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I am interested in porting this Python code to C++. As part of the port, I am using std::stack from the <stack> header. How can I determine whether some character is contained within a stack<char>? For example:

std::stack<char> myStack

if (!('y' is included in myStack)) // I know that this is wrong
{
}
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  • May I ask why do you use stack and not set?
    – Maciek
    Jan 18, 2012 at 23:00
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    There is no way to iterate/find into an std::stack, you're only allowed to view the last item pushed and pop it out. You probably want another container.
    – wkl
    Jan 18, 2012 at 23:00
  • 3
    If you want to look at all the elements, you probably didn't want a stack. Jan 18, 2012 at 23:01
  • 1
    In C++, a stack is simply a thin wrapper around a sequential access container(std::deque by default) that purposely restricts access to all elements except the top. You want to remove that restriction, so just use a sequential access container (vector, deque or list). Jan 18, 2012 at 23:18

4 Answers 4

12

The C++ stack does not support random access, so there is no direct way using a stack to check if an element is contained. You can, however, make a copy of the stack and then continuously pop off that stack until the element is found.

Alternatively, if you do need to search the stack, you could consider instead using a deque, which does support random access. For example, you could use the find algorithm on a deque to search for an element:

std::find(myDeque.begin(), myDeque.end(), myValue);

If you need to frequently search of the stack, consider keeping a parallel std::set along with the stack that stores the same elements as the stack. This way, you can just use set::find to check (efficiently) whether the element exists.

Hope this helps!

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  • I write else if (!(std::find(myStack.begin(), myStack.end(), x))) and gives me error no operator "!" matches this operants. Is there any find function that gives back bool or makes this happen? Jan 19, 2012 at 15:53
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    The find function returns an iterator rather than a Boolean. You'd write if (std::find(myStack.begin(), myStack.end(), x) != myStack.end()) { ... } Jan 19, 2012 at 18:49
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If you need to find an element in your container, by definition stack is the wrong container for your needs. With the extremely minimal amount of information you've provided either vector or deque sound like they would provide the interface you need (std::find(c.begin(), c.end(), item);).

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  • I used else if (!(find(visited.begin(), visited.end(), x))) and else if (!(find_if(visited.begin(), visited.end(), x))) it gave me error no operator "!" matches this operants. How can I return true if the item is found ? Jan 19, 2012 at 16:09
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Since you wish to implement DFS and BFS, using std::stack (for DFS) and std::queue (for BFS) is indeed appropriate to keep not yet visited nodes, and you only need to use push() and pop() methods of these containers.

But stack and queue are not sufficient to keep visited nodes. My preference would be to use an associative container, e.g. std::set, better yet unordered_set if your C++ compiler has it, because searching an arbitrary value in an associative container is faster than in a sequence like vector or deque (unless data are sorted there).

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  • Does the std::set has a pop and push function? I searched and found out that there is none functions like this. Any suggestions? Jan 19, 2012 at 15:30
  • For the associative containers, the corresponding operations are erase and insert. And you most likely will not need erase because the container would be used for visited nodes. So the program would employ both a stack/queue for the nodes to visit and a set for already visited nodes. Jan 19, 2012 at 15:47
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If you need to search in the stack frequently, consider using a set alongside. Always keep the set updated too: if any element is popped from stack, erase it from the set , and on any push operation onto the stack, insert into the set too.

stack<int> st; 
set<int> s;  


//push 
st.push(2);s.insert(2);

//pop
s.erase(st.top()); st.pop();

//find (what your main objective was)
bool ispresent = s.find(2)!=s.end() ; // on failure the iterator = s.end()

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