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Learning Boost C++

You're reading from   Learning Boost C++ Solve practical programming problems using powerful, portable, and expressive libraries from Boost

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783551217
Length 558 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Arindam Mukherjee Arindam Mukherjee
Author Profile Icon Arindam Mukherjee
Arindam Mukherjee
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Boost FREE CHAPTER 2. The First Brush with Boost's Utilities 3. Memory Management and Exception Safety 4. Working with Strings 5. Effective Data Structures beyond STL 6. Bimap and Multi-index Containers 7. Higher Order and Compile-time Programming 8. Date and Time Libraries 9. Files, Directories, and IOStreams 10. Concurrency with Boost 11. Network Programming Using Boost Asio A. C++11 Language Features Emulation Index

Chapter 6. Bimap and Multi-index Containers

The Standard Library has ordered and unordered associative containers for storing objects and looking them up efficiently using some key. The key could be a text type, numeric type, or first-class objects. For ordered containers such as std::set and std::map, the keys must have a well-defined ordering relation that allows any set of keys to be sorted. For unordered containers, it must be possible to compute an integer hash value for each key, and additionally, determine whether any two keys are equivalent for some definition of equivalence. The key represents an index or criterion for lookup, and all the Standard Library associative containers support lookup using only a single criterion. In other words, you cannot efficiently look up objects using multiple, independent criteria.

Let us suppose you have a type called PersonEntry to describe a person. The PersonEntry type has attributes like name, age, phone number, and so on. You would...

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