5

Good afternoon, I have a C++ class Range which implements a operator < for use by std::multiset<Range> ranges_type.

Since the multiset constructor don't specify a a custom comparator functor, it uses the std::less operator <.

However, I need to use a second comparator functor for std::multiset ranges_type. Specifically, I would specify a second comparator: std::multiset<Range, PointerCompare> where struct PointerCompare looks this :

struct PointerCompare{
   bool operator()(const Range& a, const Range& b) const {
         return (a.mPtr == b.mPtr)
   }

Is it possible to use std:multiset with multiple comparator functions or is there a workaround? Thank you

The class Range looks this:

class Range { 
     public:   
         explicit Range(int item){ 
            mLow = item;
            mHigh = item;
            mPtr  = 0;
         }
         Range(int low, int high, char* ptr = 0,char* mapptr = 0){ 
            mLow = low;
            mHigh = high;
            mPtr  = ptr;

         }
         Range(void){  
            mLow = 0;
            mHigh = 0;
            mPtr  = 0;

         }

         Range(const Range& r):
            mLow(r.mLow),
            mHigh(r.mHigh),
            mPtr(r.mPtr)
         {

         }


         bool operator==(const Range& rhs) const{
             return (mLow <= rhs.mLow && mHigh >= rhs.mHigh);
         }
         bool operator<(const Range& rhs) const{               
            return mHigh < rhs.mHigh;      
         } 
         int low() const { return mLow; }   
         int high() const { return mHigh; }
         char* getPtr() const { return mPtr; }
     private:   
         int mLow;   
         int mHigh; 
         char* mPtr;
}; // class Range 
8
  • I don't understand why you would want multiple comparators. How would that make sense? What is wrong with std::multiset<Range, PointerCompare>? Apr 29, 2011 at 16:28
  • Also, please be careful with your formatting. You should format code snippets with the "{}" button. I already did this for you, but you've edited your question and broken it all again! Apr 29, 2011 at 16:32
  • Oli Charlesworth: I need to use two comparators because I use: std::multiset<Range>::const_iterator iter = ranges_type.lower_bound(Range(n)); if(iter == ranges_type.end() || iter->low() > n){ found = false;} else{ curr = *iter; found = true; }
    – Frank
    Apr 29, 2011 at 16:33
  • 1
    @Frank: I'm not sure I understand. Are you saying that you want to be able to iterate through your multiset in different sorted orders? This is not possible (so you'd need to find a different data structure). If that's not what you want, then what you are doing is correct; i.e. providing a custom comparator as a template argument. Apr 29, 2011 at 16:37
  • Oli Charlesworth: I need to use two comparators because I use: std::multiset<Range>::const_iterator iter = ranges_type.lower_bound(Range(n)); if(iter == ranges_type.end() || iter->low() > n){ found = false;} else{ curr = *iter; found = true; }. I need to use a 2nd comparator like this std::multiset<Range>::iterator iter = find(range_types.begin(), ranges_type.end(),curr); range__type.erase(iter) . Thank you . I apologize for breaking your edit.
    – Frank
    Apr 29, 2011 at 16:43

2 Answers 2

4

Sounds almost like you'd be better if you used something from Boost::MultiIndex rather than trying to force several different comparator functions onto a std::multiset. They have a bunch of different container types (see here.) In particular I'd look at the ordered_indices versions.

7
  • @wheaties, Thank you for your answer. We can't use Boost because we don't haven't paid for the latest Solaris UNIX, IBM AIX or HPUX licenses. In order to use a Boost distribution, we need to have a the latest Solaris UNIX, IAM AIX and HPUX licenses. Is there a link to a custom C++ class which implements a minimal version of ordered_indices? Thank you.
    – Frank
    Apr 29, 2011 at 17:10
  • 2
    @Frank: Since when does one need to pay for something in order to use Boost? Apr 29, 2011 at 17:28
  • @Oli Charlewsworth, It is correct that we not need to pay any something in Boost. However, I tried using Boost::regex in an project last year and the Solaris, IBM AIX and HPUX compilers generated numerous compiler errors with the Boost Code, We were told that the Boost compiler errors would go away if purchased the latest UNIX licenses. Thank you.
    – Frank
    Apr 29, 2011 at 18:43
  • @Frank who told you that? The vendor? Some libraries won't work with older compilers, some will. You have to read the documentation as most libraries are rather explicit with what will/won't work. That said, I believe this is one of those libraries that should work.
    – wheaties
    Apr 29, 2011 at 19:02
  • @wheaties, The last time we purchased UNIX Licenses for Solaris, IBM AIX and HP UX was in 2005/2006. Boost has changed substantially since then. That is why we got all the UNIX compiler errors when we tried building the boost regex library. Thank you
    – Frank
    Apr 29, 2011 at 20:20
1

I may have found a workaround for multiple comparator functions: Here it is:

Range targetRange = Range(PreviousNCopy,PreviousN, TmpPrevMapPtr);

bool Found = std::binary_search( ranges_type.begin(), ranges_type.end(), targetRange, MyComparator() );

where: MyComparator is a struct : struct MyComparator {
bool operator () ( const Range& d1, const Range& d2 ) const {
return d1.getPtr() < d2.getPtr();
} };

std::binary_search take o(log n) time but the std::multiset ranges_type must always remain sorted. Thank you.

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