Defined in header <algorithm> | ||
|---|---|---|
| (1) | ||
template< class BidirIt, class OutputIt > OutputIt reverse_copy( BidirIt first, BidirIt last, OutputIt d_first ); | (until C++20) | |
template< class BidirIt, class OutputIt > constexpr OutputIt reverse_copy( BidirIt first, BidirIt last, OutputIt d_first ); | (since C++20) | |
template< class ExecutionPolicy, class BidirIt, class ForwardIt > ForwardIt reverse_copy( ExecutionPolicy&& policy, BidirIt first, BidirIt last, ForwardIt d_first ); | (2) | (since C++17) |
[first, last) to another range beginning at d_first in such a way that the elements in the new range are in reverse order. *(d_first + (last - first) - 1 - i) = *(first + i) once for each non-negative i < (last - first)
[first, last) and [d_first, d_first+(last-first)) respectively) overlap, the behavior is undefined.policy. This overload does not participate in overload resolution unless std::is_execution_policy_v<std::decay_t<ExecutionPolicy>> is true| first, last | - | the range of elements to copy |
| d_first | - | the beginning of the destination range |
| Type requirements | ||
-BidirIt must meet the requirements of LegacyBidirectionalIterator. |
||
-OutputIt must meet the requirements of LegacyOutputIterator. |
||
-ForwardIt must meet the requirements of LegacyForwardIterator. |
||
Output iterator to the element past the last element copied.
The overload with a template parameter named ExecutionPolicy reports errors as follows:
ExecutionPolicy is one of the standard policies, std::terminate is called. For any other ExecutionPolicy, the behavior is implementation-defined. std::bad_alloc is thrown. See also the implementations in libstdc++ and libc++.
template<class BidirIt, class OutputIt>
OutputIt reverse_copy(BidirIt first, BidirIt last, OutputIt d_first)
{
while (first != last) {
*(d_first++) = *(--last);
}
return d_first;
} |
#include <vector>
#include <iostream>
#include <algorithm>
int main()
{
std::vector<int> v({1,2,3});
for (const auto& value : v) {
std::cout << value << " ";
}
std::cout << '\n';
std::vector<int> destination(3);
std::reverse_copy(std::begin(v), std::end(v), std::begin(destination));
for (const auto& value : destination) {
std::cout << value << " ";
}
std::cout << '\n';
}Output:
1 2 3 3 2 1
Linear in the distance between first and last.
| reverses the order of elements in a range (function template) |
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http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/algorithm/reverse_copy