2

Here is some code which checks if 2 units are killed after they attack each other, I pass in the position in the vector however when I remove one the vector is changed in size and therefore the 2nd unit is out of range. How can I remove both simultaneously?

if ((MyHealth <= 0) && (EnemyHealth <= 0))
{
    PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + MyUnit, PlayerUnits.begin() + EnemyUnit);
}
else if (MyHealth <= 0)
{
    PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + MyUnit);
}
else if (EnemyHealth <= 0)
{
    PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + EnemyUnit);
}
3
  • 8
    Erase the bigger index first
    – user2249683
    Apr 22, 2015 at 18:26
  • @DieterLücking, that is the answer. You should make it so :) Apr 22, 2015 at 18:27
  • If you don't have to preserve the order of the elements in vector, it should be faster to swap element(s) you want to remove with last element(s) of the vector, and trim the size of the vector.
    – anxieux
    Apr 22, 2015 at 18:32

3 Answers 3

4

Instead of coding the removal logic yourself, it would be better managed using std::remove_if from algorithm. Depending on whether you have compiler supporting C++11 or not, the Predicate can either be a lambda or a named function.

0

First point: In your first block, the call erase(x, y) does something different than you expect - it erases a whole range of elements starting at index x until just before index y. For example, if we have the vector [a,b,c,d,e,f,g], then erase(2,5) will erase indexes 2,3,4, so we end up with [a,b,f,g]. I'm guessing you want to erase just two elements, not an entire range.

Second point: As Dieter Lücking pointed out, simply erase the higher index element first, like this:

if (MyUnit > EnemyUnit) {
    PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + MyUnit);
    PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + EnemyUnit);
} else {
    PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + EnemyUnit);
    PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + MyUnit);
}
1
  • I did not vote on your answer at all. Please do not make this kind of accusation at me.
    – Nayuki
    Apr 23, 2015 at 4:03
0

I think a better way to handle this would be to add an "isDead" condition to your "unit" class:

void Unit::Update()
{
    //other stuff
    if(this->m_health <= 0) this->m_isDead = true;
}

then in the main loop:

void Game::Update()
{
   size_t size = PlayerUnits.size();

   //iterate backwards, so there is no skipping
   for(int i = size-1; i>= 0; i--)
   {
       PlayerUnits[i]->Update();
       if(PlayerUnits[i]->isDead()) PlayerUnits.erase(PlayerUnits.begin() + i);
   }
}

This is at least how I personally do it.

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