Error when comparing iterators c++ [duplicate] - c++

It's very basic, but I could not find a similar question here. I am trying to iterate the same sorted STL list from different directions using list. I know I can compare an iterator to the list.begin() and list.end(), so why doesn't this work?
list<family>::iterator itLargeFamily =
families.begin(); //starts from the biggest families
list<family>::iterator itSmallFamily =
families.end(); //starts from the smallest families
for (; itSmallFamily > itLargeFamily; --itSmallFamily, ++itLargeFamily) {
// stuff...
}
The error is of course
no operator > matches these operands
100% chance I'm missing something basic.

Only random access iterators are ordered. std::list iterators are only bidirectional iterators, so they do not support operator< or operator>.
Instead, you could do your comparison with !=.
while (itSmallFamily != itLargeFamily)
You'll have to make sure that the iterators don't jump over each other for this to work though. That is, if itSmallFamily is only one increment away from itLargeFamily, you will simply swap them over and they'll never have been equal to each other.
You could instead use std::vector, whose iterators are random access iterators. In addition, std::array and std::deque are also support random access.

From the comments and the answer of sftrabbit you can see that relational operators are only defined for random access iterators, and std::list has only bidirectional iterators. So there are several solutions for your problem:
Use std::vector or std::array. They provide random access iterators, have better performance for smaller sizes, and depending of how you fill/use them for larger sizes as well, and they have better memory footprint. This is the preferred solution, I'd call it the "default" solution. Use other containers only if there is a very good, measurable reason (e.g. a profiler tells you that using that container is a performance bottleneck).
Since you know the size of the list, you can use a counter for your iterations:
for (size_t i = 0, count = families.size()/2;
i < count;
++i, --itSmallFamily, ++itLargeFamily)
{ /* do stuff */ }
Since your list is sorted, you can compare the elements the iterators point to instead of the iterators themselves.

Related

Iterating over a vector in C++ [duplicate]

Take the following two lines of code:
for (int i = 0; i < some_vector.size(); i++)
{
//do stuff
}
And this:
for (some_iterator = some_vector.begin(); some_iterator != some_vector.end();
some_iterator++)
{
//do stuff
}
I'm told that the second way is preferred. Why exactly is this?
The first form is efficient only if vector.size() is a fast operation. This is true for vectors, but not for lists, for example. Also, what are you planning to do within the body of the loop? If you plan on accessing the elements as in
T elem = some_vector[i];
then you're making the assumption that the container has operator[](std::size_t) defined. Again, this is true for vector but not for other containers.
The use of iterators bring you closer to container independence. You're not making assumptions about random-access ability or fast size() operation, only that the container has iterator capabilities.
You could enhance your code further by using standard algorithms. Depending on what it is you're trying to achieve, you may elect to use std::for_each(), std::transform() and so on. By using a standard algorithm rather than an explicit loop you're avoiding re-inventing the wheel. Your code is likely to be more efficient (given the right algorithm is chosen), correct and reusable.
It's part of the modern C++ indoctrination process. Iterators are the only way to iterate most containers, so you use it even with vectors just to get yourself into the proper mindset. Seriously, that's the only reason I do it - I don't think I've ever replaced a vector with a different kind of container.
Wow, this is still getting downvoted after three weeks. I guess it doesn't pay to be a little tongue-in-cheek.
I think the array index is more readable. It matches the syntax used in other languages, and the syntax used for old-fashioned C arrays. It's also less verbose. Efficiency should be a wash if your compiler is any good, and there are hardly any cases where it matters anyway.
Even so, I still find myself using iterators frequently with vectors. I believe the iterator is an important concept, so I promote it whenever I can.
because you are not tying your code to the particular implementation of the some_vector list. if you use array indices, it has to be some form of array; if you use iterators you can use that code on any list implementation.
Imagine some_vector is implemented with a linked-list. Then requesting an item in the i-th place requires i operations to be done to traverse the list of nodes. Now, if you use iterator, generally speaking, it will make its best effort to be as efficient as possible (in the case of a linked list, it will maintain a pointer to the current node and advance it in each iteration, requiring just a single operation).
So it provides two things:
Abstraction of use: you just want to iterate some elements, you don't care about how to do it
Performance
I'm going to be the devils advocate here, and not recommend iterators. The main reason why, is all the source code I've worked on from Desktop application development to game development have i nor have i needed to use iterators. All the time they have not been required and secondly the hidden assumptions and code mess and debugging nightmares you get with iterators make them a prime example not to use it in any applications that require speed.
Even from a maintence stand point they're a mess. Its not because of them but because of all the aliasing that happen behind the scene. How do i know that you haven't implemented your own virtual vector or array list that does something completely different to the standards. Do i know what type is currently now during runtime? Did you overload a operator I didn't have time to check all your source code. Hell do i even know what version of the STL your using?
The next problem you got with iterators is leaky abstraction, though there are numerous web sites that discuss this in detail with them.
Sorry, I have not and still have not seen any point in iterators. If they abstract the list or vector away from you, when in fact you should know already what vector or list your dealing with if you don't then your just going to be setting yourself up for some great debugging sessions in the future.
You might want to use an iterator if you are going to add/remove items to the vector while you are iterating over it.
some_iterator = some_vector.begin();
while (some_iterator != some_vector.end())
{
if (/* some condition */)
{
some_iterator = some_vector.erase(some_iterator);
// some_iterator now positioned at the element after the deleted element
}
else
{
if (/* some other condition */)
{
some_iterator = some_vector.insert(some_iterator, some_new_value);
// some_iterator now positioned at new element
}
++some_iterator;
}
}
If you were using indices you would have to shuffle items up/down in the array to handle the insertions and deletions.
Separation of Concerns
It's very nice to separate the iteration code from the 'core' concern of the loop. It's almost a design decision.
Indeed, iterating by index ties you to the implementation of the container. Asking the container for a begin and end iterator, enables the loop code for use with other container types.
Also, in the std::for_each way, you TELL the collection what to do, instead of ASKing it something about its internals
The 0x standard is going to introduce closures, which will make this approach much more easy to use - have a look at the expressive power of e.g. Ruby's [1..6].each { |i| print i; }...
Performance
But maybe a much overseen issue is that, using the for_each approach yields an opportunity to have the iteration parallelized - the intel threading blocks can distribute the code block over the number of processors in the system!
Note: after discovering the algorithms library, and especially foreach, I went through two or three months of writing ridiculously small 'helper' operator structs which will drive your fellow developers crazy. After this time, I went back to a pragmatic approach - small loop bodies deserve no foreach no more :)
A must read reference on iterators is the book "Extended STL".
The GoF have a tiny little paragraph in the end of the Iterator pattern, which talks about this brand of iteration; it's called an 'internal iterator'. Have a look here, too.
Because it is more object-oriented. if you are iterating with an index you are assuming:
a) that those objects are ordered
b) that those objects can be obtained by an index
c) that the index increment will hit every item
d) that that index starts at zero
With an iterator, you are saying "give me everything so I can work with it" without knowing what the underlying implementation is. (In Java, there are collections that cannot be accessed through an index)
Also, with an iterator, no need to worry about going out of bounds of the array.
Another nice thing about iterators is that they better allow you to express (and enforce) your const-preference. This example ensures that you will not be altering the vector in the midst of your loop:
for(std::vector<Foo>::const_iterator pos=foos.begin(); pos != foos.end(); ++pos)
{
// Foo & foo = *pos; // this won't compile
const Foo & foo = *pos; // this will compile
}
Aside from all of the other excellent answers... int may not be large enough for your vector. Instead, if you want to use indexing, use the size_type for your container:
for (std::vector<Foo>::size_type i = 0; i < myvector.size(); ++i)
{
Foo& this_foo = myvector[i];
// Do stuff with this_foo
}
I probably should point out you can also call
std::for_each(some_vector.begin(), some_vector.end(), &do_stuff);
STL iterators are mostly there so that the STL algorithms like sort can be container independent.
If you just want to loop over all the entries in a vector just use the index loop style.
It is less typing and easier to parse for most humans. It would be nice if C++ had a simple foreach loop without going overboard with template magic.
for( size_t i = 0; i < some_vector.size(); ++i )
{
T& rT = some_vector[i];
// now do something with rT
}
'
I don't think it makes much difference for a vector. I prefer to use an index myself as I consider it to be more readable and you can do random access like jumping forward 6 items or jumping backwards if needs be.
I also like to make a reference to the item inside the loop like this so there are not a lot of square brackets around the place:
for(size_t i = 0; i < myvector.size(); i++)
{
MyClass &item = myvector[i];
// Do stuff to "item".
}
Using an iterator can be good if you think you might need to replace the vector with a list at some point in the future and it also looks more stylish to the STL freaks but I can't think of any other reason.
The second form represents what you're doing more accurately. In your example, you don't care about the value of i, really - all you want is the next element in the iterator.
After having learned a little more on the subject of this answer, I realize it was a bit of an oversimplification. The difference between this loop:
for (some_iterator = some_vector.begin(); some_iterator != some_vector.end();
some_iterator++)
{
//do stuff
}
And this loop:
for (int i = 0; i < some_vector.size(); i++)
{
//do stuff
}
Is fairly minimal. In fact, the syntax of doing loops this way seems to be growing on me:
while (it != end){
//do stuff
++it;
}
Iterators do unlock some fairly powerful declarative features, and when combined with the STL algorithms library you can do some pretty cool things that are outside the scope of array index administrivia.
Indexing requires an extra mul operation. For example, for vector<int> v, the compiler converts v[i] into &v + sizeof(int) * i.
During iteration you don't need to know number of item to be processed. You just need the item and iterators do such things very good.
No one mentioned yet that one advantage of indices is that they are not become invalid when you append to a contiguous container like std::vector, so you can add items to the container during iteration.
This is also possible with iterators, but you must call reserve(), and therefore need to know how many items you'll append.
If you have access to C++11 features, then you can also use a range-based for loop for iterating over your vector (or any other container) as follows:
for (auto &item : some_vector)
{
//do stuff
}
The benefit of this loop is that you can access elements of the vector directly via the item variable, without running the risk of messing up an index or making a making a mistake when dereferencing an iterator. In addition, the placeholder auto prevents you from having to repeat the type of the container elements,
which brings you even closer to a container-independent solution.
Notes:
If you need the the element index in your loop and the operator[] exists for your container (and is fast enough for you), then better go for your first way.
A range-based for loop cannot be used to add/delete elements into/from a container. If you want to do that, then better stick to the solution given by Brian Matthews.
If you don't want to change the elements in your container, then you should use the keyword const as follows: for (auto const &item : some_vector) { ... }.
Several good points already. I have a few additional comments:
Assuming we are talking about the C++ standard library, "vector" implies a random access container that has the guarantees of C-array (random access, contiguos memory layout etc). If you had said 'some_container', many of the above answers would have been more accurate (container independence etc).
To eliminate any dependencies on compiler optimization, you could move some_vector.size() out of the loop in the indexed code, like so:
const size_t numElems = some_vector.size();
for (size_t i = 0; i
Always pre-increment iterators and treat post-increments as exceptional cases.
for (some_iterator = some_vector.begin(); some_iterator != some_vector.end(); ++some_iterator){ //do stuff }
So assuming and indexable std::vector<> like container, there is no good reason to prefer one over other, sequentially going through the container. If you have to refer to older or newer elemnent indexes frequently, then the indexed version is more appropropriate.
In general, using the iterators is preferred because algorithms make use of them and behavior can be controlled (and implicitly documented) by changing the type of the iterator. Array locations can be used in place of iterators, but the syntactical difference will stick out.
I don't use iterators for the same reason I dislike foreach-statements. When having multiple inner-loops it's hard enough to keep track of global/member variables without having to remember all the local values and iterator-names as well. What I find useful is to use two sets of indices for different occasions:
for(int i=0;i<anims.size();i++)
for(int j=0;j<bones.size();j++)
{
int animIndex = i;
int boneIndex = j;
// in relatively short code I use indices i and j
... animation_matrices[i][j] ...
// in long and complicated code I use indices animIndex and boneIndex
... animation_matrices[animIndex][boneIndex] ...
}
I don't even want to abbreviate things like "animation_matrices[i]" to some random "anim_matrix"-named-iterator for example, because then you can't see clearly from which array this value is originated.
If you like being close to the metal / don't trust their implementation details, don't use iterators.
If you regularly switch out one collection type for another during development, use iterators.
If you find it difficult to remember how to iterate different sorts of collections (maybe you have several types from several different external sources in use), use iterators to unify the means by which you walk over elements. This applies to say switching a linked list with an array list.
Really, that's all there is to it. It's not as if you're going to gain more brevity either way on average, and if brevity really is your goal, you can always fall back on macros.
Even better than "telling the CPU what to do" (imperative) is "telling the libraries what you want" (functional).
So instead of using loops you should learn the algorithms present in stl.
For container independence
I always use array index because many application of mine require something like "display thumbnail image". So I wrote something like this:
some_vector[0].left=0;
some_vector[0].top =0;<br>
for (int i = 1; i < some_vector.size(); i++)
{
some_vector[i].left = some_vector[i-1].width + some_vector[i-1].left;
if(i % 6 ==0)
{
some_vector[i].top = some_vector[i].top.height + some_vector[i].top;
some_vector[i].left = 0;
}
}
Both the implementations are correct, but I would prefer the 'for' loop. As we have decided to use a Vector and not any other container, using indexes would be the best option. Using iterators with Vectors would lose the very benefit of having the objects in continuous memory blocks which help ease in their access.
I felt that none of the answers here explain why I like iterators as a general concept over indexing into containers. Note that most of my experience using iterators doesn't actually come from C++ but from higher-level programming languages like Python.
The iterator interface imposes fewer requirements on consumers of your function, which allows consumers to do more with it.
If all you need is to be able to forward-iterate, the developer isn't limited to using indexable containers - they can use any class implementing operator++(T&), operator*(T) and operator!=(const &T, const &T).
#include <iostream>
template <class InputIterator>
void printAll(InputIterator& begin, InputIterator& end)
{
for (auto current = begin; current != end; ++current) {
std::cout << *current << "\n";
}
}
// elsewhere...
printAll(myVector.begin(), myVector.end());
Your algorithm works for the case you need it - iterating over a vector - but it can also be useful for applications you don't necessarily anticipate:
#include <random>
class RandomIterator
{
private:
std::mt19937 random;
std::uint_fast32_t current;
std::uint_fast32_t floor;
std::uint_fast32_t ceil;
public:
RandomIterator(
std::uint_fast32_t floor = 0,
std::uint_fast32_t ceil = UINT_FAST32_MAX,
std::uint_fast32_t seed = std::mt19937::default_seed
) :
floor(floor),
ceil(ceil)
{
random.seed(seed);
++(*this);
}
RandomIterator& operator++()
{
current = floor + (random() % (ceil - floor));
}
std::uint_fast32_t operator*() const
{
return current;
}
bool operator!=(const RandomIterator &that) const
{
return current != that.current;
}
};
int main()
{
// roll a 1d6 until we get a 6 and print the results
RandomIterator firstRandom(1, 7, std::random_device()());
RandomIterator secondRandom(6, 7);
printAll(firstRandom, secondRandom);
return 0;
}
Attempting to implement a square-brackets operator which does something similar to this iterator would be contrived, while the iterator implementation is relatively simple. The square-brackets operator also makes implications about the capabilities of your class - that you can index to any arbitrary point - which may be difficult or inefficient to implement.
Iterators also lend themselves to decoration. People can write iterators which take an iterator in their constructor and extend its functionality:
template<class InputIterator, typename T>
class FilterIterator
{
private:
InputIterator internalIterator;
public:
FilterIterator(const InputIterator &iterator):
internalIterator(iterator)
{
}
virtual bool condition(T) = 0;
FilterIterator<InputIterator, T>& operator++()
{
do {
++(internalIterator);
} while (!condition(*internalIterator));
return *this;
}
T operator*()
{
// Needed for the first result
if (!condition(*internalIterator))
++(*this);
return *internalIterator;
}
virtual bool operator!=(const FilterIterator& that) const
{
return internalIterator != that.internalIterator;
}
};
template <class InputIterator>
class EvenIterator : public FilterIterator<InputIterator, std::uint_fast32_t>
{
public:
EvenIterator(const InputIterator &internalIterator) :
FilterIterator<InputIterator, std::uint_fast32_t>(internalIterator)
{
}
bool condition(std::uint_fast32_t n)
{
return !(n % 2);
}
};
int main()
{
// Rolls a d20 until a 20 is rolled and discards odd rolls
EvenIterator<RandomIterator> firstRandom(RandomIterator(1, 21, std::random_device()()));
EvenIterator<RandomIterator> secondRandom(RandomIterator(20, 21));
printAll(firstRandom, secondRandom);
return 0;
}
While these toys might seem mundane, it's not difficult to imagine using iterators and iterator decorators to do powerful things with a simple interface - decorating a forward-only iterator of database results with an iterator which constructs a model object from a single result, for example. These patterns enable memory-efficient iteration of infinite sets and, with a filter like the one I wrote above, potentially lazy evaluation of results.
Part of the power of C++ templates is your iterator interface, when applied to the likes of fixed-length C arrays, decays to simple and efficient pointer arithmetic, making it a truly zero-cost abstraction.

why can't i use list iterator logical comparisons operator?

It's very basic, but I could not find a similar question here. I am trying to iterate the same sorted STL list from different directions using list. I know I can compare an iterator to the list.begin() and list.end(), so why doesn't this work?
list<family>::iterator itLargeFamily =
families.begin(); //starts from the biggest families
list<family>::iterator itSmallFamily =
families.end(); //starts from the smallest families
for (; itSmallFamily > itLargeFamily; --itSmallFamily, ++itLargeFamily) {
// stuff...
}
The error is of course
no operator > matches these operands
100% chance I'm missing something basic.
Only random access iterators are ordered. std::list iterators are only bidirectional iterators, so they do not support operator< or operator>.
Instead, you could do your comparison with !=.
while (itSmallFamily != itLargeFamily)
You'll have to make sure that the iterators don't jump over each other for this to work though. That is, if itSmallFamily is only one increment away from itLargeFamily, you will simply swap them over and they'll never have been equal to each other.
You could instead use std::vector, whose iterators are random access iterators. In addition, std::array and std::deque are also support random access.
From the comments and the answer of sftrabbit you can see that relational operators are only defined for random access iterators, and std::list has only bidirectional iterators. So there are several solutions for your problem:
Use std::vector or std::array. They provide random access iterators, have better performance for smaller sizes, and depending of how you fill/use them for larger sizes as well, and they have better memory footprint. This is the preferred solution, I'd call it the "default" solution. Use other containers only if there is a very good, measurable reason (e.g. a profiler tells you that using that container is a performance bottleneck).
Since you know the size of the list, you can use a counter for your iterations:
for (size_t i = 0, count = families.size()/2;
i < count;
++i, --itSmallFamily, ++itLargeFamily)
{ /* do stuff */ }
Since your list is sorted, you can compare the elements the iterators point to instead of the iterators themselves.

Iterator Loop vs index loop [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Closed 10 years ago.
Possible Duplicate:
Why use iterators instead of array indices?
I'm reviewing my knowledge on C++ and I've stumbled upon iterators. One thing I want to know is what makes them so special and I want to know why this:
using namespace std;
vector<int> myIntVector;
vector<int>::iterator myIntVectorIterator;
// Add some elements to myIntVector
myIntVector.push_back(1);
myIntVector.push_back(4);
myIntVector.push_back(8);
for(myIntVectorIterator = myIntVector.begin();
myIntVectorIterator != myIntVector.end();
myIntVectorIterator++)
{
cout<<*myIntVectorIterator<<" ";
//Should output 1 4 8
}
is better than this:
using namespace std;
vector<int> myIntVector;
// Add some elements to myIntVector
myIntVector.push_back(1);
myIntVector.push_back(4);
myIntVector.push_back(8);
for(int y=0; y<myIntVector.size(); y++)
{
cout<<myIntVector[y]<<" ";
//Should output 1 4 8
}
And yes I know that I shouldn't be using the std namespace. I just took this example off of the cprogramming website. So can you please tell me why the latter is worse? What's the big difference?
The special thing about iterators is that they provide the glue between algorithms and containers. For generic code, the recommendation would be to use a combination of STL algorithms (e.g. find, sort, remove, copy) etc. that carries out the computation that you have in mind on your data structure (vector, list, map etc.), and to supply that algorithm with iterators into your container.
Your particular example could be written as a combination of the for_each algorithm and the vector container (see option 3) below), but it's only one out of four distinct ways to iterate over a std::vector:
1) index-based iteration
for (std::size_t i = 0; i != v.size(); ++i) {
// access element as v[i]
// any code including continue, break, return
}
Advantages: familiar to anyone familiar with C-style code, can loop using different strides (e.g. i += 2).
Disadvantages: only for sequential random access containers (vector, array, deque), doesn't work for list, forward_list or the associative containers. Also the loop control is a little verbose (init, check, increment). People need to be aware of the 0-based indexing in C++.
2) iterator-based iteration
for (auto it = v.begin(); it != v.end(); ++it) {
// if the current index is needed:
auto i = std::distance(v.begin(), it);
// access element as *it
// any code including continue, break, return
}
Advantages: more generic, works for all containers (even the new unordered associative containers, can also use different strides (e.g. std::advance(it, 2));
Disadvantages: need extra work to get the index of the current element (could be O(N) for list or forward_list). Again, the loop control is a little verbose (init, check, increment).
3) STL for_each algorithm + lambda
std::for_each(v.begin(), v.end(), [](T const& elem) {
// if the current index is needed:
auto i = &elem - &v[0];
// cannot continue, break or return out of the loop
});
Advantages: same as 2) plus small reduction in loop control (no check and increment), this can greatly reduce your bug rate (wrong init, check or increment, off-by-one errors).
Disadvantages: same as explicit iterator-loop plus restricted possibilities for flow control in the loop (cannot use continue, break or return) and no option for different strides (unless you use an iterator adapter that overloads operator++).
4) range-for loop
for (auto& elem: v) {
// if the current index is needed:
auto i = &elem - &v[0];
// any code including continue, break, return
}
Advantages: very compact loop control, direct access to the current element.
Disadvantages: extra statement to get the index. Cannot use different strides.
What to use?
For your particular example of iterating over std::vector: if you really need the index (e.g. access the previous or next element, printing/logging the index inside the loop etc.) or you need a stride different than 1, then I would go for the explicitly indexed-loop, otherwise I'd go for the range-for loop.
For generic algorithms on generic containers I'd go for the explicit iterator loop unless the code contained no flow control inside the loop and needed stride 1, in which case I'd go for the STL for_each + a lambda.
With a vector iterators do no offer any real advantage. The syntax is uglier, longer to type and harder to read.
Iterating over a vector using iterators is not faster and is not safer (actually if the vector is possibly resized during the iteration using iterators will put you in big troubles).
The idea of having a generic loop that works when you will change later the container type is also mostly nonsense in real cases. Unfortunately the dark side of a strictly typed language without serious typing inference (a bit better now with C++11, however) is that you need to say what is the type of everything at each step. If you change your mind later you will still need to go around and change everything. Moreover different containers have very different trade-offs and changing container type is not something that happens that often.
The only case in which iteration should be kept if possible generic is when writing template code, but that (I hope for you) is not the most frequent case.
The only problem present in your explicit index loop is that size returns an unsigned value (a design bug of C++) and comparison between signed and unsigned is dangerous and surprising, so better avoided. If you use a decent compiler with warnings enabled there should be a diagnostic on that.
Note that the solution is not to use an unsiged as the index, because arithmetic between unsigned values is also apparently illogical (it's modulo arithmetic, and x-1 may be bigger than x). You instead should cast the size to an integer before using it.
It may make some sense to use unsigned sizes and indexes (paying a LOT of attention to every expression you write) only if you're working on a 16 bit C++ implementation (16 bit was the reason for having unsigned values in sizes).
As a typical mistake that unsigned size may introduce consider:
void drawPolyline(const std::vector<P2d>& points)
{
for (int i=0; i<points.size()-1; i++)
drawLine(points[i], points[i+1]);
}
Here the bug is present because if you pass an empty points vector the value points.size()-1 will be a huge positive number, making you looping into a segfault.
A working solution could be
for (int i=1; i<points.size(); i++)
drawLine(points[i - 1], points[i]);
but I personally prefer to always remove unsinged-ness with int(v.size()).
PS: If you really don't want to think by to yourself to the implications and simply want an expert to tell you then consider that a quite a few world recognized C++ experts agree and expressed opinions on that unsigned values are a bad idea except for bit manipulations.
Discovering the ugliness of using iterators in the case of iterating up to second-last is left as an exercise for the reader.
Iterators make your code more generic.
Every standard library container provides an iterator hence if you change your container class in future the loop wont be affected.
Iterators are first choice over operator[]. C++11 provides std::begin(), std::end() functions.
As your code uses just std::vector, I can't say there is much difference in both codes, however, operator [] may not operate as you intend to. For example if you use map, operator[] will insert an element if not found.
Also, by using iterator your code becomes more portable between containers. You can switch containers from std::vector to std::list or other container freely without changing much if you use iterator such rule doesn't apply to operator[].
It always depends on what you need.
You should use operator[] when you need direct access to elements in the vector (when you need to index a specific element in the vector). There is nothing wrong in using it over iterators. However, you must decide for yourself which (operator[] or iterators) suits best your needs.
Using iterators would enable you to switch to other container types without much change in your code. In other words, using iterators would make your code more generic, and does not depend on a particular type of container.
By writing your client code in terms of iterators you abstract away the container completely.
Consider this code:
class ExpressionParser // some generic arbitrary expression parser
{
public:
template<typename It>
void parse(It begin, const It end)
{
using namespace std;
using namespace std::placeholders;
for_each(begin, end,
bind(&ExpressionParser::process_next, this, _1);
}
// process next char in a stream (defined elsewhere)
void process_next(char c);
};
client code:
ExpressionParser p;
std::string expression("SUM(A) FOR A in [1, 2, 3, 4]");
p.parse(expression.begin(), expression.end());
std::istringstream file("expression.txt");
p.parse(std::istringstream<char>(file), std::istringstream<char>());
char expr[] = "[12a^2 + 13a - 5] with a=108";
p.parse(std::begin(expr), std::end(expr));
Edit: Consider your original code example, implemented with :
using namespace std;
vector<int> myIntVector;
// Add some elements to myIntVector
myIntVector.push_back(1);
myIntVector.push_back(4);
myIntVector.push_back(8);
copy(myIntVector.begin(), myIntVector.end(),
std::ostream_iterator<int>(cout, " "));
The nice thing about iterator is that later on if you wanted to switch your vector to a another STD container. Then the forloop will still work.
its a matter of speed. using the iterator accesses the elements faster. a similar question was answered here:
What's faster, iterating an STL vector with vector::iterator or with at()?
Edit:
speed of access varies with each cpu and compiler

How come random deletion from a std::vector is faster than a std::list?

How come that random deletion from a std::vector is faster than a std::list? What I'm doing to speed it up is swapping the random element with the last and then deleting the last.
I would have thought that the list would be faster since random deletion is what it was built for.
for(int i = 500; i < 600; i++){
swap(vector1[i], vector1[vector1.size()-1]);
vector1.pop_back();
}
for(int i = 0; i < 100; i++){
list1.pop_front();
}
Results (in seconds):
Vec swap delete: 0.00000909461232367903
List normal delete: 0.00011785102105932310
What you're doing is not random deletion though. You're deleting from the end, which is what vectors are built for (among other things).
And when swapping, you're doing a single random indexing operation, which is also what vectors are good at.
The difference between std::list and std::vector is not merely down to performance. They also have different iterator invalidation semantics. If you erase an item from a std::list, all iterators pointing to other items in the list remain valid. Not so with std::vector, where erasing an item invalidates all iterators pointing after that item. (In some implementations, they may still serve as valid iterators, but according to the standard they are now unusable, and a checking implementation ought to assert if you try to use them.)
So your choice of container is also to do with what semantics you require.
That's not random. Try vector1.erase(vector.begin() + rand() % vector.size()); instead.
The list erase will cause to delete the erased list element, this will invoke a call to the delete operator. The vector erase just causes a swap and then a integer decrement - this is a lot faster.
Actually if you want further speed-ups you should index elements in the vector via iterators. They are known to have better performance for some architectures.

Why use iterators instead of array indices?

Take the following two lines of code:
for (int i = 0; i < some_vector.size(); i++)
{
//do stuff
}
And this:
for (some_iterator = some_vector.begin(); some_iterator != some_vector.end();
some_iterator++)
{
//do stuff
}
I'm told that the second way is preferred. Why exactly is this?
The first form is efficient only if vector.size() is a fast operation. This is true for vectors, but not for lists, for example. Also, what are you planning to do within the body of the loop? If you plan on accessing the elements as in
T elem = some_vector[i];
then you're making the assumption that the container has operator[](std::size_t) defined. Again, this is true for vector but not for other containers.
The use of iterators bring you closer to container independence. You're not making assumptions about random-access ability or fast size() operation, only that the container has iterator capabilities.
You could enhance your code further by using standard algorithms. Depending on what it is you're trying to achieve, you may elect to use std::for_each(), std::transform() and so on. By using a standard algorithm rather than an explicit loop you're avoiding re-inventing the wheel. Your code is likely to be more efficient (given the right algorithm is chosen), correct and reusable.
It's part of the modern C++ indoctrination process. Iterators are the only way to iterate most containers, so you use it even with vectors just to get yourself into the proper mindset. Seriously, that's the only reason I do it - I don't think I've ever replaced a vector with a different kind of container.
Wow, this is still getting downvoted after three weeks. I guess it doesn't pay to be a little tongue-in-cheek.
I think the array index is more readable. It matches the syntax used in other languages, and the syntax used for old-fashioned C arrays. It's also less verbose. Efficiency should be a wash if your compiler is any good, and there are hardly any cases where it matters anyway.
Even so, I still find myself using iterators frequently with vectors. I believe the iterator is an important concept, so I promote it whenever I can.
because you are not tying your code to the particular implementation of the some_vector list. if you use array indices, it has to be some form of array; if you use iterators you can use that code on any list implementation.
Imagine some_vector is implemented with a linked-list. Then requesting an item in the i-th place requires i operations to be done to traverse the list of nodes. Now, if you use iterator, generally speaking, it will make its best effort to be as efficient as possible (in the case of a linked list, it will maintain a pointer to the current node and advance it in each iteration, requiring just a single operation).
So it provides two things:
Abstraction of use: you just want to iterate some elements, you don't care about how to do it
Performance
I'm going to be the devils advocate here, and not recommend iterators. The main reason why, is all the source code I've worked on from Desktop application development to game development have i nor have i needed to use iterators. All the time they have not been required and secondly the hidden assumptions and code mess and debugging nightmares you get with iterators make them a prime example not to use it in any applications that require speed.
Even from a maintence stand point they're a mess. Its not because of them but because of all the aliasing that happen behind the scene. How do i know that you haven't implemented your own virtual vector or array list that does something completely different to the standards. Do i know what type is currently now during runtime? Did you overload a operator I didn't have time to check all your source code. Hell do i even know what version of the STL your using?
The next problem you got with iterators is leaky abstraction, though there are numerous web sites that discuss this in detail with them.
Sorry, I have not and still have not seen any point in iterators. If they abstract the list or vector away from you, when in fact you should know already what vector or list your dealing with if you don't then your just going to be setting yourself up for some great debugging sessions in the future.
You might want to use an iterator if you are going to add/remove items to the vector while you are iterating over it.
some_iterator = some_vector.begin();
while (some_iterator != some_vector.end())
{
if (/* some condition */)
{
some_iterator = some_vector.erase(some_iterator);
// some_iterator now positioned at the element after the deleted element
}
else
{
if (/* some other condition */)
{
some_iterator = some_vector.insert(some_iterator, some_new_value);
// some_iterator now positioned at new element
}
++some_iterator;
}
}
If you were using indices you would have to shuffle items up/down in the array to handle the insertions and deletions.
Separation of Concerns
It's very nice to separate the iteration code from the 'core' concern of the loop. It's almost a design decision.
Indeed, iterating by index ties you to the implementation of the container. Asking the container for a begin and end iterator, enables the loop code for use with other container types.
Also, in the std::for_each way, you TELL the collection what to do, instead of ASKing it something about its internals
The 0x standard is going to introduce closures, which will make this approach much more easy to use - have a look at the expressive power of e.g. Ruby's [1..6].each { |i| print i; }...
Performance
But maybe a much overseen issue is that, using the for_each approach yields an opportunity to have the iteration parallelized - the intel threading blocks can distribute the code block over the number of processors in the system!
Note: after discovering the algorithms library, and especially foreach, I went through two or three months of writing ridiculously small 'helper' operator structs which will drive your fellow developers crazy. After this time, I went back to a pragmatic approach - small loop bodies deserve no foreach no more :)
A must read reference on iterators is the book "Extended STL".
The GoF have a tiny little paragraph in the end of the Iterator pattern, which talks about this brand of iteration; it's called an 'internal iterator'. Have a look here, too.
Because it is more object-oriented. if you are iterating with an index you are assuming:
a) that those objects are ordered
b) that those objects can be obtained by an index
c) that the index increment will hit every item
d) that that index starts at zero
With an iterator, you are saying "give me everything so I can work with it" without knowing what the underlying implementation is. (In Java, there are collections that cannot be accessed through an index)
Also, with an iterator, no need to worry about going out of bounds of the array.
Another nice thing about iterators is that they better allow you to express (and enforce) your const-preference. This example ensures that you will not be altering the vector in the midst of your loop:
for(std::vector<Foo>::const_iterator pos=foos.begin(); pos != foos.end(); ++pos)
{
// Foo & foo = *pos; // this won't compile
const Foo & foo = *pos; // this will compile
}
Aside from all of the other excellent answers... int may not be large enough for your vector. Instead, if you want to use indexing, use the size_type for your container:
for (std::vector<Foo>::size_type i = 0; i < myvector.size(); ++i)
{
Foo& this_foo = myvector[i];
// Do stuff with this_foo
}
I probably should point out you can also call
std::for_each(some_vector.begin(), some_vector.end(), &do_stuff);
STL iterators are mostly there so that the STL algorithms like sort can be container independent.
If you just want to loop over all the entries in a vector just use the index loop style.
It is less typing and easier to parse for most humans. It would be nice if C++ had a simple foreach loop without going overboard with template magic.
for( size_t i = 0; i < some_vector.size(); ++i )
{
T& rT = some_vector[i];
// now do something with rT
}
'
I don't think it makes much difference for a vector. I prefer to use an index myself as I consider it to be more readable and you can do random access like jumping forward 6 items or jumping backwards if needs be.
I also like to make a reference to the item inside the loop like this so there are not a lot of square brackets around the place:
for(size_t i = 0; i < myvector.size(); i++)
{
MyClass &item = myvector[i];
// Do stuff to "item".
}
Using an iterator can be good if you think you might need to replace the vector with a list at some point in the future and it also looks more stylish to the STL freaks but I can't think of any other reason.
The second form represents what you're doing more accurately. In your example, you don't care about the value of i, really - all you want is the next element in the iterator.
After having learned a little more on the subject of this answer, I realize it was a bit of an oversimplification. The difference between this loop:
for (some_iterator = some_vector.begin(); some_iterator != some_vector.end();
some_iterator++)
{
//do stuff
}
And this loop:
for (int i = 0; i < some_vector.size(); i++)
{
//do stuff
}
Is fairly minimal. In fact, the syntax of doing loops this way seems to be growing on me:
while (it != end){
//do stuff
++it;
}
Iterators do unlock some fairly powerful declarative features, and when combined with the STL algorithms library you can do some pretty cool things that are outside the scope of array index administrivia.
Indexing requires an extra mul operation. For example, for vector<int> v, the compiler converts v[i] into &v + sizeof(int) * i.
During iteration you don't need to know number of item to be processed. You just need the item and iterators do such things very good.
No one mentioned yet that one advantage of indices is that they are not become invalid when you append to a contiguous container like std::vector, so you can add items to the container during iteration.
This is also possible with iterators, but you must call reserve(), and therefore need to know how many items you'll append.
If you have access to C++11 features, then you can also use a range-based for loop for iterating over your vector (or any other container) as follows:
for (auto &item : some_vector)
{
//do stuff
}
The benefit of this loop is that you can access elements of the vector directly via the item variable, without running the risk of messing up an index or making a making a mistake when dereferencing an iterator. In addition, the placeholder auto prevents you from having to repeat the type of the container elements,
which brings you even closer to a container-independent solution.
Notes:
If you need the the element index in your loop and the operator[] exists for your container (and is fast enough for you), then better go for your first way.
A range-based for loop cannot be used to add/delete elements into/from a container. If you want to do that, then better stick to the solution given by Brian Matthews.
If you don't want to change the elements in your container, then you should use the keyword const as follows: for (auto const &item : some_vector) { ... }.
Several good points already. I have a few additional comments:
Assuming we are talking about the C++ standard library, "vector" implies a random access container that has the guarantees of C-array (random access, contiguos memory layout etc). If you had said 'some_container', many of the above answers would have been more accurate (container independence etc).
To eliminate any dependencies on compiler optimization, you could move some_vector.size() out of the loop in the indexed code, like so:
const size_t numElems = some_vector.size();
for (size_t i = 0; i
Always pre-increment iterators and treat post-increments as exceptional cases.
for (some_iterator = some_vector.begin(); some_iterator != some_vector.end(); ++some_iterator){ //do stuff }
So assuming and indexable std::vector<> like container, there is no good reason to prefer one over other, sequentially going through the container. If you have to refer to older or newer elemnent indexes frequently, then the indexed version is more appropropriate.
In general, using the iterators is preferred because algorithms make use of them and behavior can be controlled (and implicitly documented) by changing the type of the iterator. Array locations can be used in place of iterators, but the syntactical difference will stick out.
I don't use iterators for the same reason I dislike foreach-statements. When having multiple inner-loops it's hard enough to keep track of global/member variables without having to remember all the local values and iterator-names as well. What I find useful is to use two sets of indices for different occasions:
for(int i=0;i<anims.size();i++)
for(int j=0;j<bones.size();j++)
{
int animIndex = i;
int boneIndex = j;
// in relatively short code I use indices i and j
... animation_matrices[i][j] ...
// in long and complicated code I use indices animIndex and boneIndex
... animation_matrices[animIndex][boneIndex] ...
}
I don't even want to abbreviate things like "animation_matrices[i]" to some random "anim_matrix"-named-iterator for example, because then you can't see clearly from which array this value is originated.
If you like being close to the metal / don't trust their implementation details, don't use iterators.
If you regularly switch out one collection type for another during development, use iterators.
If you find it difficult to remember how to iterate different sorts of collections (maybe you have several types from several different external sources in use), use iterators to unify the means by which you walk over elements. This applies to say switching a linked list with an array list.
Really, that's all there is to it. It's not as if you're going to gain more brevity either way on average, and if brevity really is your goal, you can always fall back on macros.
Even better than "telling the CPU what to do" (imperative) is "telling the libraries what you want" (functional).
So instead of using loops you should learn the algorithms present in stl.
For container independence
I always use array index because many application of mine require something like "display thumbnail image". So I wrote something like this:
some_vector[0].left=0;
some_vector[0].top =0;<br>
for (int i = 1; i < some_vector.size(); i++)
{
some_vector[i].left = some_vector[i-1].width + some_vector[i-1].left;
if(i % 6 ==0)
{
some_vector[i].top = some_vector[i].top.height + some_vector[i].top;
some_vector[i].left = 0;
}
}
Both the implementations are correct, but I would prefer the 'for' loop. As we have decided to use a Vector and not any other container, using indexes would be the best option. Using iterators with Vectors would lose the very benefit of having the objects in continuous memory blocks which help ease in their access.
I felt that none of the answers here explain why I like iterators as a general concept over indexing into containers. Note that most of my experience using iterators doesn't actually come from C++ but from higher-level programming languages like Python.
The iterator interface imposes fewer requirements on consumers of your function, which allows consumers to do more with it.
If all you need is to be able to forward-iterate, the developer isn't limited to using indexable containers - they can use any class implementing operator++(T&), operator*(T) and operator!=(const &T, const &T).
#include <iostream>
template <class InputIterator>
void printAll(InputIterator& begin, InputIterator& end)
{
for (auto current = begin; current != end; ++current) {
std::cout << *current << "\n";
}
}
// elsewhere...
printAll(myVector.begin(), myVector.end());
Your algorithm works for the case you need it - iterating over a vector - but it can also be useful for applications you don't necessarily anticipate:
#include <random>
class RandomIterator
{
private:
std::mt19937 random;
std::uint_fast32_t current;
std::uint_fast32_t floor;
std::uint_fast32_t ceil;
public:
RandomIterator(
std::uint_fast32_t floor = 0,
std::uint_fast32_t ceil = UINT_FAST32_MAX,
std::uint_fast32_t seed = std::mt19937::default_seed
) :
floor(floor),
ceil(ceil)
{
random.seed(seed);
++(*this);
}
RandomIterator& operator++()
{
current = floor + (random() % (ceil - floor));
}
std::uint_fast32_t operator*() const
{
return current;
}
bool operator!=(const RandomIterator &that) const
{
return current != that.current;
}
};
int main()
{
// roll a 1d6 until we get a 6 and print the results
RandomIterator firstRandom(1, 7, std::random_device()());
RandomIterator secondRandom(6, 7);
printAll(firstRandom, secondRandom);
return 0;
}
Attempting to implement a square-brackets operator which does something similar to this iterator would be contrived, while the iterator implementation is relatively simple. The square-brackets operator also makes implications about the capabilities of your class - that you can index to any arbitrary point - which may be difficult or inefficient to implement.
Iterators also lend themselves to decoration. People can write iterators which take an iterator in their constructor and extend its functionality:
template<class InputIterator, typename T>
class FilterIterator
{
private:
InputIterator internalIterator;
public:
FilterIterator(const InputIterator &iterator):
internalIterator(iterator)
{
}
virtual bool condition(T) = 0;
FilterIterator<InputIterator, T>& operator++()
{
do {
++(internalIterator);
} while (!condition(*internalIterator));
return *this;
}
T operator*()
{
// Needed for the first result
if (!condition(*internalIterator))
++(*this);
return *internalIterator;
}
virtual bool operator!=(const FilterIterator& that) const
{
return internalIterator != that.internalIterator;
}
};
template <class InputIterator>
class EvenIterator : public FilterIterator<InputIterator, std::uint_fast32_t>
{
public:
EvenIterator(const InputIterator &internalIterator) :
FilterIterator<InputIterator, std::uint_fast32_t>(internalIterator)
{
}
bool condition(std::uint_fast32_t n)
{
return !(n % 2);
}
};
int main()
{
// Rolls a d20 until a 20 is rolled and discards odd rolls
EvenIterator<RandomIterator> firstRandom(RandomIterator(1, 21, std::random_device()()));
EvenIterator<RandomIterator> secondRandom(RandomIterator(20, 21));
printAll(firstRandom, secondRandom);
return 0;
}
While these toys might seem mundane, it's not difficult to imagine using iterators and iterator decorators to do powerful things with a simple interface - decorating a forward-only iterator of database results with an iterator which constructs a model object from a single result, for example. These patterns enable memory-efficient iteration of infinite sets and, with a filter like the one I wrote above, potentially lazy evaluation of results.
Part of the power of C++ templates is your iterator interface, when applied to the likes of fixed-length C arrays, decays to simple and efficient pointer arithmetic, making it a truly zero-cost abstraction.