The C++11 introduced ranged-based for loop that is internally implemented using (const) iterators so this:
std::vector<std::string> vec;
for(std::string &str : vec)
{
//...
}
is basically equivalent to more verbose (yes, it could be simplified using auto):
for(std::vector<std::string>::iterator it = vec.begin(); it != vec.end(); ++it)
{
//...
}
However commonly one needs an index of the item as well. With the second approach that is easy:
auto index = it - vec.begin();
In ranged-based for it is not so straightforward. But I was wondering if this was ok and portable solution that avoids iterators altogether:
for(auto &str : vec)
{
auto index = &str - &vec[0];
}
(const version will be the same but one needs to watch out not to mix non-const container with const reference which might not always be obvious.)
Obviously this relies on several assumptions:
that iterator of vector is just a reference to an item (probably in the standard?)
container is guaranteed contiguous (std::vector is...)
the internal implementation of ranged based for (also probably in the standard)
Yes, but I'd use vec.data() instead. A bonus of using .data() is that non-contiguous std containers don't have it, so your code reliably stops compiling when the container being iterated over doesn't work that way (like deque or std::vector<bool>). (There are other minor advantages, like std::addressof issues, and the fact it is well defined on empty containers, but those aren't as important especially here.)
Alternatively we write an index_t iterator-like wrapper:
template<class T>
struct index_t {
T t;
T operator*()const{ return t; }
void operator++() { ++t; }
friend bool operator==( index_t const& lhs, index_t const& rhs ) {
return lhs.t == rhs.t;
}
friend bool operator!=( index_t const& lhs, index_t const& rhs ) {
return lhs.t != rhs.t;
}
};
template<class T>
index_t<T> index(T t) { return {t}; }
index_t<int> can be used to create counting for(:) loops.
index_t<iterator> can be used to create iterator-returning for(:) loops.
template<class It>
struct range_t {
It b,e;
It begin() const {return b;}
It end() const {return e;}
};
template<class It>
range_t<It> range( It s, It f ) { return {s,f}; }
template<class T>
range_t<index_t<T>>
index_over( T s, T f ) {
return {{{s}}, {{f}}};
}
template<class Container>
auto iterators_of( Container& c ) {
using std::begin; using std::end;
return index_over( begin(c), end(c) );
}
we can now iterator over iterators of a container.
for (auto it : iterators_of(vec))
live example.
The mentioned iterate-over-integers is:
for (int i : index_over( 0, 100 ) )
we can also directly get the indexes of the container:
template<class Container>
range_t< index_t<std::size_t> >
indexes_of( Container& c ) {
return index_over( std::size_t(0), c.size() );
}
template<class T, std::size_t N>
range_t< index_t<std::size_t> >
indexes_of( T(&)[N] ) {
return index_over( std::size_t(0), N );
}
which lets us:
for( auto i : indexes_of( vec ) )
where i varies from 0 to vec.size()-1. I find this is easier to work with sometimes than a zip iterator or the like.
Improvements omitted:
Make index_t a real input_iterator. Use std::move and/or std::forward as needed in making indexes and ranges. Support Sentinals on ranges. Make range_t interface richer (size, optional random-access [], empty, front, back, range_t range_t::without_front(n) const, etc.
Yes, that's a valid solution. The underlying data is guaranteed to be contiguous (std::vector is supposed to be a dynamic array, more or less).
n4140 §23.3.6.1 [vector.overview]/1
The elements of a
vectorare stored contiguously, meaning that ifvis avector<T, Allocator>whereTis some type other thanbool, then it obeys the identity&v[n] == &v[0] + nfor all0 <= n < v.size()
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With