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!
std::stack
, you're only allowed to view the last item pushed and pop it out. You probably want another 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).