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Is it always safe to directly manipulate reference/pointer to an element in an STL container?

For example, suppose we have

inline void swap(int &a, int &b){int temp=a;a=b;b=temp;}

and

vector<int> array;

which contains {1,2,3,4,5}

Is it a good practice to use the following call?

swap(array[1],array[3]);

3 Answers 3

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Yes, that would work fine.

It would be even better practice to use std::swap rather than your own function.

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  • Worth noting that this isn't the case for all containers. The OP seems to indicate that his use of std::vector specifically is merely an example. Nov 3, 2012 at 14:57
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For sequence containers that's fine. Associative containers, on the other hand, have their own notion of where an element with a particular value belongs, so don't mess with the value of their elements.

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There would be no point in std::vector::operator[] returning a reference if you couldn't actually do anything with it. Your code is perfectly fine.

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