3. Interface of All Containers
Although the sequential and associative containers of the Standard Template library are two quite different classes of containers, they have a lot in common. For example, the operations, to create or delete a container, to determine its size, to access its elements, to assign or swap are all independent of the type of elements of a container. It is common for the containers that you can define them with an arbitrary size, and each container has an allocator. That’s the reason the size of a container can be adjusted at runtime. The allocator works most of the time in the background. This can be seen for a std::vector
. The call std::vector<int>
results in a call std::vector<int, std::allocator<int>>
. Because of the std::allocator
, you can adjust except for std::array
the size of all containers dynamically. However, they have yet more in common. You can access the elements of a container quite easily with an iterator.
Having so much...