How would I do a for loop on every character in string in C++?
10 Answers
Looping through the characters of a
std::string
, using a range-based for loop (it's from C++11, already supported in recent releases of GCC, clang, and the VC11 beta):std::string str = ???; for(char& c : str) { do_things_with(c); }
Looping through the characters of a
std::string
with iterators:std::string str = ???; for(std::string::iterator it = str.begin(); it != str.end(); ++it) { do_things_with(*it); }
Looping through the characters of a
std::string
with an old-fashioned for-loop:std::string str = ???; for(std::string::size_type i = 0; i < str.size(); ++i) { do_things_with(str[i]); }
Looping through the characters of a null-terminated character array:
char* str = ???; for(char* it = str; *it; ++it) { do_things_with(*it); }
-
This does confuse me somewhat, given std::string is UTF8 (assumed to be), so encoding is possibly variable length. Are you iterating through the bytes in the string or the characters here?– RobinsonJul 25, 2014 at 9:56
-
5@Robinson: That's a faulty assumption. A very faulty assumption. Also, "character" has so many different meanings, it's best to strictly avoid the term.– PuppyJul 25, 2014 at 10:43
-
2Well, OK, it has no encoding, however given the ubiquity of utf8 now (especially on the web) and the fact that one might want a single consistent encoding throughout a pipeline or application, for the basis of this discussion my std::strings are all utf8 :p.– RobinsonJul 25, 2014 at 11:12
-
5@Robinson: And all of mine are treated as encoding-less because I am not programming in a user-facing domain (that is, there are no strings destined to be rendered to humans). If you want to talk about character encodings, you need to talk about a higher-level abstraction on top of
std::string
, which is just a series of bytes. Jul 25, 2014 at 11:16 -
2also, cases 2 and 3 are good example of where you can/should use "auto"– galoisFeb 21, 2016 at 6:40
A for loop can be implemented like this:
string str("HELLO");
for (int i = 0; i < str.size(); i++){
cout << str[i];
}
This will print the string character by character. str[i]
returns character at index i
.
If it is a character array:
char str[6] = "hello";
for (int i = 0; str[i] != '\0'; i++){
cout << str[i];
}
Basically above two are two type of strings supported by c++. The second is called c string and the first is called std string or(c++ string).I would suggest use c++ string,much Easy to handle.
In modern C++:
std::string s("Hello world");
for (char & c : s)
{
std::cout << "One character: " << c << "\n";
c = '*';
}
In C++98/03:
for (std::string::iterator it = s.begin(), end = s.end(); it != end; ++it)
{
std::cout << "One character: " << *it << "\n";
*it = '*';
}
For read-only iteration, you can use std::string::const_iterator
in C++98, and for (char const & c : s)
or just for (char c : s)
in C++11.
-
Here's a couple options for compilers with partial C++11 support: pastebin.com/LBULsn76 Feb 24, 2012 at 21:34
-
@BenjaminLindley: Thanks!
auto
is always a good idea. When using it, the distinction betweenbegin()
andcbegin()
becomes relevant. Feb 24, 2012 at 21:43 -
4what is the role of the reference in char here (
char & c
)? Is it just to allow the modification of the character value in the case it's needed? Jun 2, 2015 at 16:03
Here is another way of doing it, using the standard algorithm.
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <algorithm>
int main()
{
std::string name = "some string";
std::for_each(name.begin(), name.end(), [] (char c) {
std::cout << c;
});
}
-
-
One could also use
std::all_of
,std::any_of
, etc. according to their needs en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/algorithm/all_any_none_of– aureliaJul 20, 2021 at 14:18
const char* str = "abcde";
int len = strlen(str);
for (int i = 0; i < len; i++)
{
char chr = str[i];
//do something....
}
-
4(Outdated comment, that is still probably relevant for the OP:) It is not considered good form to use
strlen
in the loop condition, as it requires an O(n) operation on the string for each iteration, making the entire loop O(n^2) in the size of the string.strlen
in the loop condition can be called for if the string changes during the loop, but should be reserved for the cases where it is actually required. Feb 24, 2012 at 21:27 -
@MagnusHoff: Yup, Schlemiel the Painter rears his ugly head again. Feb 24, 2012 at 21:30
-
I've edited my answer. Magnus you're right, oops been using foreach in c# for the last couple of years ;) Feb 24, 2012 at 21:30
-
You should however still use strlen() outside the loop in preference to testing for null in every iteration.– mckenzmJul 4, 2019 at 3:40
I don't see any examples using a range based for loop with a "c string".
char cs[] = "This is a c string\u0031 \x32 3";
// range based for loop does not print '\n'
for (char& c : cs) {
printf("%c", c);
}
not related but int array example
int ia[] = {1,2,3,4,5,6};
for (int& i : ia) {
printf("%d", i);
}
for (int x = 0; x < yourString.size();x++){
if (yourString[x] == 'a'){
//Do Something
}
if (yourString[x] == 'b'){
//Do Something
}
if (yourString[x] == 'c'){
//Do Something
}
//...........
}
A String is basically an array of characters, therefore you can specify the index to get the character. If you don't know the index, then you can loop through it like the above code, but when you're making a comparison, make sure you use single quotes (which specifies a character).
Other than that, the above code is self explanatory.
For C-string (char []
) you should do something like this:
char mystring[] = "My String";
int size = strlen(mystring);
int i;
for(i = 0; i < size; i++) {
char c = mystring[i];
}
For std::string
you can use str.size()
to get its size and iterate like the example , or could use an iterator:
std::string mystring = "My String";
std::string::iterator it;
for(it = mystring.begin(); it != mystring.end(); it++) {
char c = *it;
}
You can use the size() method to get the lenght of the string and the square bracket operator to access each individual character.
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
string s;
cin >> s;
int length = s.size();
for(int i = 0; i < length; i++)
{
process(s[i]);
}
}
you can get every char in a string by using the at function of string library, like i did it like this
string words;
for (unsigned int i = 0; i < words.length(); i++)
{
if (words.at(i) == ' ')
{
spacecounter++; // to count all the spaces in a string
if (words.at(i + 1) == ' ')
{
i += 1;
}
this is just a segment of my code but the point is you can access characters by stringname.at(index)
std::string
?char
, Unicode code point, extended grapheme cluster?index
part in the answers.