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I have these three related class members:

vector<Frame*>* poolFrames;
vector<Frame*>*::iterator frameIterator;
vector<vector<Frame*>::iterator>* poolFrameIterators;

When I compile, gcc tells me

error: invalid use of ‘::’ error: expected ‘;’ before ‘frameIterator’

In reference to the middle line, where I define frameIterators. It goes away when I loose the pointer to the vector and make it a vector::iterator. However, I want them to be pointers. Is there a special way to define the data type that I want, or do I need to use vector::iterator and then dereference?

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  • 1
    It's not valid because it doesn't make any sense (according to the C++ ISO standard). I can't even figure out what it is you want... Keep in mind that storing vector-iterators is not the best idea because vector-iterators will get invalid pretty easily.
    – sellibitze
    Jul 26, 2010 at 20:40
  • I know what I am doing, know that it could be instable, and have precautions to avoid issues it. I want to iterate over a vector of Frame*, however the vector needs to be a pointer. Jul 26, 2010 at 20:46
  • There is your confusion: You don't seem to distinguish between pointer and pointee. Just loose the 2nd asterik in the 2nd line and you're fine.
    – sellibitze
    Jul 26, 2010 at 20:53

5 Answers 5

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I see what you were trying to do. You've defined poolFrames as a pointer to a vector. Then you want to define frameIterator as an iterator for poolFrames. Since poolFrames is a pointer, you think you need a special pointer-to-vector iterator, but you're mistaken.

A vector iterator is a vector iterator is a vector iterator, no matter how you managed to refer to the vector in the first place. You need frameIterator to be a simple iterator:

vector<Data*>::iterator frameIterator;

To assign a value to that variable, you'll need to dereference your vector pointer, like this:

frameIterator = poolFrames->begin();

If poolFrames were a vector instead of a pointer to a vector, you'd use the dot operator instead: poolFrames.begin().

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  • Thank you, you actually understood what I was trying to do. That answers it all for me. Jul 26, 2010 at 21:00
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If you want a pointer to an iterator do it this way round:

vector<Frame*>::iterator*

The asterisk always follows the type that is pointed to. The way you have it is pretty much like writing vector*<Frame*>::iterator, it just has the asterisk in the wrong place.

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  • I don't think that's true. My first declaration, 'vector<Frame*>*' compiles fine while 'vector*<Frame*>' does not. Jul 26, 2010 at 20:44
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    It is true. In your first declaration the type pointed to is vector<Frame*>, and following with an asterisk gives vector<Frame*>*. In the second declaration, I think you want the type pointed to to be vector<Frame*>::iterator, in which case following with an asterisk gives vector<Frame*>::iterator*. If that's not enough I think you should clarify the question. Jul 26, 2010 at 20:50
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What data type do you actually want?

vector<Frame*>* poolFrames; is a pointer to a vector of Frame pointers. Do you actually just want a vector of Frame pointers?

In that context, the error makes sense. A vector<Frame*> has iterators. A pointer to such a thing does not have iterators.

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  • so I need to dereference every time I want to get a pointer out of an iterator, correct? Jul 26, 2010 at 20:40
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The type of vector* is a pointer, which has no iterators.

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vector<Frame*>* 

Is a type expression but it does not have a member iterator It's kind of like using . on a pointer.

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