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The C++ Standard Library

You're reading from   The C++ Standard Library What every professional C++ programmer should know about the C++ standard library.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838981129
Length 251 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Rainer Grimm Rainer Grimm
Author Profile Icon Rainer Grimm
Rainer Grimm
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Reader Testimonials FREE CHAPTER Introduction 1. The Standard Library 2. Utilities 3. Interface of All Containers 4. Sequential Containers 5. Associative Container 6. Adaptors for Containers 7. Iterators 8. Callable Units 9. Algorithms 10. Numeric 11. Strings 12. String Views 13. Regular Expressions 14. Input and Output Streams 15. Filesystem library 16. Multithreading Index

Arrays

std::array is a homogeneous container of fixed length. It needs the header <array>. The std::array combines the memory and runtime characteristic of a C array with the interface of std::vector. This means in particular, the std::array knows its size. You can use std::array in the algorithms of the STL.

You have to keep a few special rules in your mind to initialise a std::array.

std::array<int, 10> arr
The 10 elements are not initialised.
std::array<int, 10> arr{}
The 10 elements are default initialised.
std::array<int, 10> arr{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
The remaining elements are default initialised.

std::array supports three types of index access.

arr[n];
arr.at(n);
std::get<n>(arr);

The most often used first type form with angle brackets does not check the boundaries of the arr. This is in opposition to arr.at(n). You will get eventually a std::range-error exception. The last type shows the relationship of the std::array...

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