14

I wanted to do this

#include <vector>
#include <span>

struct S
{
    std::vector<int> v;
    void set(std::span<int> _v)
    {
        v = _v;
    }
};

But it does not compile. What are the alternatives?

4 Answers 4

23
v.assign(_v.begin(), _v.end());
3
  • Thanks, pretty neat. I was thinking of doing clear() + insert() but this looks better.
    – tuket
    Commented Sep 1, 2020 at 10:59
  • that (clear + insert) is basically what assign does. Commented Sep 1, 2020 at 14:26
  • admittedly the clear is extra if its in the constructor as you wouldn't expect the any data elements in an empty vector.
    – Mikhail
    Commented Aug 1, 2022 at 2:08
4

You can also use the std::vector::insert as follows:

v.insert(v.begin(), _v.begin(), _v.end());

Note that, if the v should be emptied before, you should call v.clear() before this. However, this allows you to add the span to a specified location in the v.

(See a demo)

4

Use std::vector<T,Allocator>::assign_range (C++23).

v.assign_range(_v);

// or “v.assign(_v.begin(), _v.end());”
3

The general way to create a new container from any input range is std::ranges::to():

        v = _v | std::ranges::to<decltype(v)>();

This is more useful for passing a temporary to a function that's more constrained (e.g. it needs a sized or bidirectional range), but it can be used for assignment, too (at a short-term cost in memory, since v's contents are not released until after the new container is constructed).

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