std::unordered_multimap<Key,T,Hash,KeyEqual,Allocator>::merge
From cppreference.com
< cpp | container | unordered multimap
template< class H2, class P2 > void merge( std::unordered_map<Key, T, H2, P2, Allocator>& source ); |
(1) | (since C++17) |
template< class H2, class P2 > void merge( std::unordered_map<Key, T, H2, P2, Allocator>&& source ); |
(2) | (since C++17) |
template< class H2, class P2 > void merge( std::unordered_multimap<Key, T, H2, P2, Allocator>& source ); |
(3) | (since C++17) |
template< class H2, class P2 > void merge( std::unordered_multimap<Key, T, H2, P2, Allocator>&& source ); |
(4) | (since C++17) |
Attempts to extract ("splice") each element in source and insert it into *this using the hash function and key equality predicate of *this.
No elements are copied or moved, only the internal pointers of the container nodes are repointed. All pointers and references to the transferred elements remain valid, but now refer into *this, not into source. Iterators referring to the transferred elements and all iterators referring to *this are invalidated.
The behavior is undefined if get_allocator() != source.get_allocator().
Contents |
[edit] Parameters
source | - | compatible container to transfer the nodes from |
[edit] Return value
(none)
[edit] Complexity
Average case O(N), worst case O(N * size() + N), where N is source.size().
[edit] Example
Run this code
#include <iostream> #include <string> #include <unordered_map> #include <utility> // print out a std::pair template<class Os, class U, class V> Os& operator<<(Os& os, const std::pair<U,V>& p) { return os << '{' << p.first << ", " << p.second << '}'; } // print out an associative container template<class Os, class K, class V> Os& operator<<(Os& os, const std::unordered_multimap<K, V>& v) { os << '[' << v.size() << "] {"; bool o{}; for (const auto& e : v) os << (o ? ", " : (o = 1, "")) << e; return os << "}\n"; } int main() { std::unordered_multimap<std::string, int> p{{"C", 3}, {"B", 2}, {"A", 1}, {"A", 0}}, q{{"E", 6}, {"E", 7}, {"D", 5}, {"A", 4}}; std::cout << "p: " << p << "q: " << q; p.merge(q); std::cout << "p.merge(q);\n" << "p: " << p << "q: " << q; }
Possible output:
p: [4] {{A, 1}, {A, 0}, {B, 2}, {C, 3}} q: [4] {{A, 4}, {D, 5}, {E, 6}, {E, 7}} p.merge(q); p: [8] {{E, 6}, {E, 7}, {C, 3}, {A, 1}, {A, 0}, {A, 4}, {D, 5}, {B, 2}} q: [0] {}
[edit] See also
(C++17) |
extracts nodes from the container (public member function) |
inserts elements or nodes(since C++17) (public member function) |