Below is a simplified code to replicate my problem:
Working code:
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
std::vector<int> x;
std::map<char, std::vector<int>::size_type> y;
y[0]=x.size();
return 0;
}
Not working code (using decltype):
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
std::vector<int> x;
//std::map<char, std::vector<int>::size_type> y;
std::map<char, decltype(x.begin())> y;
y[0]=x.size();
return 0;
}
The code fails to compile with the following error:
error: no match for ‘operator=’ (operand types are ‘std::map > >::mapped_type {aka __gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator >}’ and ‘std::vector::size_type {aka long unsigned int}’) y[0]=x.size();
Shouldn't decltype(x.begin())
be equivalent to std::vector<int>::size_type
?
x.begin()
is an iterator andx.size()
isnt, so no, they are not equivalentbegin
returns an iterator and not an integer which is whatsize
returns? Perhaps you should take a few steps back and find a good beginners book and start over?begin
andsize
would have told you their return types differ.it - vec.begin()
to get the current index the iterator is pointing to. I guess some implicit casting is happening here