table of contents
        
      
      
    | std::regex_iterator::operator++,operator++(int)(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::regex_iterator::operator++,operator++(int)(3) | 
NAME¶
std::regex_iterator::operator++,operator++(int) - std::regex_iterator::operator++,operator++(int)
Synopsis¶
 regex_iterator& operator++(); (since C++11)
  
   regex_iterator operator++(int); (since C++11)
  
   Advances the iterator on the next match.
  
   This section is incomplete
  
   Reason: explain better
  
   At first, a local variable of type BidirIt is constructed with the value of
  
   match[0].second.
  
   If the iterator holds a zero-length match and start == end, *this is set to
  
   end-of-sequence iterator and the function returns.
  
   Otherwise, if the iterator holds a zero-length match the operator invokes the
  
   following:
  
   regex_search(start, end, match, *pregex,
  
   flags | regex_constants::match_not_null |
  
   regex_constants::match_continuous);
  
   If the call returns true, the function returns.
  
   Otherwise the operator increments start and continues as if the most recent
    match
  
   was not a zero-length match.
  
   If the most recent match was not a zero-length match, the operator sets flags
    to
  
   flags | regex_constants::match_prev_avail and invokes the following:
  
   regex_search(start, end, match, *pregex, flags);
  
   If the call returns false, the iterator sets *this to the end-of-sequence
    iterator,
  
   the function returns.
  
   In all cases in which the call to regex_search returns true,
    match.prefix().first
  
   will be equal to the previous value of match[0].second and for each index i
    in the
  
   range [0, match.size()) for which match[i].matched is true,
    match[i].position() will
  
   return distance(begin, match[i].first).
  
   This means that match[i].position() gives the offset from the beginning of
    the
  
   target sequence, which is often not the same as the offset from the sequence
    passed
  
   in the call to regex_search.
  
   It is unspecified how the implementation makes these adjustments. This means
    that a
  
   compiler may call an implementation-specific search function, in which case a
  
   user-defined specialization of regex_search will not be called.
  
   The behavior is undefined if the iterator is end-of-sequence iterator.
Parameters¶
(none)
Return value¶
 1) *this
  
   2) The previous value of the iterator.
| 2022.07.31 | http://cppreference.com |