...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
Boost.Range filtered range adaptor is adapted to Boost.Geometry
Boost.Range filtered range adaptor filters a range.
The Boost.Range filtered range adaptor takes over the model of the original geometry, which might be:
#include <boost/geometry/geometries/adapted/boost_range/filtered.hpp>
The standard header boost/geometry.hpp
does not include this header.
Shows how to use a Boost.Geometry linestring, filtered by Boost.Range adaptor
#include <iostream> #include <boost/geometry.hpp> #include <boost/geometry/geometries/linestring.hpp> #include <boost/geometry/geometries/point_xy.hpp> #include <boost/geometry/geometries/adapted/boost_range/filtered.hpp> struct not_two { template <typename P> bool operator()(P const& p) const { return boost::geometry::get<1>(p) != 2; } }; int main() { typedef boost::geometry::model::d2::point_xy<int> xy; boost::geometry::model::linestring<xy> line; line.push_back(xy(0, 0)); line.push_back(xy(1, 1)); line.push_back(xy(2, 2)); line.push_back(xy(3, 1)); line.push_back(xy(4, 0)); line.push_back(xy(5, 1)); line.push_back(xy(6, 2)); line.push_back(xy(7, 1)); line.push_back(xy(8, 0)); using boost::adaptors::filtered; std::cout << boost::geometry::length(line) << std::endl << boost::geometry::length(line | filtered(not_two())) << std::endl << boost::geometry::dsv(line | filtered(not_two())) << std::endl; return 0; }
Output:
11.3137 9.65685 ((0, 0), (1, 1), (3, 1), (4, 0), (5, 1), (7, 1), (8, 0))