I was wondering if there was a way to use the stl::find_if to search for a user inputted value
I don't know to do that without using any bad conventions(globals) or adding 开发者_Go百科loads of extended code.
For example, if a user inputs a int x for 10, then I want to search an vector of ints
iterator = find_if(begin,end,pred) //but how does pred know the user inputted value?
You can use equal_to
:
find_if(a.begin(), a.end(), bind2nd(equal_to<int>(), your_value));
The pred
must be an instance of a type that has the overloaded () operator, so it can be called like a function.
struct MyPred
{
int x;
bool operator()(int i)
{
return (i == x);
}
};
(Using a struct
for brevity here)
std::vector<int> v;
// fill v with ints
MyPred pred;
pred.x = 5;
std::vector<int>::iterator f
= std::find_if(v.begin(),
v.end(),
pred);
Writing custom classes like this (with "loads" of code!) is cumbersome to say the least, but will be improved a lot in C++0x when lambda syntax is added.
You can use boost::bind, for more general solution, for example:
struct Point
{
int x;
int y;
};
vector< Point > items;
find_if( items.begin(), items.end(), boost::bind( &Point::x, _1 ) == xValue );
will find a point whose x equals xValue
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