Difference between revisions of "Intermediate C++ Game Programming Tutorial 15"
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== Links == | == Links == | ||
[http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/iterator/ Iterator Category Reference] | [http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/iterator/ Iterator Category Reference] | ||
+ | [https://gist.github.com/jeetsukumaran/307264 Custom Iterator Example] | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Tutorial 16|Next in series (Tutorial 16)]] | * [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Tutorial 16|Next in series (Tutorial 16)]] | ||
* [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Series]] | * [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Series]] |
Revision as of 00:02, 19 October 2017
Iterators are just fancy pointers for containers. In this video we learn how to use iterators, what they're good for, and why we go through all this goddamn trouble in the first place (answer: because they make my dick hard).
Contents
[hide]Topics Covered
- Iterator operations (increment/decrement, dereference, add/sub, etc.)
- Getting iterators from containers (begin/end)
- Sequence ranges [closed,open)
- Container manipulation functions (erase/insert)
- Iterators and template algorithms (generic algorithms)
- Iterator types (random access/bidirectional/forward etc.)
- const_iterator (cbegin/cend) & reverse iterators (rbegin/rend)
- Free iterator functions (std::begin/end/advance/next/prev)
- Iterator adapters (back_inserter, ostream_iterator)
Video Timestamp Index
Answer to erase puzzle
The reason why we do not increment the iterator i
in the for loop, but instead increment it conditionally in the body of the loop is, if we erase an element, the returned iterator will point to the next element after the erased one, and if we were incrementing every iteration of the loop, it would skip all elements that immediately follow an erased element. Instead, we only increment if we did not erase an element, and this ensures that all elements are tested.
Homework
Modify our linked list stack to work with range based for loops. You are not allowed to modify any code outsize of the Stack
class. If you want an extra challenge after completing Level 1, you can uncomment the code for Level 2 and try to get it to compile as well.
Links
Iterator Category Reference Custom Iterator Example