60

At the moment my solution is to iterate through the map to solve this.

I see there is a upper_bound method which can make this loop faster, but is there a quicker or more succinct way?

5 Answers 5

138

The end:

m.rbegin();

Maps (and sets) are sorted, so the first element is the smallest, and the last element is the largest. By default maps use std::less, but you can switch the comparer and this would of course change the position of the largest element. (For example, using std::greater would place it at begin().

Keep in mind rbegin returns an iterator. To get the actual key, use m.rbegin()->first. You might wrap it up into a function for clarity, though I'm not sure if it's worth it:

template <typename T>
inline const typename T::key_type& last_key(const T& pMap)
{
    return pMap.rbegin()->first;
}

typedef std::map</* types */> map_type;

map_type myMap;
// populate

map_type::key_type k = last_key(myMap);
2
  • 6
    also it could be worth checking for empty map. Nov 5, 2014 at 7:35
  • 1
    +1, great answer. After your answer I did some research, and I'd add crbegin to your answer to make it even better (in case we want a const iterator, which might be important in some cases). Jan 23, 2017 at 17:58
13

The entries in a std::map are sorted, so for a std::map m (assuming m.empty() is false), you can get the biggest key easily: (--m.end())->first

5
  • 2
    end() can't be iterated backwards without an assertion
    – G Huxley
    Mar 29, 2019 at 3:46
  • @GHuxley - Are you sure your map is non-empty?
    – user200783
    Apr 4, 2019 at 16:09
  • yes. Maybe you're using an STL implementation that doesn't assert for this incorrect use.
    – G Huxley
    Aug 3, 2021 at 22:27
  • @GHuxley - Sorry, I don't understand why iterating end() backwards is incorrect. According to this answer, an "iterator of an associative container is of the bidirectional iterator category" - so why can't it be decremented?
    – user200783
    Aug 9, 2021 at 2:01
  • @user200783- Decrementing of a bi-directional end() iterator only works for some contexts and not others. If you want end() to always work then you need std::prev(m.end()). Refer to notes here: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/iterator/prev I'll post it as my own answer to this Qn...
    – G Huxley
    Aug 16, 2021 at 22:11
1

Since the map is just an AVL tree then, it's sorted -in an ascending order-. So, the element with largest key is the last element and you can obtain it using one of the following two methods:

1.

    largestElement = (myMap.rbegin())-> first; // rbegin(): returns an iterator pointing to the last element
    largestElement = (--myMap.end())->first; // end(): returns an iterator pointing to the theortical element following the last element 
0

As std::map is assosiative array one can easily find biggest or smallest key very easily. By defualt compare function is less(<) operator so biggest key will be last element in map. Similarly if someone has different requirement anyone can modify compare function while declaring map.

std::map< key, Value, compare< key,Value > >

By default compare=std::less

0

Since you're not using unordered_map, your keys should be in order. Depending upon what you want to do with an iterator, you have two options:

  1. If you want a forwards-iterator then you can use std::prev(myMap.end()). Note that --myMap.end() isn't guaranteed to work in all scenarios, so I'd usually avoid it.
  2. If you want to iterate in reverse then use myMap.rbegin()

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