
- •Thinking in C++ 2nd edition Volume 2: Standard Libraries & Advanced Topics
- •Preface
- •What’s new in the second edition
- •What’s in Volume 2 of this book
- •How to get Volume 2
- •Prerequisites
- •Learning C++
- •Goals
- •Chapters
- •Exercises
- •Exercise solutions
- •Source code
- •Language standards
- •Language support
- •The book’s CD ROM
- •Seminars, CD Roms & consulting
- •Errors
- •Acknowledgements
- •Library overview
- •1: Strings
- •What’s in a string
- •Creating and initializing C++ strings
- •Initialization limitations
- •Operating on strings
- •Appending, inserting and concatenating strings
- •Replacing string characters
- •Concatenation using non-member overloaded operators
- •Searching in strings
- •Finding in reverse
- •Finding first/last of a set
- •Removing characters from strings
- •Stripping HTML tags
- •Comparing strings
- •Using iterators
- •Iterating in reverse
- •Strings and character traits
- •A string application
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •2: Iostreams
- •Why iostreams?
- •True wrapping
- •Iostreams to the rescue
- •Sneak preview of operator overloading
- •Inserters and extractors
- •Manipulators
- •Common usage
- •Line-oriented input
- •Overloaded versions of get( )
- •Reading raw bytes
- •Error handling
- •File iostreams
- •Open modes
- •Iostream buffering
- •Seeking in iostreams
- •Creating read/write files
- •User-allocated storage
- •Output strstreams
- •Automatic storage allocation
- •Proving movement
- •A better way
- •Output stream formatting
- •Internal formatting data
- •Format fields
- •Width, fill and precision
- •An exhaustive example
- •Formatting manipulators
- •Manipulators with arguments
- •Creating manipulators
- •Effectors
- •Iostream examples
- •Code generation
- •Maintaining class library source
- •Detecting compiler errors
- •A simple datalogger
- •Generating test data
- •Verifying & viewing the data
- •Counting editor
- •Breaking up big files
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •3: Templates in depth
- •Nontype template arguments
- •Typedefing a typename
- •Using typename instead of class
- •Function templates
- •A string conversion system
- •A memory allocation system
- •Type induction in function templates
- •Taking the address of a generated function template
- •Local classes in templates
- •Applying a function to an STL sequence
- •Template-templates
- •Member function templates
- •Why virtual member template functions are disallowed
- •Nested template classes
- •Template specializations
- •A practical example
- •Pointer specialization
- •Partial ordering of function templates
- •Design & efficiency
- •Preventing template bloat
- •Explicit instantiation
- •Explicit specification of template functions
- •Controlling template instantiation
- •Template programming idioms
- •Summary
- •Containers and iterators
- •STL reference documentation
- •The Standard Template Library
- •The basic concepts
- •Containers of strings
- •Inheriting from STL containers
- •A plethora of iterators
- •Iterators in reversible containers
- •Iterator categories
- •Input: read-only, one pass
- •Output: write-only, one pass
- •Forward: multiple read/write
- •Bidirectional: operator--
- •Random-access: like a pointer
- •Is this really important?
- •Predefined iterators
- •IO stream iterators
- •Manipulating raw storage
- •Basic sequences: vector, list & deque
- •Basic sequence operations
- •vector
- •Cost of overflowing allocated storage
- •Inserting and erasing elements
- •deque
- •Converting between sequences
- •Cost of overflowing allocated storage
- •Checked random-access
- •list
- •Special list operations
- •list vs. set
- •Swapping all basic sequences
- •Robustness of lists
- •Performance comparison
- •A completely reusable tokenizer
- •stack
- •queue
- •Priority queues
- •Holding bits
- •bitset<n>
- •vector<bool>
- •Associative containers
- •Generators and fillers for associative containers
- •The magic of maps
- •A command-line argument tool
- •Multimaps and duplicate keys
- •Multisets
- •Combining STL containers
- •Creating your own containers
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •5: STL Algorithms
- •Function objects
- •Classification of function objects
- •Automatic creation of function objects
- •Binders
- •Function pointer adapters
- •SGI extensions
- •A catalog of STL algorithms
- •Support tools for example creation
- •Filling & generating
- •Example
- •Counting
- •Example
- •Manipulating sequences
- •Example
- •Searching & replacing
- •Example
- •Comparing ranges
- •Example
- •Removing elements
- •Example
- •Sorting and operations on sorted ranges
- •Sorting
- •Example
- •Locating elements in sorted ranges
- •Example
- •Merging sorted ranges
- •Example
- •Set operations on sorted ranges
- •Example
- •Heap operations
- •Applying an operation to each element in a range
- •Examples
- •Numeric algorithms
- •Example
- •General utilities
- •Creating your own STL-style algorithms
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •Perspective
- •Duplicate subobjects
- •Ambiguous upcasting
- •virtual base classes
- •The "most derived" class and virtual base initialization
- •"Tying off" virtual bases with a default constructor
- •Overhead
- •Upcasting
- •Persistence
- •MI-based persistence
- •Improved persistence
- •Avoiding MI
- •Mixin types
- •Repairing an interface
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •7: Exception handling
- •Error handling in C
- •Throwing an exception
- •Catching an exception
- •The try block
- •Exception handlers
- •Termination vs. resumption
- •The exception specification
- •Better exception specifications?
- •Catching any exception
- •Rethrowing an exception
- •Uncaught exceptions
- •Function-level try blocks
- •Cleaning up
- •Constructors
- •Making everything an object
- •Exception matching
- •Standard exceptions
- •Programming with exceptions
- •When to avoid exceptions
- •Not for asynchronous events
- •Not for ordinary error conditions
- •Not for flow-of-control
- •You’re not forced to use exceptions
- •New exceptions, old code
- •Typical uses of exceptions
- •Always use exception specifications
- •Start with standard exceptions
- •Nest your own exceptions
- •Use exception hierarchies
- •Multiple inheritance
- •Catch by reference, not by value
- •Throw exceptions in constructors
- •Don’t cause exceptions in destructors
- •Avoid naked pointers
- •Overhead
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •8: Run-time type identification
- •The “Shape” example
- •What is RTTI?
- •Two syntaxes for RTTI
- •Syntax specifics
- •Producing the proper type name
- •Nonpolymorphic types
- •Casting to intermediate levels
- •void pointers
- •Using RTTI with templates
- •References
- •Exceptions
- •Multiple inheritance
- •Sensible uses for RTTI
- •Revisiting the trash recycler
- •Mechanism & overhead of RTTI
- •Creating your own RTTI
- •Explicit cast syntax
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •9: Building stable systems
- •Shared objects & reference counting
- •Reference-counted class hierarchies
- •Finding memory leaks
- •An extended canonical form
- •Exercises
- •10: Design patterns
- •The pattern concept
- •The singleton
- •Variations on singleton
- •Classifying patterns
- •Features, idioms, patterns
- •Basic complexity hiding
- •Factories: encapsulating object creation
- •Polymorphic factories
- •Abstract factories
- •Virtual constructors
- •Destructor operation
- •Callbacks
- •Observer
- •The “interface” idiom
- •The “inner class” idiom
- •The observer example
- •Multiple dispatching
- •Visitor, a type of multiple dispatching
- •Efficiency
- •Flyweight
- •The composite
- •Evolving a design: the trash recycler
- •Improving the design
- •“Make more objects”
- •A pattern for prototyping creation
- •Trash subclasses
- •Parsing Trash from an external file
- •Recycling with prototyping
- •Abstracting usage
- •Applying double dispatching
- •Implementing the double dispatch
- •Applying the visitor pattern
- •More coupling?
- •RTTI considered harmful?
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •11: Tools & topics
- •The code extractor
- •Debugging
- •Trace macros
- •Trace file
- •Abstract base class for debugging
- •Tracking new/delete & malloc/free
- •CGI programming in C++
- •Encoding data for CGI
- •The CGI parser
- •Testing the CGI parser
- •Using POST
- •Handling mailing lists
- •Maintaining your list
- •Mailing to your list
- •A general information-extraction CGI program
- •Parsing the data files
- •Summary
- •Exercises
- •General C++
- •My own list of books
- •Depth & dark corners
- •Design Patterns
- •Index

for(int i3 = 0; i3 < count; i3++) for(int j = 0; j < sz; j++)
di[j];
cout << "deque[]" << clock() - ticks << endl; ticks = clock();
for(int i4 = 0; i4 < count; i4++) for(int j = 0; j < sz; j++)
di.at(j);
cout << "deque::at()" << clock()-ticks <<endl; // Demonstrate at() when you go out of bounds: di.at(vi.size() + 1);
} ///:~
As you’ll learn in the exception-handling chapter, different systems may handle the uncaught exception in different ways, but you’ll know one way or another that something went wrong with the program when using at( ), whereas it’s possible to go blundering ahead using operator[ ].
list
A list is implemented as a doubly-linked list and is thus designed for rapid insertion and removal of elements in the middle of the sequence (whereas for vector and deque this is a much more costly operation). A list is so slow when randomly accessing elements that it does not have an operator[ ]. It’s best used when you’re traversing a sequence, in order, from beginning to end (or end to beginning) rather than choosing elements randomly from the middle. Even then the traversal is significantly slower than either a vector or a deque, but if you aren’t doing a lot of traversals that won’t be your bottleneck.
Another thing to be aware of with a list is the memory overhead of each link, which requires a forward and backward pointer on top of the storage for the actual object. Thus a list is a better choice when you have larger objects that you’ll be inserting and removing from the middle of the list. It’s better not to use a list if you think you might be traversing it a lot, looking for objects, since the amount of time it takes to get from the beginning of the list – which is the only place you can start unless you’ve already got an iterator to somewhere you know is closer to your destination – to the object of interest is proportional to the number of objects between the beginning and that object.
The objects in a list never move after they are created; “moving” a list element means changing the links, but never copying or assigning the actual objects. This means that a held iterator never moves when you add new things to a list as it was demonstrated to do in vector. Here’s an example using the Noisy class:
//: C04:ListStability.cpp
// Things don't move around in lists #include "Noisy.h"
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#include <list> #include <iostream> #include <algorithm> using namespace std;
int main() { list<Noisy> l;
ostream_iterator<Noisy> out(cout, " "); generate_n(back_inserter(l), 25, NoisyGen()); cout << "\n Printing the list:" << endl; copy(l.begin(), l.end(), out);
cout << "\n Reversing the list:" << endl; l.reverse();
copy(l.begin(), l.end(), out);
cout << "\n Sorting the list:" << endl; l.sort();
copy(l.begin(), l.end(), out);
cout << "\n Swapping two elements:" << endl; list<Noisy>::iterator it1, it2;
it1 = it2 = l.begin(); it2++;
swap(*it1, *it2); cout << endl;
copy(l.begin(), l.end(), out);
cout << "\n Using generic reverse(): " << endl; reverse(l.begin(), l.end());
cout << endl;
copy(l.begin(), l.end(), out); cout << "\n Cleanup" << endl;
} ///:~
Operations as seemingly radical as reversing and sorting the list require no copying of objects, because instead of moving the objects, the links are simply changed. However, notice that sort( ) and reverse( ) are member functions of list, so they have special knowledge of the internals of list and can perform the pointer movement instead of copying. On the other hand, the swap( ) function is a generic algorithm, and doesn’t know about list in particular and so it uses the copying approach for swapping two elements. There are also generic algorithms for sort( ) and reverse( ), but if you try to use these you’ll discover that the generic reverse( ) performs lots of copying and destruction (so you should never use it with a list) and the generic sort( ) simply doesn’t work because it requires random-access iterators that list doesn’t provide (a definite benefit, since this would certainly be an expensive way to sort compared to list’s own sort( )). The generic sort( ) and reverse( ) should only be used with arrays, vectors and deques.
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