) {
return w.to_upper(), w.len
})
// [('PIPPO.JPG', 9), ('IMG_02.JPG', 10), ('IMG_01.JPG', 10)]
```
### Fixed size arrays
V also supports arrays with fixed size. Unlike ordinary arrays, their