std::partial_sum
Defined in header <numeric>
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||
template< class InputIt, class OutputIt > OutputIt partial_sum( InputIt first, InputIt last, |
(1) | (constexpr since C++20) |
template< class InputIt, class OutputIt, class BinaryOp > OutputIt partial_sum( InputIt first, InputIt last, |
(2) | (constexpr since C++20) |
[
first,
last)
is empty, does nothing.- Creates an accumulator acc, whose type is the value type of
InputIt
, and initializes it with *first. - Assigns acc to *d_first.
- For each integer i in
[
1,
std::distance(first, last))
, performs the following operations in order:
Given binary_op as the actual binary operation:
- If any of the following conditions is satisfied, the program is ill-formed:
- The value type of
InputIt
is not constructible from *first. - acc is not writable to d_first.
- The result of binary_op(acc, *iter)(until C++20)binary_op(std::move(acc), *iter)(since C++20) is not implicitly convertible to the value type of
InputIt
.
- The value type of
- Given d_last as the iterator to be returned, if any of the following conditions is satisfied, the behavior is undefined:
- binary_op modifies any element of
[
first,
last)
or[
d_first,
d_last)
. - binary_op invalidates any iterator or subrange in
[
first,
last]
or[
d_first,
d_last]
.
- binary_op modifies any element of
- ↑ The actual value to be assigned is the result of the assignment in the previous step. We assume the assignment result is acc here.
Contents |
Parameters
first, last | - | the range of elements to sum |
d_first | - | the beginning of the destination range; may be equal to first |
op | - | binary operation function object that will be applied. The signature of the function should be equivalent to the following: Ret fun(const Type1 &a, const Type2 &b); The signature does not need to have const &. |
Type requirements | ||
-InputIt must meet the requirements of LegacyInputIterator.
| ||
-OutputIt must meet the requirements of LegacyOutputIterator.
|
Return value
Iterator to the element past the last element written, or d_first if [
first,
last)
is empty.
Complexity
Given N as std::distance(first, last):
Possible implementation
partial_sum (1) |
---|
template<class InputIt, class OutputIt> constexpr // since C++20 OutputIt partial_sum(InputIt first, InputIt last, OutputIt d_first) { if (first == last) return d_first; typename std::iterator_traits<InputIt>::value_type sum = *first; *d_first = sum; while (++first != last) { sum = std::move(sum) + *first; // std::move since C++20 *++d_first = sum; } return ++d_first; // or, since C++14: // return std::partial_sum(first, last, d_first, std::plus<>()); } |
partial_sum (2) |
template<class InputIt, class OutputIt, class BinaryOp> constexpr // since C++20 OutputIt partial_sum(InputIt first, InputIt last, OutputIt d_first, BinaryOp op) { if (first == last) return d_first; typename std::iterator_traits<InputIt>::value_type acc = *first; *d_first = acc; while (++first != last) { acc = op(std::move(acc), *first); // std::move since C++20 *++d_first = acc; } return ++d_first; } |
Notes
acc was introduced because of the resolution of LWG issue 539. The reason of using acc rather than directly summing up the results (i.e. *(d_first + 2) = (*first + *(first + 1)) + *(first + 2);) is because the semantic of the latter is confusing if the following types mismatch:
- the value type of
InputIt
- the writable type(s) of
OutputIt
- the types of the parameters of operator+ or op
- the return type of operator+ or op
acc serves as the intermediate object to store and provide the values for each step of the computation:
- its type is the value type of
InputIt
- it is written to d_first
- its value is passed to operator+ or op
- it stores the return value of operator+ or op
enum not_int { x = 1, y = 2 }; char i_array[4] = {100, 100, 100, 100}; not_int e_array[4] = {x, x, y, y}; int o_array[4]; // OK: uses operator+(char, char) and assigns char values to int array std::partial_sum(i_array, i_array + 4, o_array); // Error: cannot assign not_int values to int array std::partial_sum(e_array, e_array + 4, o_array); // OK: performs conversions when needed // 1. creates “acc” of type char (the value type) // 2. the char arguments are used for long multiplication (char -> long) // 3. the long product is assigned to “acc” (long -> char) // 4. “acc” is assigned to an element of “o_array” (char -> int) // 5. go back to step 2 to process the remaining elements in the input range std::partial_sum(i_array, i_array + 4, o_array, std::multiplies<long>{});
Example
#include <functional> #include <iostream> #include <iterator> #include <numeric> #include <vector> int main() { std::vector<int> v(10, 2); // v = {2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2} std::cout << "The first " << v.size() << " even numbers are: "; // write the result to the cout stream std::partial_sum(v.cbegin(), v.cend(), std::ostream_iterator<int>(std::cout, " ")); std::cout << '\n'; // write the result back to the vector v std::partial_sum(v.cbegin(), v.cend(), v.begin(), std::multiplies<int>()); std::cout << "The first " << v.size() << " powers of 2 are: "; for (int n : v) std::cout << n << ' '; std::cout << '\n'; }
Output:
The first 10 even numbers are: 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 The first 10 powers of 2 are: 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 242 | C++98 | op could not have side effects | it cannot modify the ranges involved |
LWG 539 | C++98 | the type requirements needed for the result evaluations and assignments to be valid were missing |
added |
See also
computes the differences between adjacent elements in a range (function template) | |
sums up or folds a range of elements (function template) | |
(C++17) |
similar to std::partial_sum, includes the ith input element in the ith sum (function template) |
(C++17) |
similar to std::partial_sum, excludes the ith input element from the ith sum (function template) |