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Viewing file: Select action/file-type: Table of Contents The neatest accomplishment of the algorithms section is that all the work is done via iterators, not containers directly. This means two important things:
Even strings can be fed through the algorithms here, although the
string class has specialized versions of many of these functions
(for example, The single thing that trips people up the most is the definition of range used with iterators; the famous "past-the-end" rule that everybody loves to hate. The iterators section of this document has a complete explanation of this simple rule that seems to cause so much confusion. Once you get range into your head (it's not that hard, honest!), then the algorithms are a cakewalk. If you call This allows member functions of each container class to take over, and containers' swap functions should have O(1) complexity according to the standard. (And while "should" allows implementations to behave otherwise and remain compliant, this implementation does in fact use constant-time swaps.) This should not be surprising, since for two containers of the same type to swap contents, only some internal pointers to storage need to be exchanged. |
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