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Man Pages
std::experimental::ranges::find_end(3) C++ Standard Libary std::experimental::ranges::find_end(3)

std::experimental::ranges::find_end - std::experimental::ranges::find_end


Defined in header <experimental/ranges/algorithm>
template< ForwardIterator I1, Sentinel<I1> S1, ForwardIterator I2,
Sentinel<I2> S2,


class Proj = ranges::identity,
IndirectRelation<I2, projected<I1, Proj>> Pred = ranges::equal_to<> (1) (ranges TS)
>
I1 find_end(I1 first1, S1 last1, I2 first2, S2 last2,


Pred pred = Pred{}, Proj proj = Proj{});
template< ForwardRange R1, ForwardRange R2, class Proj =
ranges::identity,


IndirectRelation<ranges::iterator_t<R2>, (2) (ranges TS)
projected<ranges::iterator_t<R1>, Proj>> Pred = ranges::equal_to<> >
ranges::safe_iterator_t<R1> find_end(Rng1&& rng1, Rng2&& rng2,


Pred pred = Pred{}, Proj proj = Proj{});


1) Searches for the last occurrence of the sequence [first2, last2) in the range
[first1, last1) (after projection with proj).
2) Same as (1), but uses r1 as the first source range and r2 as the second source
range, as if using ranges::begin(r1) as first1, ranges::end(r1) as last1,
ranges::begin(r2) as first2, and ranges::end(r2) as last2.


Notwithstanding the declarations depicted above, the actual number and order of
template parameters for algorithm declarations is unspecified. Thus, if explicit
template arguments are used when calling an algorithm, the program is probably
non-portable.


first1, last1 - the range of elements to examine
r1 - the range of elements to examine
first2, last2 - the range of elements to search for
r2 - the range of elements to search for
pred - predicate to compare the elements
proj - projection to apply to the elements in the first range


Iterator to the beginning of last occurrence of the sequence [first2, last2) in
range [first1, last1) (after projection with proj).


If [first2, last2) is empty or if no such sequence is found, an iterator that
compares equal to last1 is returned.


At most S*(N-S+1) applications of the predicate and projection, where S = last2 -
first2 and N = last1 - first1.


The projection is only applied to the range [first1, last1).


template< ForwardIterator I1, Sentinel<I1> S1, ForwardIterator I2, Sentinel<I2> S2,
class Proj = ranges::identity,
IndirectRelation<I2, projected<I1, Proj>> Pred = ranges::equal_to<> >
I1 find_end(I1 first1, S1 last1, I2 first2, S2 last2,
Pred pred = Pred{}, Proj proj = Proj{})
{
I1 result = ranges::next(first1, last1);
if (first2 == last2)
return result;
while (true) {
I1 new_result = ranges::search(first1, last1, first2, last2, pred, proj);
if (new_result == last1) {
break;
} else {
result = new_result;
first1 = result;
++first1;
}
}
return result;
}


This section is incomplete
Reason: no example


find_end finds the last sequence of elements in a certain range
(function template)
search searches for a range of elements
(function template)
includes returns true if one set is a subset of another
(function template)
finds the first two adjacent items that are equal (or satisfy a given
adjacent_find predicate)
(function template)
find finds the first element satisfying specific criteria
find_if (function template)
find_if_not
find_first_of searches for any one of a set of elements
(function template)
search_n searches for a number consecutive copies of an element in a range
(function template)

2022.07.31 http://cppreference.com

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