list::erase
Removes an element or a range of elements in a list from specified positions.
iterator erase(
iterator _Where
);
iterator erase(
iterator _First,
iterator _Last
);
Parameters
_Where
Position of the element to be removed from the list._First
Position of the first element removed from the list._Last
Position just beyond the last element removed from the list.
Return Value
A bidirectional iterator that designates the first element remaining beyond any elements removed, or a pointer to the end of the list if no such element exists.
Remarks
No reallocation occurs, so iterators and references become invalid only for the erased elements.
erase never throws an exception.
Example
// list_erase.cpp
// compile with: /EHsc
#include <list>
#include <iostream>
int main( )
{
using namespace std;
list <int> c1;
list <int>::iterator Iter;
c1.push_back( 10 );
c1.push_back( 20 );
c1.push_back( 30 );
c1.push_back( 40 );
c1.push_back( 50 );
cout << "The initial list is:";
for ( Iter = c1.begin( ); Iter != c1.end( ); Iter++ )
cout << " " << *Iter;
cout << endl;
c1.erase( c1.begin( ) );
cout << "After erasing the first element, the list becomes:";
for ( Iter = c1.begin( ); Iter != c1.end( ); Iter++ )
cout << " " << *Iter;
cout << endl;
Iter = c1.begin( );
Iter++;
c1.erase( Iter, c1.end( ) );
cout << "After erasing all elements but the first, the list becomes: ";
for (Iter = c1.begin( ); Iter != c1.end( ); Iter++ )
cout << " " << *Iter;
cout << endl;
}
Output
The initial list is: 10 20 30 40 50 After erasing the first element, the list becomes: 20 30 40 50 After erasing all elements but the first, the list becomes: 20
Requirements
Header: <list>
Namespace: std