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    | std::iota(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::iota(3) | 
NAME¶
std::iota - std::iota
Synopsis¶
 Defined in header <numeric>
  
   template< class ForwardIt, class T > (since C++11)
  
   void iota( ForwardIt first, ForwardIt last, T value ); (until C++20)
  
   template< class ForwardIt, class T > (since C++20)
  
   constexpr void iota( ForwardIt first, ForwardIt last, T value );
  
   Fills the range [first, last) with sequentially increasing values, starting
    with
  
   value and repetitively evaluating ++value.
  
   Equivalent operation:
  
   *(first) = value;
  
   *(first+1) = ++value;
  
   *(first+2) = ++value;
  
   *(first+3) = ++value;
  
   ...
Parameters¶
 first, last - the range of elements to fill with sequentially
    increasing values
  
   starting with value
  
   value - initial value to store; the expression ++value must be
  well-formed
Return value¶
(none)
Complexity¶
Exactly last - first increments and assignments.
Possible implementation¶
 template<class ForwardIt, class T>
  
   constexpr // since C++20
  
   void iota(ForwardIt first, ForwardIt last, T value)
  
   {
  
   while(first != last) {
  
   *first++ = value;
  
   ++value;
  
   }
  
   }
Notes¶
 The function is named after the integer function ⍳ from
    the programming language
  
   APL. It was one of the STL components that were not included in C++98, but
    made it
  
   into the standard library in C++11.
Example¶
 The following example applies std::shuffle to a vector of
    std::lists' iterators.
  
   std::iota is used to populate containers.
// Run this code
  
   #include <algorithm>
  
   #include <iomanip>
  
   #include <iostream>
  
   #include <list>
  
   #include <numeric>
  
   #include <random>
  
   #include <vector>
  
   class BigData // inefficient to copy
  
   {
  
   int data[1024]; /* some raw data */
  
   public:
  
   explicit BigData(int i = 0) { data[0] = i; /* ... */ }
  
   operator int () const { return data[0]; }
  
   BigData& operator=(int i) { data[0] = i; return *this; }
  
   /* ... */
  
   };
  
   int main()
  
   {
  
   std::list<BigData> l(10);
  
   std::iota(l.begin(), l.end(), -4);
  
   std::vector<std::list<BigData>::iterator> v(l.size());
  
   std::iota(v.begin(), v.end(), l.begin());
  
   // Vector of iterators (to original data) is used to avoid expensive copying,
  
   // and because std::shuffle (below) cannot be applied to a std::list
    directly.
  
   std::shuffle(v.begin(), v.end(), std::mt19937{std::random_device{}()});
  
   std::cout << "Original contents of the list l:\t";
  
   for(auto const& n: l) std::cout << std::setw(2) << n <<
    ' ';
  
   std::cout << '\n';
  
   std::cout << "Contents of l, viewed via shuffled v:\t";
  
   for(auto const i: v) std::cout << std::setw(2) << *i << '
    ';
  
   std::cout << '\n';
  
   }
Possible output:¶
 Original contents of the list l: -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5
  
   Contents of l, viewed via shuffled v: -1 5 -4 0 2 1 4 -2 3 -3
See also¶
 ranges::iota_view a view consisting of a sequence generated by
    repeatedly
  
   views::iota incrementing an initial value
  
   (C++20) (class template) (customization point object)
  
   fill copy-assigns the given value to every element in a range
  
   (function template)
  
   ranges::fill assigns a range of elements a certain value
  
   (C++20) (niebloid)
  
   assigns the results of successive function calls to every element
  
   generate in a range
  
   (function template)
  
   ranges::generate saves the result of a function in a range
  
   (C++20) (niebloid)
  
   ranges::iota fills a range with successive increments of the starting value
  
   (C++23) (niebloid)
| 2022.07.31 | http://cppreference.com |