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C++20 STL Cookbook

You're reading from   C++20 STL Cookbook Leverage the latest features of the STL to solve real-world problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803248714
Length 450 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Bill Weinman Bill Weinman
Author Profile Icon Bill Weinman
Bill Weinman
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chaper 1: New C++20 Features 2. Chapter 2: General STL Features FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: STL Containers 4. Chapter 4: Compatible Iterators 5. Chapter 5: Lambda Expressions 6. Chapter 6: STL Algorithms 7. Chapter 7: Strings, Streams, and Formatting 8. Chapter 8: Utility Classes 9. Chapter 9: Concurrency and Parallelism 10. Chapter 10: Using the File System 11. Chapter 11: A Few More Ideas 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

Iterators are fundamental

The STL uses iterators to navigate the elements of its container classes. Most containers include begin() and end() iterators. These are usually implemented as member functions that return an iterator object. The begin() iterator points to the initial container element, and the end() iterator points past the final element:

Figure 4.1 – The begin() and end() iterators

The end() iterator may function as a sentinel for containers of indeterminate length. We'll see some examples of that in this chapter.

Most STL containers define their own specific iterator type. For example, for a vector of int:

std::vector<int> v;

The iterator type would be defined as:

std::vector<int>::iterator v_it;

You can see how this could easily get out of hand. If we had a vector of vector of string:

std::vector<std::vector<int, std::string>> v;

Its iterator type would be:

std::vector<std::vector&lt...
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