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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
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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

Chapter 10: Using the File System

The purpose of the STL filesystem library is to normalize file system operations across platforms. The filesystem library seeks to normalize operations, bridging irregularities between POSIX/Unix, Windows, and other file systems.

The filesystem library was adopted from the corresponding Boost library and incorporated into the STL with C++17. At the time of writing, there are still gaps in its implementation on some systems, but the recipes in this chapter have been tested on Linux, Windows, and macOS file systems, and compiled with the latest available versions of the GCC, MSVC, and Clang compilers, respectively.

The library uses the <filesystem> header, and the std::filesystem namespace is commonly aliased as fs:

namespace fs = std::filesystem;

The fs::path class is at the core of the filesystem library. It provides normalized filename and directory path representation across disparate environments. A path object may represent a...

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