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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

Splitting text using the Boost Tokenizer library


The boost::split algorithm, we saw in the last section, splits a string using a predicate and puts the tokens into a sequence container. It requires extra storage for storing all the tokens, and the user has limited choices for the tokenizing criteria used. Splitting a string into a series of tokens based on various criteria is a frequent programming requirement, and the Boost.Tokenizer library provides an extensible framework for accomplishing this. Also, this does not require extra storage for storing tokens. It provides a generic interface to retrieve successive tokens from a string. The criterion to split the string into successive tokens is passed as a parameter. The Tokenizer library itself provides a few reusable, commonly used tokenizing policies for splitting, but, most importantly, it defines an interface using which we can write our own splitting policies. It treats the input string like a container of tokens from which successive...

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