void splice( const_iterator pos, list& other ); | (1) | |
void splice( const_iterator pos, list&& other ); | (2) | (since C++11) |
void splice( const_iterator pos, list& other, const_iterator it ); | (3) | |
void splice( const_iterator pos, list&& other, const_iterator it ); | (4) | (since C++11) |
void splice( const_iterator pos, list& other, const_iterator first, const_iterator last); | (5) | |
void splice( const_iterator pos, list&& other, const_iterator first, const_iterator last ); | (6) | (since C++11) |
Transfers elements from one list to another.
No elements are copied or moved, only the internal pointers of the list nodes are re-pointed. The behavior is undefined if get_allocator() != other.get_allocator()
. No iterators or references become invalidated, the iterators to moved elements remain valid, but now refer into *this
, not into other
.
other
into *this
. The elements are inserted before the element pointed to by pos
. The container other
becomes empty after the operation. The behavior is undefined if other
refers to the same object as *this
.it
from other
into *this
. The element is inserted before the element pointed to by pos
.[
first
,
last
)
from other
into *this
. The elements are inserted before the element pointed to by pos
. The behavior is undefined if pos
is an iterator in the range [
first
,
last
)
.pos | - | element before which the content will be inserted |
other | - | another container to transfer the content from |
it | - | the element to transfer from other to *this |
first, last | - | the range of elements to transfer from other to *this |
(none).
Throws nothing.
1-4) Constant.
5,6) Constant if other
refers to the same object as *this
, otherwise linear in std::distance(first, last)
.
#include <iostream> #include <list> std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& ostr, const std::list<int>& list) { for (auto& i : list) ostr << ' ' << i; return ostr; } int main () { std::list<int> list1{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}; std::list<int> list2{10, 20, 30, 40, 50}; auto it = list1.begin(); std::advance(it, 2); list1.splice(it, list2); std::cout << "list1:" << list1 << '\n'; std::cout << "list2:" << list2 << '\n'; list2.splice(list2.begin(), list1, it, list1.end()); std::cout << "list1:" << list1 << '\n'; std::cout << "list2:" << list2 << '\n'; }
Output:
list1: 1 2 10 20 30 40 50 3 4 5 list2: list1: 1 2 10 20 30 40 50 list2: 3 4 5
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 250 | C++98 | references and iterators to the moved element(s) were all invalidated | they refer or point to the same element(s) in *this |
merges two sorted lists (public member function) |
|
removes elements satisfying specific criteria (public member function) |
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