Boost C++ Libraries

...one of the most highly regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the world. Herb Sutter and Andrei Alexandrescu, C++ Coding Standards

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Pitfalls

This section describes some common pitfalls with BOOST_FOREACH.

Types With Commas

Since BOOST_FOREACH is a macro, it must have exactly two arguments, with exactly one comma separating them. That's not always convenient, especially when the type of the loop variable is a template. Consider trying to iterate over a std::map:

std::map<int,int> m;

// ERROR! Too many arguments to BOOST_FOREACH macro.
BOOST_FOREACH(std::pair<const int,int> p, m) // ...

One way to fix this is with a typedef.

std::map<int,int> m;
typedef std::pair<const int,int> pair_t;

BOOST_FOREACH(pair_t p, m) // ...

Another way to fix it is to predeclare the loop variable:

std::map<int,int> m;
std::pair<const int,int> p;

BOOST_FOREACH(p, m) // ...

Hoisting and Iterator Invalidation

Under the covers, BOOST_FOREACH uses iterators to traverse the element sequence. Before the loop is executed, the end iterator is cached in a local variable. This is called hoisting, and it is an important optimization. It assumes, however, that the end iterator of the sequence is stable. It usually is, but if we modify the sequence by adding or removing elements while we are iterating over it, we may end up hoisting ourselves on our own petard.

Consider the following code:

std::vector<int> vect(4, 4);
BOOST_FOREACH(int i, vect)
{
    vect.push_back(i + 1);
}

This code will compile, but it has undefined behavior. That is because it is logically equivalent to the following:

std::vector<int> vect(4, 4);
for(std::vector<int>::iterator it1 = vect.begin(), it2 = vect.end();
    it1 != it2; ++it1)
{
    int i = *it1;
    vect.push_back(i + 1); // Oops! This invalidates it1 and it2!
}

The call to vect.push_back() will cause all iterators into vect to become invalid, including it1 and it2. The next iteration through the loop will cause the invalid iterators to be used. That's bad news.

The moral of the story is to think twice before adding and removing elements from the sequence over which you are iterating. If doing so could cause iterators to become invalid, don't do it. Use a regular for loop instead.


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