subrange class (C++ Standard Library)

Provides a view of part of the elements of a range as defined by a begin iterator and sentinel.

Syntax

template<input_or_output_iterator I, sentinel_for<I> S, subrange_kind K>
  requires (K == subrange_kind::sized || !sized_sentinel_for<S, I>)
class subrange : public view_interface<subrange<I, S, K>>

Template parameters

I
The begin iterator type. The input_or_output_iterator concept ensures that I is an iterator that can read all of the elements.

K
The kind of subrange: Use subrange_kind::sized to specify a sized subrange. Use sized_sentinel_for<S, I> if the iterator and sentinel can be subtracted to yield the size. The requirement subrange_kind::sized || !sized_sentinel_for<S, I> stores the size locally in the subrange object, and requires that you construct the subrange either using the constructor that takes a sized_range (for which you would specify subrange_kind::sized here) or via the constructor that takes an iterator, sentinel, and size (so you would specify sized_sentinel_for<S, I> here).

S
The end iterator type. The sized_sentinel_for concept ensures that S can be used as a sentinel for I and that it's possible to compute the distance between the sentinel and the current iterator position in I in constant time.

View characteristics

For a description of the following entries, see View class characteristics

Characteristic Description
Range adaptor views::counted
Underlying range Any range
Element type iter_reference_t<I>
View iterator category Same as Is category
Sized If K is subrange::sized
Is const-iterable If I is copyable
Common range If I and S are the same type.
Borrowed range Yes

Members

Member functions Description
ConstructorsC++20 Construct a subrange.
operator PairLikeC++20 Convert a subrange to a pair-like type.
advanceC++20 Move the iterator a specified distance.
begin Get an iterator to the first element.
emptyC++20 Test whether the subrange is empty.
endC++20 Get the sentinel at the end of the subrange.
nextC++20 Creates a copy of this subrange but with the stored iterator moved forward the specified distance.
prevC++20 Creates a copy of this subrange but with the stored iterator moved back the specified distance.
sizeC++20 Get the number of elements.
Inherited from view_interface Description
backC++20 Get the last element.
dataC++20 Get a pointer to the first element.
frontC++20 Get the first element.
operator[]C++20 Get the element at the specified position.
operator boolC++20 Test whether the subrange is empty.

Remarks

A subrange is useful when you have a begin and end iterator, but you want to pass a single object instead. For example, if you wanted to call a range adaptor but had begin and end iterators, you could use a subrange to wrap them and pass the subrange to the range adaptor.

Requirements

Header: <ranges> (since C++20)

Namespace: std::ranges

Compiler Option: /std:c++20 or later is required.

Constructors

Create a subrange.

1) subrange() requires default_initializable<I> = default;
2) template <Convertible_to_non_slicing<I> It>
    constexpr subrange(It begin, S end) requires (!Store_size);
3) template <Convertible_to_non_slicing<I> It>
    constexpr subrange(It begin, S end, const Size_type size) requires (K == subrange_kind::sized);
4) template <Not_same_as<subrange> rg>
    requires borrowed_range<rg>
        && Convertible_to_non_slicing<iterator_t<rg>, I>
        && convertible_to<sentinel_t<rg>, S>
    constexpr subrange(rg&& r) requires (!_Store_size || sized_range<rg>);
5) template <borrowed_range rg>
        requires Convertible_to_non_slicing<iterator_t<rg>, I> && convertible_to<sentinel_t<rg>, S>
    constexpr subrange(rg&& r, const _Size_type sizeHint) requires (K == subrange_kind::sized)

Parameters

begin
Iterator that points to the first element in the subrange.

end
Sentinel that points to the end of the subrange. The element it points to isn't included in the subrange.

sizeHint
The size of the range in elements. This is used to optimize the size member function and is necessary if you want to make a sized subrange from an iterator and sentinel whose types don't model sized_sentinel_for.

For information about template parameter types, see Template parameters.

Return value

A subrange instance.

Remarks

1) Default constructs the stored iterator and sentinel. The size hint is set to 0.
2) Uses std::move() to move the begin iterator and end sentinel to the stored iterator and sentinel.
3) Initializes the stored iterator with std::move(begin), the stored sentinel with std::move(end), and the stored size hint with size, which should equal the distance between the first and second arguments.
4) Construct a subrange from a range.
5) The behavior isn't defined if szHint != ranges::distance(rg).

The counted range adaptor can create a subrange. That adaptor takes a begin iterator and a count.

Example: counted

// requires /std:c++20 or later
#include <ranges>
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>

int main()
{
    std::vector<int> v{0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10};
    auto pos5 = std::ranges::find(v, 5);
    auto countedView = std::views::counted(pos5, 5);
    for (auto e : countedView) // outputs 5 6 7 8 9
    {
        std::cout << e << ' ';
    }
    std::cout << '\n';

    // You can pass the range directly if it supports input_or_output_iterator, in which case, the
    // count starts from the first element
    const char chars[] = { 'H','i',' ','t','h','e','r','e' };
    for (char c : std::views::counted(chars, 2))
    {
        std::cout << c; // outputs Hi
    }
}
5 6 7 8 9
Hi

operator PairLike

Convert a subrange to a type that models pair-like.

template<not-same-as<subrange> PairLike>
requires pair-like-convertible-from<PairLike, const I&, const S&>
constexpr operator PairLike() const;

Parameters

None.

For information about template parameter types, see Template parameters.

Return value

A PairLike value that is direct-initialized with the stored iterator and sentinel. The last value in the pair will be the sentinel.

Remember that the sentinel is past the last element in the subrange, as shown in the example below.

Remarks

This conversion is useful with older Boost::Ranges code that accepts (first, last) pairs to denote a range.
This conversion is useful for converting a subrange to a pair or tuple or other type that models pair_like. Some examples of pair_like types are:

std::array<T, 2>
std::pair<T, U>
std::ranges::subrange<I, S, K>
std::tuple<T, U>

Example: operator PairLike()

// requires /std:c++20 or later
#include <iostream>
#include <ranges>
#include <vector>
#include <utility>

int main()
{
    constexpr int a[] = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
    std::ranges::subrange rg(a);
    rg.advance(2);
    const std::pair<const int*, const int*> p = rg;
    for (auto e : rg)
    {
        std::cout << e << ' ';
    }

    // because the sentinel points after the last element, subtract one to get the last element
    std::cout << '\n' << *p.first << ':' << *(p.second - 1) << '\n'; // outputs 2:5
 }
2 3 4 5
2:5

advance

Adjust the iterator for this subrange by n elements.

constexpr subrange& advance(const iter_difference_t<I> n);

Parameters

n
How many elements to adjust the iterator. n can be positive (move forward) or, if I is bidirectional, negative (move backward).

Remarks

This function modifies the current state of the iterator in the subrange.

If you advance past the end of the subrange, the iterator is set to the sentinel at the end of the subrange.
If you advance past the beginning of the subrange (using a negative n), you'll get an invalid parameter exception if the range you made the subrange from doesn't have an element in the place.

Example advance

// requires /std:c++20 or later
#include <iostream>
#include <ranges>
#include <string>
#include <vector>

void print(const std::string &msg, auto &&v)
{
    std::cout << msg << '\n';
    for (auto& x : v)
    {
        std::cout << x << ' ';
    }
    std::cout << '\n';
}

int main()
{
    std::vector v = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 };
    print("Original vector: ", v); // outputs 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

    // create a subrange 3 4 5 6
    std::ranges::subrange theSubrange{ std::ranges::find(v,3), std::ranges::find(v, 7) };
    print("The subrange: ", theSubrange); // outputs 3 4 5 6

    auto sr = theSubrange.advance(2); // get a subrange 2 positions to the right of the current iterator location
    print("theSubrange.advance(2): ", sr); // outputs 5 6
    print("Note that subrange's iterator moved during advance(): ", sr); // outputs 5 6
    sr = theSubrange.advance(-3); // Moving before the subrange, but onto a valid element in the original range 
    print("theSubrange.advance(-3): ", sr); // outputs 2 3 4 5 6
}
Original vector:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
The subrange:
3 4 5 6
theSubrange.advance(2):
5 6
Note that subrange's iterator moved during advance():
5 6
theSubrange.advance(-3):
2 3 4 5 6

begin

Get an iterator to the first element in the subrange.

1) constexpr I begin() const requires copyable<I>;
2) [[nodiscard]] constexpr I begin() requires (!std::copyable<I>);

Parameters

None.

Return value

An iterator pointing at the first element in the subrange. If the iterator isn't copyable, it's returned with std::move(). If the iterator is moved, the state of the stored iterator depends on the implementation of the move constructor for I.

Picture of a vector with the elements 10, 20, and 30. The first element contains 10 and is labeled begin(). The last element contains 30 and is labeled 'last element'. An imaginary box after the last element indicates the sentinel and is labeled end().

empty

Test whether the subrange is empty.

constexpr bool empty() const;

Parameters

None.

Return value

Returns true if the subrange has no elements. Otherwise, returns false.

end

Get the sentinel at the end of the subrange

[[nodiscard]] constexpr S end() const;

Parameters

None.

Return value

The sentinel that follows the last element in the subrange:

Picture of a vector with the elements 10, 20, and 30. The first element contains 10 and is labeled begin(). The last element contains 30 and is labeled 'last element'. An imaginary box after the last element indicates the sentinel and is labeled end().

The sentinel is copy-constructed from the stored sentinel.

next

Creates a copy of this subrange but with the stored iterator moved forward the specified distance.

1) [[nodiscard]] constexpr subrange next(iter_difference_t<I> n = 1) const & requires forward_iterator<I>;
2) [[nodiscard]] constexpr subrange next(iter_difference_t<I> n = 1) &&;

Parameters

n
How many elements to move the iterator forward. Defaults to 1. Must be positive.

Return value

Returns a copy of the subrange starting at the *n*th element.

Remarks

Unlike advance(), next() doesn't change the location of the iterator stored in the original subrange. The returned subrange has all the elements that the original subrange has, but the iterator is in a different location.

1) The return value is the same as:

auto tmp = *this;
tmp.advance(n);
return tmp;

2) The return value is the same as:

advance(n);
return std::move(*this);

Example: next

// requires /std:c++20 or later
#include <iostream>
#include <ranges>
#include <string>
#include <vector>

void print(const std::string &msg, auto &&v)
{
    std::cout << msg << '\n';
    for (auto& x : v)
    {
        std::cout << x << ' ';
    }
    std::cout << '\n';
}

int main()
{
    std::vector v = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 };
    print("Original vector:", v); // 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

    // create a subrange from the front of v up to (but not including) the element 7
    std::ranges::subrange theSubrange{ std::ranges::find(v,1), std::ranges::find(v, 7) };
    print("The subrange:", theSubrange); // 1 2 3 4 5 6

    auto forward = theSubrange.advance(3); // get a subrange 3 positions to the right of the current iterator location
    print("theSubrange.advance(3):", forward); // 4 5 6

    // prev()
    auto previous = theSubrange.prev(2); // move back 2
    print("theSubrange.prev(2):", previous); // 2 3 4 5 6    
    print("Note that the subrange's iterator did *not* move during prev():", theSubrange); // 4 5 6
}
Original vector:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
The subrange:
1 2 3 4 5 6
theSubrange.next(3):
4 5 6
Note that the original subrange's iterator did *not* move during next():
1 2 3 4 5 6

prev

Creates a copy of this subrange, but with the stored iterator moved back the specified distance.

[[nodiscard]] constexpr subrange prev(std::iter_difference_t<I> n = 1 ) const
    requires std::bidirectional_iterator<I>;

Parameters

n
How many elements to move the iterator back. Defaults to 1. Must be positive.

Return value

Returns a copy of the subrange but with the iterator moved back n elements.

Remarks

Unlike advance(), prev() doesn't change the location of the iterator stored in the original subrange.
The returned subrange has all the elements that the original subrange has, but the iterator is just in a different location. You can think of the return value as:

auto tmp = *this;
tmp.advance(-n);
return tmp;

Example prev

// requires /std:c++20 or later
#include <iostream>
#include <ranges>
#include <string>
#include <vector>

void print(const std::string &msg, auto &&v)
{
    std::cout << msg << '\n';
    for (auto& x : v)
    {
        std::cout << x << ' ';
    }
    std::cout << '\n';
}

int main()
{
    std::vector v = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10};
    print("Original vector:", v); // 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

    // create a subrange from the front of v up to (but not including) the element 7
    std::ranges::subrange theSubrange{std::ranges::find(v,1), std::ranges::find(v, 7)};
    print("The subrange: ", theSubrange); // 1 2 3 4 5 6

    auto forward = theSubrange.advance(3); // get a subrange 3 positions to the right of the current iterator location
    print("theSubrange.advance(3):", forward); // 4 5 6

    // prev()
    auto previous = theSubrange.prev(2); // move back 2
    print("theSubrange.prev(2):", previous); // 2 3 4 5 6    
    print("Note that the subrange's iterator did *not* move during prev():", theSubrange); // 4 5 6
}
Original vector:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
The subrange:
1 2 3 4 5 6
theSubrange.advance(3):
4 5 6
theSubrange.prev(2):
2 3 4 5 6
Note that the subrange's iterator did *not* move during prev():
4 5 6

size

Get the number of elements in the subrange.

constexpr size() const
    requires (K == ranges::subrange_kind::sized);

Parameters

None.

Return value

The number of elements in the subrange.

If the size isn't stored, which is the case when the subrange is created with K == ranges::subrange_kind::sized specified and std::sized_sentinel_for<S, I> isn't satisfied, then the size is returned as the distance between the begin and end iterators.

Changing the position of the begin iterator, with advance, for example, changes the reported size.

See also

<ranges>
counted
View classes