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C++20 STL Cookbook

You're reading from   C++20 STL Cookbook Leverage the latest features of the STL to solve real-world problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803248714
Length 450 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Bill Weinman Bill Weinman
Author Profile Icon Bill Weinman
Bill Weinman
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chaper 1: New C++20 Features 2. Chapter 2: General STL Features FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: STL Containers 4. Chapter 4: Compatible Iterators 5. Chapter 5: Lambda Expressions 6. Chapter 6: STL Algorithms 7. Chapter 7: Strings, Streams, and Formatting 8. Chapter 8: Utility Classes 9. Chapter 9: Concurrency and Parallelism 10. Chapter 10: Using the File System 11. Chapter 11: A Few More Ideas 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

Transform strings

The std::string class is a contiguous container, much like a vector or an array. It supports the contiguous_iterator concept and all corresponding algorithms.

The string class is a specialization of basic_string with a char type. This means that the elements of the container are of type char. Other specializations are available, but string is most common.

Because it is fundamentally a contiguous container of char elements, string may be used with the transform() algorithm, or any other technique that uses the contiguous_iterator concept.

How to do it…

There are several ways to do transformations, depending on the application. This recipe will explore a few of them.

  • We'll start with a few predicate functions. A predicate function takes a transformation element and returns a related element. For example, here is a simple predicate that returns an upper-case character:
    char char_upper(const char& c) {
        return...
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