Is there any built in function which tells me that my vector contains a certain element or not e.g.
std::vector<string> v;
v.push_back("abc");
v.push_back("xyz");
if (v.contains("abc")) // I am looking for one such feature, is there any
// such function or i need to loop through whole vector?
You can use std::find as follows:
if (std::find(v.begin(), v.end(), "abc") != v.end())
{
// Element in vector.
}
To be able to use std::find: include <algorithm>.
If your container only contains unique values, consider using
std::setinstead. It allows querying of set membership with logarithmic complexity.std::set<std::string> s; s.insert("abc"); s.insert("xyz"); if (s.find("abc") != s.end()) { ...If your vector is kept sorted, use
std::binary_search, it offers logarithmic complexity as well.If all else fails, fall back to
std::find, which is a simple linear search.
In C++11, you can use std::any_of instead.
An example to find if there is any zero in the array:
std::array<int,3> foo = {0,1,-1};
if ( std::any_of(foo.begin(), foo.end(), [](int i){return i==0;}) )
std::cout << "zero found...";
it's in <algorithm> and called std::find.
std::find().
加载中,请稍侯......
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