2

the issue is I want to initialize a multiset iterator to some value, to be able to check later if there was some successful assignment to my iterator or not. Now without this initialization in some cycle of my program I get there some trash and all crashes. In pseudocode I'd think about it like that:

multiset<whateverclassA,whateverclassB>::const_iterator init_me = NULL;
...//if succesfull, something is assigned to init_me iterator
if (init_me != NULL)
//do something

however it is not a usual pointer, so simple NULL doesn't suffice probably. Any help appreciated!

3 Answers 3

4

Use std::multiset::end. This is also the value that will be returned by algorithms like std::multiset::find if the value could not be found:

multiset<whateverclassA,whateverclassB>::const_iterator 
    init_me = your_multiset.end();

/* ... */

if (init_me != your_multiset.end())
    //do something
4
  • but this points out to the one after last element, so actually random value, isn't it? then if I check it in if condition, can be another random value there ..
    – josh130
    Jan 25, 2013 at 10:08
  • 1
    @eReM: You obviously check init_me != ctn.end() instead of init_me != NULL before dereferencing the iterator.
    – Zeta
    Jan 25, 2013 at 10:09
  • ok thanks, I didn't know that there is some steady value in case of using end(), I thought it may change continuously.
    – josh130
    Jan 25, 2013 at 10:16
  • @eReM: insert, emplace erase and clear are the only things which change your set*. insert and emplace won't invalidate any iterator or reference, erase will invalidate the iterator and references to the element which has been erased, and clear will invalidate all iterators but not the past-the-end iterator which are equal to end(). So you can use end() without any problems. (* there's also swap, but I don't think you're going to use it)
    – Zeta
    Jan 25, 2013 at 10:27
4

The variable init_me is an object instance, and NULL is a pointer. A non-pointer instance can not be compared to a pointer.

What you should to is set init_me to another iterator that means "no iterator", like end, and compare against that.

3

If the multiset in question always exists and is determined at the time you declare init_me (i.e. there is only one possible multiset that the iterator can point into), you could use mymultiset.end() as a marker.

(Note that this iterator does not point to the last element of a container, but to the "end", i.e. it is a special value. That's what makes it useful for flagging purposes. Be careful to only check other iterators against mymultiset.end(), not dereference it. Dereferencing end() or past-the-end iterators is undefined behaviour.)

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