1

Say I have the following struct in C++

struct Foo {
   double a;
   int b;
};

And say I have a parameter to some function declared as follows:

const std::initializer_list<Foo> &args;

Is there an concise way to extract just one field from the elements in args to get, for instance, just an std::vector containing each b field from the original args list?

Of course, I know I could do this by just explicitly writing it out as a loop:

std::vector<int> result;
for(auto &x:args) {
    result.push_back(x.b);
}

... but given that I can copy an entire initializer_list of any type to a like-typed vector in a single line of C++, just using functions like std::copy and std::back_inserter, I am wondering if there is a more elegant way to do this as well, using stl or C++11 facilities that may already exist.

7
  • Looks like XY problem. You are misusing initializer_list! It suppose to be used as initialization of some specific object. Now your case is doing something different. Why? We do not know, since this is question with XY problem.
    – Marek R
    Aug 27, 2017 at 7:48
  • Have you tried std::transform?
    – pmaxim98
    Aug 27, 2017 at 7:50
  • 2
    std::transform(std::begin(args), std::end(args), std::back_inserter(result), [] (const Foo & foo) { return foo.b; });
    – pmaxim98
    Aug 27, 2017 at 7:50
  • 2
    @pmaxim98 - The answer section is bellow. And may I suggest std::mem_fn(&Foo::b) instead? In this case I find it better than a lambda. Purely for lack of verbosity. Aug 27, 2017 at 7:53
  • 2
    @pmaxim98 - Despite the un-intuitive name, std::mem_fn can be used to generate an accessor for a member of any type. In this case, it will simply return b. I personally like it better than spelling the lambda out. Even though the end result is the same. Aug 27, 2017 at 7:57

2 Answers 2

3

You could use std::transform and add elements to the vector via std::back_inserter:

std::transform(std::begin(args), std::end(args), std::back_inserter(result), 
[] (const Foo & foo) { return foo.b; });

If you find the lambda too verbose you can use std::mem_fn instead (credit goes to @StoryTeller).

std::transform(std::begin(args), std::end(args), std::back_inserter(result), std::mem_fn(&Foo::b));

But then again, your approach isn't necessary bad since it's pretty readable and does the job just fine (might have some performance issues tho).

0

One solution can be using linq++ like the following:

shared_ptr<vector<Foo>> foo_list; 
// suppose foo_list is being filled
shared_ptr<vector> bs = from(foo_list).select(&_1 ->* &Foo::b).get();

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