table of contents
        
      
      
    | std::set::extract(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::set::extract(3) | 
NAME¶
std::set::extract - std::set::extract
Synopsis¶
 node_type extract( const_iterator position ); (1)
    (since C++17)
  
   node_type extract( const Key& k ); (2) (since C++17)
  
   template< class K > (3) (since C++23)
  
   node_type extract( K&& x );
  
   1) Unlinks the node that contains the element pointed to by position and
    returns a
  
   node handle that owns it.
  
   2) If the container has an element with key equivalent to k, unlinks the node
    that
  
   contains that element from the container and returns a node handle that owns
    it.
  
   Otherwise, returns an empty node handle.
  
   3) Same as (2). This overload participates in overload resolution only
    if the
  
   qualified-id Compare::is_transparent is valid and denotes a type, and neither
  
   iterator nor const_iterator is implicitly convertible from K. It allows
    calling this
  
   function without constructing an instance of Key.
  
   In either case, no elements are copied or moved, only the internal pointers
    of the
  
   container nodes are repointed (rebalancing may occur, as with erase()).
  
   Extracting a node invalidates only the iterators to the extracted element.
    Pointers
  
   and references to the extracted element remain valid, but cannot be used
    while
  
   element is owned by a node handle: they become usable if the element is
    inserted
  
   into a container.
Parameters¶
 position - a valid iterator into this container
  
   k - a key to identify the node to be extracted
  
   x - a value of any type that can be transparently compared with a key
  
   identifying the node to be extracted
Return value¶
 A node handle that owns the extracted element, or empty node
    handle in case the
  
   element is not found in (2,3).
Exceptions¶
 1) Throws nothing.
  
   2,3) Any exceptions thrown by the Compare object.
Complexity¶
 1) amortized constant
  
   2,3) log(a.size())
Notes¶
extract is the only way to take a move-only object out of a set
  
   std::set<move_only_type> s;
  
   s.emplace(...);
  
   move_only_type mot = std::move(s.extract(s.begin()).value());
  
   Feature-test macro: __cpp_lib_associative_heterogeneous_erasure (for overload
    (3))
Example¶
// Run this code
  
   #include <algorithm>
  
   #include <iostream>
  
   #include <string_view>
  
   #include <set>
  
   void print(std::string_view comment, const auto& data)
  
   {
  
   std::cout << comment;
  
   for (auto datum : data)
  
   std::cout << ' ' << datum;
  
   std::cout << '\n';
  
   }
  
   int main()
  
   {
  
   std::set<int> cont{1, 2, 3};
  
   print("Start:", cont);
  
   // Extract node handle and change key
  
   auto nh = cont.extract(1);
  
   nh.value() = 4;
  
   print("After extract and before insert:", cont);
  
   // Insert node handle back
  
   cont.insert(std::move(nh));
  
   print("End:", cont);
  
   }
Output:¶
 Start: 1 2 3
  
   After extract and before insert: 2 3
  
   End: 2 3 4
See also¶
 merge splices nodes from another container
  
   (C++17) (public member function)
  
   inserts elements
  
   insert or nodes
  
   (since C++17)
  
   (public member function)
  
   erase erases elements
  
   (public member function)
| 2022.07.31 | http://cppreference.com |