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Transform Iterator

Author: David Abrahams, Jeremy Siek, Thomas Witt
Contact: dave@boost-consulting.com, jsiek@osl.iu.edu, witt@ive.uni-hannover.de
Organization: Boost Consulting, Indiana University Open Systems Lab, University of Hanover Institute for Transport Railway Operation and Construction
Date: 2004-01-13
Copyright: Copyright David Abrahams, Jeremy Siek, and Thomas Witt 2003. All rights reserved
abstract:The transform iterator adapts an iterator by modifying the operator* to apply a function object to the result of dereferencing the iterator and returning the result.

Table of Contents

transform_iterator synopsis

template <class UnaryFunction,
          class Iterator, 
          class Reference = use_default, 
          class Value = use_default>
class transform_iterator
{
public:
  typedef /* see below */ value_type;
  typedef /* see below */ reference;
  typedef /* see below */ pointer;
  typedef iterator_traits<Iterator>::difference_type difference_type;
  typedef /* see below */ iterator_category;

  transform_iterator();
  transform_iterator(Iterator const& x, UnaryFunction f);

  template<class F2, class I2, class R2, class V2>
  transform_iterator(
        transform_iterator<F2, I2, R2, V2> const& t
      , typename enable_if_convertible<I2, Iterator>::type* = 0      // exposition only
      , typename enable_if_convertible<F2, UnaryFunction>::type* = 0 // exposition only
  );
  UnaryFunction functor() const;
  Iterator const& base() const;
  reference operator*() const;
  transform_iterator& operator++();
  transform_iterator& operator--();
private:
  Iterator m_iterator; // exposition only
  UnaryFunction m_f;   // exposition only
};

If Reference is use_default then the reference member of transform_iterator is result_of<UnaryFunction(iterator_traits<Iterator>::reference)>::type. Otherwise, reference is Reference.

If Value is use_default then the value_type member is remove_cv<remove_reference<reference> >::type. Otherwise, value_type is Value.

If Iterator models Readable Lvalue Iterator and if Iterator models Random Access Traversal Iterator, then iterator_category is convertible to random_access_iterator_tag. Otherwise, if Iterator models Bidirectional Traversal Iterator, then iterator_category is convertible to bidirectional_iterator_tag. Otherwise iterator_category is convertible to forward_iterator_tag. If Iterator does not model Readable Lvalue Iterator then iterator_category is convertible to input_iterator_tag.

transform_iterator requirements

The type UnaryFunction must be Assignable, Copy Constructible, and the expression f(*i) must be valid where f is an object of type UnaryFunction, i is an object of type Iterator, and where the type of f(*i) must be result_of<UnaryFunction(iterator_traits<Iterator>::reference)>::type.

The argument Iterator shall model Readable Iterator.

transform_iterator models

The resulting transform_iterator models the most refined of the following that is also modeled by Iterator.

  • Writable Lvalue Iterator if transform_iterator::reference is a non-const reference.
  • Readable Lvalue Iterator if transform_iterator::reference is a const reference.
  • Readable Iterator otherwise.

The transform_iterator models the most refined standard traversal concept that is modeled by the Iterator argument.

If transform_iterator is a model of Readable Lvalue Iterator then it models the following original iterator concepts depending on what the Iterator argument models.

If Iterator models then transform_iterator models
Single Pass Iterator Input Iterator
Forward Traversal Iterator Forward Iterator
Bidirectional Traversal Iterator Bidirectional Iterator
Random Access Traversal Iterator Random Access Iterator

If transform_iterator models Writable Lvalue Iterator then it is a mutable iterator (as defined in the old iterator requirements).

transform_iterator<F1, X, R1, V1> is interoperable with transform_iterator<F2, Y, R2, V2> if and only if X is interoperable with Y.

transform_iterator operations

In addition to the operations required by the concepts modeled by transform_iterator, transform_iterator provides the following operations.

transform_iterator();

Returns:An instance of transform_iterator with m_f and m_iterator default constructed.

transform_iterator(Iterator const& x, UnaryFunction f);

Returns:An instance of transform_iterator with m_f initialized to f and m_iterator initialized to x.
template<class OtherIterator, class R2, class V2>
transform_iterator(
      transform_iterator<UnaryFunction, OtherIterator, R2, V2> const& t
    , typename enable_if_convertible<OtherIterator, Iterator>::type* = 0 // exposition
);
Returns:An instance of transform_iterator that is a copy of t.
Requires:OtherIterator is implicitly convertible to Iterator.

UnaryFunction functor() const;

Returns:m_f

Iterator const& base() const;

Returns:m_iterator

reference operator*() const;

Returns:m_f(*m_iterator)

transform_iterator& operator++();

Effects:++m_iterator
Returns:*this

transform_iterator& operator--();

Effects:--m_iterator
Returns:*this
template <class UnaryFunction, class Iterator>
transform_iterator<UnaryFunction, Iterator>
make_transform_iterator(Iterator it, UnaryFunction fun);
Returns:An instance of transform_iterator<UnaryFunction, Iterator> with m_f initialized to f and m_iterator initialized to x.
template <class UnaryFunction, class Iterator>
transform_iterator<UnaryFunction, Iterator>
make_transform_iterator(Iterator it);
Returns:An instance of transform_iterator<UnaryFunction, Iterator> with m_f default constructed and m_iterator initialized to x.

Example

This is a simple example of using the transform_iterators class to generate iterators that multiply (or add to) the value returned by dereferencing the iterator. It would be cooler to use lambda library in this example.

int x[] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 };
const int N = sizeof(x)/sizeof(int);

typedef boost::binder1st< std::multiplies<int> > Function;
typedef boost::transform_iterator<Function, int*> doubling_iterator;

doubling_iterator i(x, boost::bind1st(std::multiplies<int>(), 2)),
  i_end(x + N, boost::bind1st(std::multiplies<int>(), 2));

std::cout << "multiplying the array by 2:" << std::endl;
while (i != i_end)
  std::cout << *i++ << " ";
std::cout << std::endl;

std::cout << "adding 4 to each element in the array:" << std::endl;
std::copy(boost::make_transform_iterator(x, boost::bind1st(std::plus<int>(), 4)),
          boost::make_transform_iterator(x + N, boost::bind1st(std::plus<int>(), 4)),
          std::ostream_iterator<int>(std::cout, " "));
std::cout << std::endl;

The output is:

multiplying the array by 2:
2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 
adding 4 to each element in the array:
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

The source code for this example can be found here.