1

I'm just getting more and more confused by wasting more time on my code. I just want the content of the iterator, not its address. Here is my code:

Peptides tempPep;
tempPep.set_PEPTIDE("AABF");
std::vector<Peptides>::iterator itPep = std::find_if (this->get_PepList().begin(), this->get_PepList().end(),boost::bind(&Peptides::Peptide_comparison, _1,tempPep)); 
if (itPep != this->get_PepList().end()) 
{

   Spectra tempSp;
   tempSp.set_Charge(1127);
   tempSp.set_Snum(1);
   std::cout << "without iterator "<< this->get_PepList()[0].get_New_S_num() << std::endl; 
   // output -> 0
   std::cout << "with iterator" << itPep->get_New_S_num() <<std::endl;
   //output -> 1129859637
}
2
  • 1
    What does get_PepList() return a copy or reference? itPep is probably dangling as the vector returned from the call has expired.
    – Jesse Good
    May 13, 2013 at 20:11
  • In C++ types are paramount. What is Peptides and what is the type of this and how does get_PepList() and get_New_S_num() work. May 13, 2013 at 20:17

2 Answers 2

2

Try changing your code to the following:

std::vector<Peptides> p = this->get_PepList();
std::vector<Peptides>::iterator itPep = std::find_if (p.begin(),
    p.end(),boost::bind(&Peptides::Peptide_comparison, _1,tempPep)); 
2
  • Thank you! could you describe it a bit more please!?
    – khikho
    May 14, 2013 at 18:08
  • 1
    @khikho: The lifetime of the vector returned from this->get_PepList() expires at the end of the line to the call to std::find_if since you call it like this->get_PepList().begin(). This means itPep was holding an iterator into a vector that no longer existed. To ensure the vector remains valid, I changed the code to copy the vector returned from get_PepList() into a variable, i.e. std::vector<Peptides> p = this->get_PepList();. This ensures the vector is still around when you access one of its elements with the itPep iterator.
    – Jesse Good
    May 14, 2013 at 20:40
1

If you want the content, point to it: *itPep

An iterator overloads the * operator and returns the data. (thanks for the correction, I did not know that!)

2
  • itPep is not the address directly. An iterator overloads the * operator and returns the data from there.
    – user123
    May 13, 2013 at 20:08
  • Also, you can surround a snippet of text with `` to get it to display like code. ;p (I'll edit this for you)
    – user123
    May 13, 2013 at 20:10

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