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.
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.std::transform
?std::transform(std::begin(args), std::end(args), std::back_inserter(result), [] (const Foo & foo) { return foo.b; });
std::mem_fn(&Foo::b)
instead? In this case I find it better than a lambda. Purely for lack of verbosity.std::mem_fn
can be used to generate an accessor for a member of any type. In this case, it will simply returnb
. I personally like it better than spelling the lambda out. Even though the end result is the same.