1

I have a use case wherein numbers are monotonically increasing in an vector of integers

vec[0] = 2
vec[1] = 5
vec[2] = 8
vec[3] = 10
..

If I am passed number 6, I want to return vec[1], since it lies between vec[1] and vec[2], similarly if passes 9 would have to return vec[2]. My experience with STL is limited , so wanted to check can we solve this with STL or you have to iterate over each by storing the previous and when hit a number greater than the passed number you return

3 Answers 3

10

The STL has four reusable binary search algorithms in the <algorithm> header: lower_bound, upper_bound, equal_range, and binary_search.

lower_bound doesn't do exactly what you want: when the desired element is not present in the sequence, it returns an iterator that refers to the element one past the element that you want. However, you should be able to wrap it with code that implements your behavior without much trouble.

2

You can use binary search.

0

There is a binary_search() function in the <algorithm> header. Unfortunately this function only returns a boolean. You could write your own binary search over the sorted vector, that would be faster for large lists than doing the linear search hinted at in your original post. (Apologies if I misread the post).

1
  • This is a great example of why good naming is important. Many people who are looking for a binary search will not find lower_bound, upper_bound, or equal_range unless they already know that those are binary searches too.
    – bk1e
    Jan 30, 2009 at 16:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.