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C++17 STL Cookbook

You're reading from   C++17 STL Cookbook Discover the latest enhancements to functional programming and lambda expressions

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787120495
Length 532 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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 Galowicz Galowicz
Author Profile Icon Galowicz
Galowicz
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. The New C++17 Features FREE CHAPTER 2. STL Containers 3. Iterators 4. Lambda Expressions 5. STL Algorithm Basics 6. Advanced Use of STL Algorithms 7. Strings, Stream Classes, and Regular Expressions 8. Utility Classes 9. Parallelism and Concurrency 10. Filesystem Index

Terminating iterations over ranges with iterator sentinels


Both STL algorithms and the range-based for loop assume that the begin and end positions of the iteration are known in advance. In some situations, however, it is hardly possible to know the end position before reaching it by iteration.

A very simple example for this is iterating over plain C-Style strings, the length of which is not known before runtime. The code which iterates over such strings usually looks like this:

for (const char *c_ponter = some_c_string; *c_pointer != '\0'; ++c_pointer) {
    const char c = *c_pointer;
    // do something with c
}

The only way to put this into a range-based for loop seems to be wrapping it into an std::string, which has begin() and end() functions:

for (char c : std::string(some_c_string)) { /* do something with c */ }

However, the constructor of std::string will iterate over the whole string before our for loop can iterate over it. Since C++17, we also have std::string_view, but its constructor...

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