9

I see somewhere it mentions:

for ( itr = files.begin(); itr < files.end(); ++itr )  // WRONG
for ( itr = files.begin(); itr != files.end(); ++itr ) // ok

Why is the first expression wrong? I always used the first expression, and didn't have any problems.

3 Answers 3

21

Ordering comparisons such as <, >, <=, >= will work for random-access iterators, but many other iterators (such as bidirectional iterators on linked lists) only support equality testing (== and !=). By using != you can later replace the container without needing to change as much code, and this is especially important for template code which needs to work with many different container types.

7

There are different types of iterators. Only random-access iterators support the < operator. Other types of iterators (bidirectional, input, output, and forward) do not. But all iterators support the == and != operators. Therefore your code will work with all types of iterators if you use !=.

5

The former only works for iterators that support operator <, which not all iterators do.

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