std::map<Key,T,Compare,Allocator>::find

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | container‎ | map

 
 
 
 
iterator find( const Key& key );
(1)
const_iterator find( const Key& key ) const;
(2)
template< class K > iterator find( const K& x );
(3) (since C++14)
template< class K > const_iterator find( const K& x ) const;
(4) (since C++14)
1,2) Finds an element with key equivalent to key.
3,4) Finds an element with key that compares equivalent to the value x. This overload participates in overload resolution only if the qualified-id Compare::is_transparent is valid and denotes a type. It allows calling this function without constructing an instance of Key.

Parameters

key - key value of the element to search for
x - a value of any type that can be transparently compared with a key

Return value

Iterator to an element with key equivalent to key. If no such element is found, past-the-end (see end()) iterator is returned.

Complexity

Logarithmic in the size of the container.

Notes

Feature-test macro Value Std Comment
__cpp_lib_generic_associative_lookup 201304L (C++14) Heterogeneous comparison lookup in associative containers; overloads (3,4)

Example

#include <iostream>
#include <map>
 
struct FatKey   { int x; int data[1000]; };
struct LightKey { int x; };
// Note: as detailed above, the container must use std::less<> (or other 
//   transparent Comparator) to access these overloads.
// This includes standard overloads, such as between std::string and std::string_view.
bool operator<(const FatKey& fk, const LightKey& lk) { return fk.x < lk.x; }
bool operator<(const LightKey& lk, const FatKey& fk) { return lk.x < fk.x; }
bool operator<(const FatKey& fk1, const FatKey& fk2) { return fk1.x < fk2.x; }
 
int main()
{  
    // simple comparison demo
    std::map<int,char> example = {{1,'a'}, {2,'b'}};
 
    if (auto search = example.find(2); search != example.end())
        std::cout << "Found " << search->first << " " << search->second << '\n';
    else
        std::cout << "Not found\n";
 
    // transparent comparison demo
    std::map<FatKey, char, std::less<>> example2 = {{{1, {}}, 'a'}, {{2, {}}, 'b'}};
 
    LightKey lk = {2};
    if (auto search = example2.find(lk); search != example2.end())
        std::cout << "Found " << search->first.x << " " << search->second << '\n';
    else
        std::cout << "Not found\n";
 
    // Obtaining const iterators.
    // Compiler decides whether to return iterator of (non) const type by way of accessing
    // map; to prevent modification on purpose, one of easiest choices is to access map by
    // const reference.
    const auto& example2ref = example2;
    if (auto search = example2ref.find(lk); search != example2.end())
    {
        std::cout << "Found " << search->first.x << ' ' << search->second << '\n';
    //  search->second = 'c'; // error: assignment of member
                              // 'std::pair<const FatKey, char>::second'
                              // in read-only object
    }
}

Output:

Found 2 b
Found 2 b
Found 2 b

See also

returns the number of elements matching specific key
(public member function)
returns range of elements matching a specific key
(public member function)