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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 ); (constexpr since C++20)


Fills the range [first, last) with sequentially increasing values, starting with
value and repetitively evaluating ++value.


Equivalent operation (assuming ++value returns the incremented value):


*first = value;
*++first = ++value;
*++first = ++value;
*++first = ++value;
// repeats until “last” is reached


If any of the following conditions is satisfied, the program is ill-formed:


* T is not convertible to the value type of ForwardIt.
* The expression ++val is ill-formed, where val is a variable of type T.

Parameters


first, last - the range of elements to fill with sequentially increasing values
starting with value
value - initial value to store

Complexity


Exactly std::distance(first, last) increments and assignments.

Possible implementation


template<class ForwardIt, class T>
constexpr // since C++20
void iota(ForwardIt first, ForwardIt last, T value)
{
for (; first != last; ++first, ++value)
*first = 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 (const auto& n : l)
std::cout << std::setw(2) << n << ' ';
std::cout << '\n';


std::cout << "Contents of l, viewed via shuffled v:\t";
for (const auto 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)

2024.06.10 http://cppreference.com