std::vector<T,Allocator>::vector - cppreference.com
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Constructs a new vector from a variety of data sources, optionally using a user supplied allocator alloc.
1) The default constructor since C++11. Constructs an empty vector with a default-constructed allocator.
2) The default constructor until C++11. Constructs an empty vector with the given allocator alloc.
3) Constructs a vector with count default-inserted objects of T. No copies are made.
If T is not DefaultInsertable into std::vector<T>, the behavior is undefined.
4) Constructs a vector with count copies of elements with value value.
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5) Constructs a vector with the contents of the range [first, last). Each iterator in [first, last) is dereferenced exactly once.
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This overload participates in overload resolution only if If any of the following conditions is satisfied, the behavior is undefined:
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6) Constructs a vector with the contents of the range rg. Each iterator in rg is dereferenced exactly once.
7-10) Constructs a vector with the contents of other.
7) The copy constructor.
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8) The move constructor. The allocator is obtained by move construction from other.get_allocator().
9) Same as the copy constructor, except that alloc is used as the allocator.
If T is not CopyInsertable into std::vector<T>, the behavior is undefined.
10) Same as the move constructor, except that alloc is used as the allocator.
If T is not MoveInsertable into std::vector<T>, the behavior is undefined.
11) Equivalent to vector(il.begin(), il.end(), alloc).
Parameters
| alloc | - | allocator to use for all memory allocations of this container |
| count | - | the size of the container |
| value | - | the value to initialize elements of the container with |
| first, last | - | the pair of iterators defining the range of elements to copy the elements from |
| other | - | another container to be used as source to initialize the elements of the container with |
| init | - | initializer list to initialize the elements of the container with |
| rg | - | a container compatible range |
Complexity
1,2) Constant.
3,4) Linear in count.
5) Given std::distance(first, last) as N:
- If
firstandlastare both forward, bidirectional or random-access iterators,
- The copy constructor of
Tis only called N times, and - No reallocation occurs.
- The copy constructor of
- Otherwise (
firstandlastare just input iterators),
- The copy constructor of
Tis called O(N) times, and - Reallocation occurs O(log N) times.
- The copy constructor of
6) Given ranges::distance(rg) as N:
- If
Rmodels ranges::forward_range or ranges::sized_range,
- Initializes exactly N elements from the result of dereferencing successive iterators of
rg, and - No reallocation occurs.
- Initializes exactly N elements from the result of dereferencing successive iterators of
- Otherwise (
Rmodels input range),
- The copy or move constructor of
Tis called O(N) times, and - Reallocation occurs O(log N) times.
- The copy or move constructor of
7) Linear in other.size().
8) Constant.
9) Linear in other.size().
10) Linear in other.size() if alloc != other.get_allocator(), otherwise constant.
11) Linear in init.size().
Exceptions
Calls to Allocator::allocate may throw.
Notes
After container move construction (overload (8)), references, pointers, and iterators (other than the end iterator) to other remain valid, but refer to elements that are now in *this. The current standard makes this guarantee via the blanket statement in [container.reqmts]/67, and a more direct guarantee is under consideration via LWG issue 2321.
| Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
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__cpp_lib_containers_ranges |
202202L |
(C++23) | Ranges-aware construction and insertion; overload (6) |
Example
#include <iostream> #include <string> #include <vector> template<typename T> std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& s, const std::vector<T>& v) { s.put('{'); for (char comma[]{'\0', ' ', '\0'}; const auto& e : v) s << comma << e, comma[0] = ','; return s << "}\n"; } int main() { // C++11 initializer list syntax: std::vector<std::string> words1{"the", "frogurt", "is", "also", "cursed"}; std::cout << "1: " << words1; // words2 == words1 std::vector<std::string> words2(words1.begin(), words1.end()); std::cout << "2: " << words2; // words3 == words1 std::vector<std::string> words3(words1); std::cout << "3: " << words3; // words4 is {"Mo", "Mo", "Mo", "Mo", "Mo"} std::vector<std::string> words4(5, "Mo"); std::cout << "4: " << words4; const auto rg = {"cat", "cow", "crow"}; #ifdef __cpp_lib_containers_ranges std::vector<std::string> words5(std::from_range, rg); // overload (6) #else std::vector<std::string> words5(rg.begin(), rg.end()); // overload (5) #endif std::cout << "5: " << words5; }
Output:
1: {the, frogurt, is, also, cursed}
2: {the, frogurt, is, also, cursed}
3: {the, frogurt, is, also, cursed}
4: {Mo, Mo, Mo, Mo, Mo}
5: {cat, cow, crow}
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 134 | C++98 | overload (5) allowed up to 2N copy constructor calls in the input iterator case |
changed to O(N) calls |
| LWG 438 | C++98 | overload (5) would only call overload (4) if InputIt is an integral type
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calls overload (4) if InputItis not an LegacyInputIterator |
| LWG 2193 | C++11 | the default constructor was explicit | made non-explicit |
| LWG 2210 | C++11 | overload (3) did not have an allocator parameter | added the parameter |
| N3346 | C++11 | for overload (3), the elements in the container were value-initialized |
they are default-inserted |
See also
| assigns values to the container (public member function) [edit] | |
| assigns values to the container (public member function) [edit] |