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Recently, I noticed some people mentioning that std::list::size() has a linear complexity.
According to some sources, this is in fact implementation dependent as the standard doesn't say what the complexity has to be.
The comment in this blog entry says:

Actually, it depends on which STL you are using. Microsoft Visual Studio V6 implements size() as {return (_Size); } whereas gcc (at least in versions 3.3.2 and 4.1.0) do it as { return std::distance(begin(), end()); } The first has constant speed, the second has o(N) speed

  1. So my guess is that for the VC++ crowd size() has constant complexity as Dinkumware probably won't have changed that fact since VC6. Am I right there?
  2. What does it look like currently in gcc? If it is really O(n), why did the developers choose to do so?
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You are correct that the standard does not state what the complexity of list::size() must be - however, it does recommend that it "should have constant complexity" (Note A in Table 65).

Here's an interesting article by Howard Hinnant that explains why some people think list::size() should have O(N) complexity (basically because they believe that O(1) list::size() makes list::splice() have O(N) complexity) and why an O(1) list::size() is be a good idea (in the author's opinion):

I think the main points in the paper are:

  • there are few situations where maintaining an internal count so list::size() can be O(1) causes the splice operation to become linear
  • there are probably many more situations where someone might be unaware of the negative effects that might happen because they call an O(N) size() (such as his one example where list::size() is called while holding a lock).
  • that instead of permitting size() be O(N), in the interest of 'least surprise', the standard should require any container that implements size() to implement it in an O(1) fashion. If a container cannot do this, it should not implement size() at all. In this case, the user of the container will be made aware that size() is unavailable, and if they still want or need to get the number of elements in the container they can still use container::distance( begin(), end()) to get that value - but they will be completely aware that it's an O(N) operation.

I think I tend to agree with most of his reasoning. However, I do not like his proposed addition to the splice() overloads. Having to pass in an n that must be equal to distance( first, last) to get correct behavior seems like a recipe for hard to diagnose bugs.

I'm not sure what should or could be done moving forward, as any change would have a significant impact on existing code. But as it stands, I think that existing code is already impacted - behavior might be rather significantly different from one implementation to another for something that should have been well-defined. Maybe onebyone's comment about having the size 'cached' and marked known/unknown might work well - you get amortized O(1) behavior - the only time you get O(N) behavior is when the list is modified by some splice() operations. The nice thing about this is that it can be done by implementors today without a change to the standard (unless I'm missing something).

As far as I know, C++0x is not changing anything in this area.

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The answer is correct but the reasoning on the size of list is flowed. Your proposal is prone to inconsistent parameters and violate the principle of having the user to give every information only once. – PierreBdR Oct 23 '08 at 9:31
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Should also be possible to keep splice O(1), but mark the size as "unknown". Then size() is still O(N) worst-case, but the worst case occurs at most once per 'unfriendly' splice. So performance of all operations is strictly superior to an always-O(N) size(). Warning: I have not thought this through. – Steve Jessop Oct 23 '08 at 12:09
"strictly superior" - actually that's a lie, since there are some extra checks in splice to figure out what case you're in, and arithmetic with sizes in all mutators. Told you I hadn't thought it through. But complexity is never worse, and sometimes better. – Steve Jessop Oct 23 '08 at 12:12
@PierreBdR - In case it's not clear, I'm not the author of the paper, I pointed to it because I thought it had some interesting points. I have edited the answer to make that more clear (as well as adding some more of my own thoughts and incorporating ideas from these comments). – Michael Burr Oct 23 '08 at 19:39
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The latest C++0x draft requires that size() have constant time complexity (that change to the container requirements was made in N3000). – James McNellis Mar 16 '10 at 19:18
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I've had to look into gcc 3.4's list::size before, so I can say this:

  1. it uses std::distance(head, tail)
  2. std::distance has two implementations: for types that satisfy RandomAccessIterator, it uses "tail-head", and for types that merely satisfy InputIterator, it uses an O(n) algorithm relying on "iterator++", counting until it hits the given tail.
  3. std::list does not satsify RandomAccessIterator, so size is O(n).

As to the "why", I can only say that std::list is appropriate for problems that require sequential access. Storing the size as a class variable would introduce overhead on every insert, delete, etc., and that waste is a big no-no per the intent of the STL. If you really need a constant-time size(), use std::deque.

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I personally don't see the issue with splice being O(N) as the only reason why size is permitted to be O(N). You don't pay for what you don't use is an important C++ motto. In this case, maintaining the list size requires an extra increment/decrement on every insert/erase whether you check the list's size or not. This is a small fixed overhead, but its still important to consider.

Checking the size of a list is rarely needed. Iterating from begin to end without caring the total size is infinitely more common.

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Apparently the C++11 committee didn't agree with you. Pity. – Mark Ransom Dec 26 '11 at 21:14
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I would go to the source. SGI's STL page says that it is permitted to have a linear complexity. I believe that the design guideline they followed was to allow the list implementation to be as general as possible, and thus to allow more flexibility in using lists.

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SGI isn't exactly the "source". It is based on the original (HP?) STL, but the Standard deviated from that. SGI's merely says what their implementation does, not what the Standard says it's supposed to do. – James Curran Oct 23 '08 at 19:28
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