...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
Copyright © 2004 Eric Niebler
Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
Table of Contents
“Make simple things easy.”
-- Larry Wall
BOOST_FOREACH
?
In C++, writing a loop that iterates over a sequence is tedious. We can either
use iterators, which requires a considerable amount of boiler-plate, or we
can use the std::for_each()
algorithm and move our loop body into a predicate, which requires no less boiler-plate
and forces us to move our logic far from where it will be used. In contrast,
some other languages, like Perl, provide a dedicated "foreach" construct
that automates this process. BOOST_FOREACH
is just such
a construct for C++. It iterates over sequences for us, freeing us from having
to deal directly with iterators or write predicates.
BOOST_FOREACH
is designed for ease-of-use and efficiency.
It does no dynamic allocations, makes no virtual function calls or calls through
function pointers, and makes no calls that are not transparent to the compiler's
optimizer. This results in near-optimal code generation; the performance of
BOOST_FOREACH
is usually within a few percent of the equivalent
hand-coded loop. And although BOOST_FOREACH
is a macro,
it is a remarkably well-behaved one. It evaluates its arguments exactly once,
leading to no nasty surprises.
Below is a sample program that uses BOOST_FOREACH
to loop
over the contents of a std::string
.
#include <string> #include <iostream> #include <boost/foreach.hpp> int main() { std::string hello( "Hello, world!" ); BOOST_FOREACH( char ch, hello ) { std::cout << ch; } return 0; }
This program outputs the following:
Hello, world!
BOOST_FOREACH
iterates over sequences. But what qualifies
as a sequence, exactly? Since BOOST_FOREACH
is built on
top of Boost.Range, it automatically
supports those types which Boost.Range
recognizes as sequences. Specifically, BOOST_FOREACH
works
with types that satisfy the Single
Pass Range Concept. For example, we can use BOOST_FOREACH
with:
char
and wchar_t
)
Note | |
---|---|
The support for STL containers is very general; anything that looks like
an STL container counts. If it has nested |
See the section on Extensibility
to find out how to make BOOST_FOREACH
work with other types.
Below are some examples that demonstrate all the different ways we can use
BOOST_FOREACH
.
Iterate over an STL container:
std::list<int> list_int( /*...*/ ); BOOST_FOREACH( int i, list_int ) { // do something with i }
Iterate over an array, with covariance (i.e., the type of the iteration variable is not exactly the same as the element type of the container):
short array_short[] = {1,2,3}; BOOST_FOREACH( int i, array_short ) { // The short was implicitly converted to an int }
Predeclare the loop variable, and use break
,
continue
, and return
in the loop body:
std::deque<int> deque_int( /*...*/ ); int i = 0; BOOST_FOREACH( i, deque_int ) { if( i == 0 ) return; if( i == 1 ) continue; if( i == 2 ) break; }
Iterate over a sequence by reference, and modify the underlying sequence:
short array_short[] = { 1, 2, 3 }; BOOST_FOREACH( short & i, array_short ) { ++i; } // array_short contains {2,3,4} here
Iterate over a vector of vectors with nested BOOST_FOREACH
loops. In this example, notice that braces around the loop body are not necessary:
std::vector<std::vector<int> > matrix_int; BOOST_FOREACH( std::vector<int> & row, matrix_int ) BOOST_FOREACH( int & i, row ) ++i;
Iterate over an expression that returns a sequence by value (i.e. an rvalue):
extern std::vector<float> get_vector_float(); BOOST_FOREACH( float f, get_vector_float() ) { // Note: get_vector_float() will be called exactly once }
Iterate in reverse:
std::list<int> list_int( /*...*/ ); BOOST_REVERSE_FOREACH( int i, list_int ) { // do something with i }
Iterating over rvalues doesn't work on some older compilers. Check the Portability section to see whether your compiler supports this.
BOOST_FOREACH
Prettier
People have complained about the name BOOST_FOREACH
. It's
too long. ALL CAPS
can get tiresome to look at. That may be true, but BOOST_FOREACH
is merely following the Boost
Naming Convention. That doesn't mean you're stuck with it, though.
If you would like to use a different identifier (foreach
,
perhaps), you can simply do:
#define foreach BOOST_FOREACH #define reverse_foreach BOOST_REVERSE_FOREACH
Only do this if you are sure that the identifier you choose will not cause name conflicts in your code.
Note | |
---|---|
Do not use |
Last revised: February 20, 2012 at 20:49:37 GMT |