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| std::experimental::ranges::BidirectionalIterator(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::experimental::ranges::BidirectionalIterator(3) | 
NAME¶
std::experimental::ranges::BidirectionalIterator - std::experimental::ranges::BidirectionalIterator
Synopsis¶
 Defined in header <experimental/ranges/iterator>
  
   template< class I >
  
   concept bool BidirectionalIterator =
  
   ForwardIterator<I> &&
  
   DerivedFrom<ranges::iterator_category_t<I>,
  
   ranges::bidirectional_iterator_tag> && (ranges TS)
  
   requires(I i) {
  
   { --i } -> Same<I>&;
  
   { i-- } -> Same<I>&&;
  
   };
  
   The concept BidirectionalIterator<I> refines ForwardIterator by adding
    the ability
  
   to move an iterator backward.
  
   A bidirectional iterator r is said to be decrementable if and only if there
    exists
  
   some s such that ++s == r. All decrementable iterators r shall be in the
    domain of
  
   the expressions --r and r--.
  
   Let a and b be decrementable objects of type I.
    BidirectionalIterator<I> is
  
   satisfied only if:
  
   * Pre-decrement yields an lvalue that refers to the operand:
    std::addressof(--a)
  
   == std::addressof(a).
  
   * Post-decrement yields the previous value of the operand: if bool(a == b),
    then
  
   bool(a-- == b).
  
   * Post-decrement and pre-decrement perform the same modification on its
    operand:
  
   If bool(a == b), then after evaluating both a-- and --b, bool(a == b) still
  
   holds.
  
   * Increment and decrement are inverses of each other:
  
   * If a is incrementable and bool(a == b), then bool(--(++a) == b).
  
   * If bool(a == b), then bool(++(--a) == b).
  
   Equality preservation
  
   An expression is equality preserving if it results in equal outputs given
    equal
  
   inputs.
  
   * The inputs to an expression consist of its operands.
  
   * The outputs of an expression consist of its result and all operands
    modified by
  
   the expression (if any).
  
   Every expression required to be equality preserving is further required to be
  
   stable: two evaluations of such an expression with the same input objects
    must have
  
   equal outputs absent any explicit intervening modification of those input
    objects.
  
   Unless noted otherwise, every expression used in a requires-expression is
    required
  
   to be equality preserving and stable, and the evaluation of the expression
    may only
  
   modify its non-constant operands. Operands that are constant must not be
    modified.
| 2024.06.10 | http://cppreference.com |