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std::deque(3) C++ Standard Libary std::deque(3) NAME std::deque - std::deque Synopsis Defined in header <deque> template< class T, (1) class Allocator = std::allocator<T> > class deque; namespace pmr { template <class T> (2) (since C++17) using deque = std::deque<T, std::pmr::polymorphic_allocator<T>>; } std::deque (double-ended queue) is an indexed sequence container that allows fast insertion and deletion at both its beginning and its end. In addi- tion, insertion and deletion at either end of a deque never invalidates pointers or ref- erences to the rest of the elements. As opposed to std::vector, the elements of a deque are not stored contiguously: typical implementations use a sequence of individually allocated fixed-size arrays, with additional bookkeeping, which means indexed access to deque must perform two pointer dereferences, compared to vector's indexed access which per- forms only one. The storage of a deque is automatically expanded and contracted as needed. Expansion of a deque is cheaper than the expansion of a std::vector because it does not involve copying of the existing elements to a new memory location. On the other hand, deques typically have large minimal memory cost; a deque hold- ing just one element has to allocate its full internal array (e.g. 8 times the object size on 64-bit libstdc++; 16 times the object size or 4096 bytes, whichever is larger, on 64-bit libc++). The complexity (efficiency) of common operations on deques is as follows: * Random access - constant O(1) * Insertion or removal of elements at the end or beginning - con- stant O(1) * Insertion or removal of elements - linear O(n) std::deque meets the requirements of Container, AllocatorAwareCon- tainer, SequenceContainer and ReversibleContainer. Template parameters The type of the elements. T must meet the requirements of CopyAssignable and (until C++11) CopyConstructible. T - The requirements that are imposed on the elements depend on the actual operations performed on the container. Generally, it is required that element type is a com- plete (since C++11) type and meets the requirements of Erasable, but many member functions impose stricter requirements. An allocator that is used to acquire/release memory and to construct/destroy the elements in that memory. The type must meet the requirements of Allocator. Allocator - The behavior is undefined (until C++20) The program is ill-formed (since C++20) if Allocator::value_type is not the same as T. Iterator invalidation This section is incomplete Reason: There are still a few inaccuracies in this section, refer to individual member function pages for more detail Operations Invalidated All read only operations Never swap, std::swap The past-the-end iterator may be in- validated (implementation defined) shrink_to_fit, clear, insert, emplace, push_front, Always push_back, emplace_front, emplace_back If erasing at begin - only erased ele- ments erase If erasing at end - only erased ele- ments and the past-the-end iterator Otherwise - all iterators are invali- dated (including the past-the-end iterator). If the new size is smaller than the old one : only erased elements and the past-the-end iterator resize If the new size is bigger than the old one : all iterators are invalidated Otherwise - none iterators are invali- dated. pop_front Only to the element erased pop_back Only to the element erased and the past-the-end iterator Invalidation notes * When inserting at either end of the deque, references are not invalidated by insert and emplace. * push_front, push_back, emplace_front and emplace_back do not in- validate any references to elements of the deque. * When erasing at either end of the deque, references to non- erased elements are not invalidated by erase, pop_front and pop_back. * A call to resize with a smaller size does not invalidate any references to non-erased elements. * A call to resize with a bigger size does not invalidate any ref- erences to elements of the deque. Member types Member type Definition value_type T allocator_type Allocator size_type Unsigned integer type (usually std::size_t) difference_type Signed integer type (usually std::ptrdiff_t) reference value_type& const_reference const value_type& pointer Allocator::pointer (until C++11) std::allocator_traits<Allocator>::pointer (since C++11) const_pointer Allocator::const_pointer (until C++11) std::allocator_traits<Alloca- tor>::const_pointer (since C++11) iterator LegacyRandomAccessIterator to value_type const_iterator LegacyRandomAccessIterator to const value_type reverse_iterator std::reverse_iterator<iterator> const_reverse_iterator std::reverse_iterator<const_iterator> Member functions constructor constructs the deque (public member function) destructor destructs the deque (public member function) operator= assigns values to the container (public member function) assign assigns values to the container (public member function) get_allocator returns the associated allocator (public member function) Element access at access specified element with bounds checking (public member function) operator[] access specified element (public member function) front access the first element (public member function) back access the last element (public member function) Iterators begin returns an iterator to the beginning cbegin (public member function) (C++11) end returns an iterator to the end cend (public member function) (C++11) rbegin returns a reverse iterator to the beginning crbegin (public member function) (C++11) rend returns a reverse iterator to the end crend (public member function) (C++11) Capacity empty checks whether the container is empty (public member function) size returns the number of elements (public member function) max_size returns the maximum possible number of elements (public member function) shrink_to_fit reduces memory usage by freeing unused memory (C++11) (public member function) Modifiers clear clears the contents (public member function) insert inserts elements (public member function) emplace constructs element in-place (C++11) (public member function) erase erases elements (public member function) push_back adds an element to the end (public member function) emplace_back constructs an element in-place at the end (C++11) (public member function) pop_back removes the last element (public member function) push_front inserts an element to the beginning (public member function) emplace_front constructs an element in-place at the beginning (C++11) (public member function) pop_front removes the first element (public member function) resize changes the number of elements stored (public member function) swap swaps the contents (public member function) Non-member functions operator== operator!= operator< operator<= operator> operator>= lexicographically compares the values in the deque operator<=> (function template) (removed in C++20) (removed in C++20) (removed in C++20) (removed in C++20) (removed in C++20) (C++20) std::swap(std::deque) specializes the std::swap algorithm (function template) erase(std::deque) Erases all elements satisfying specific crite- ria erase_if(std::deque) (function template) (C++20) Deduction guides(since C++17) Example // Run this code #include <iostream> #include <deque> int main() { // Create a deque containing integers std::deque<int> d = {7, 5, 16, 8}; // Add an integer to the beginning and end of the deque d.push_front(13); d.push_back(25); // Iterate and print values of deque for(int n : d) { std::cout << n << ' '; } } Output: 13 7 5 16 8 25 See also queue adapts a container to provide queue (FIFO data structure) (class template) http://cppreference.com 2022.07.31 std::deque(3)
NAME | Synopsis | Template parameters | Member types | Member functions | Element access | Iterators | Capacity | Modifiers | Non-member functions | Example | Output: | See also
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