Predicate Version of nth_element
Illustrates how to use the predicate version of the nth_element Standard Template Library (STL) function in Visual C++.
template<class RandomAccessIterator, class Compare>
inline void nth_element(
RandomAccessIterator First,
RandomAccessIterator Nth,
RandomAccessIterator Last,
Compare compare
)
Remarks
Note
The class/parameter names in the prototype do not match the version in the header file. Some have been modified to improve readability.
The nth_element algorithm partitions the sequence [First..Last) on the value referenced by Nth. All the elements less than or equal to the value are placed before value and all elements greater than value are placed after value in the sequence. The predicate version of nth_element uses the compare function for comparisons.
Example
// nth_elementPV.cpp
// compile with: /GX
// Illustrates how to use the predicate version
// of the nth_element function.
//
// Functions:
// nth_element : Partition the elements in a sequence by its nth
// element.
// disable warning C4786: symbol greater than 255 character,
// okay to ignore
#pragma warning(disable: 4786)
#include <iostream>
#include <algorithm>
#include <functional>
#include <vector>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
const int VECTOR_SIZE = 8 ;
// Define a template class vector of int
typedef vector<int > IntVector ;
//Define an iterator for template class vector of strings
typedef IntVector::iterator IntVectorIt ;
IntVector Numbers(VECTOR_SIZE) ;
IntVectorIt start, end, it ;
// Initialize vector Numbers
Numbers[0] = 4 ;
Numbers[1] = 10;
Numbers[2] = 70 ;
Numbers[3] = 30 ;
Numbers[4] = 10;
Numbers[5] = 69 ;
Numbers[6] = 96 ;
Numbers[7] = 100;
start = Numbers.begin() ; // location of first
// element of Numbers
end = Numbers.end() ; // one past the location
// last element of Numbers
cout << "Before calling nth_element:\n" << endl ;
// print content of Numbers
cout << "Numbers { " ;
for(it = start; it != end; it+)
cout << *it << " " ;
cout << " }\n" << endl ;
// partition the elements by the 4th element
nth_element(start, start+4, end, less<int>()) ;
cout << "After calling nth_element:\n" << endl ;
cout << "Numbers { " ;
for(it = start; it != end; it+)
cout << *it << " " ;
cout << " }\n" << endl ;
}
Output
Before calling nth_element:
Numbers { 4 10 70 30 10 69 96 100 }
After calling nth_element:
Numbers { 4 10 10 30 69 70 96 100 }
Requirements
Header: <algorithm>