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next_permutation

Reorders the elements in a range so that the original ordering is replaced by the lexicographically next greater permutation if it exists, where the sense of next may be specified with a binary predicate.

template<class BidirectionalIterator> 
   bool next_permutation( 
      BidirectionalIterator _First,  
      BidirectionalIterator _Last 
   ); 
template<class BidirectionalIterator, class BinaryPredicate> 
   bool next_permutation( 
      BidirectionalIterator _First,  
      BidirectionalIterator _Last, 
      BinaryPredicate _Comp 
   );

Parameters

  • _First
    A bidirectional iterator pointing to the position of the first element in the range to be permuted.

  • _Last
    A bidirectional iterator pointing to the position one past the final element in the range to be permuted.

  • _Comp
    User-defined predicate function object that defines the comparison criterion to be satisfied by successive elements in the ordering. A binary predicate takes two arguments and returns true when satisfied and false when not satisfied.

Return Value

true if the lexicographically next permutation exists and has replaced the original ordering of the range; otherwise false, in which case the ordering is transformed into the lexicographically smallest permutation.

Remarks

The range referenced must be valid; all pointers must be dereferenceable and within the sequence the last position is reachable from the first by incrementation.

The default binary predicate is less than and the elements in the range must be less than comparable to insure that the next permutation is well defined.

The complexity is linear with at most (_Last – _First)/2 swaps.

Example

// alg_next_perm.cpp
// compile with: /EHsc
#include <vector>
#include <deque>
#include <algorithm>
#include <iostream>
#include <ostream>

using namespace std;
class CInt;
ostream& operator<<( ostream& osIn, const CInt& rhs );

class CInt
{
public:
   CInt( int n = 0 ) : m_nVal( n ){}
   CInt( const CInt& rhs ) : m_nVal( rhs.m_nVal ){}
   CInt&   operator=( const CInt& rhs ) {m_nVal =
   rhs.m_nVal; return *this;}
   bool operator<( const CInt& rhs ) const
      { return ( m_nVal < rhs.m_nVal );}
   friend   ostream& operator<<( ostream& osIn, const CInt& rhs );

private:
   int m_nVal;
};

inline ostream& operator<<( ostream& osIn, const CInt& rhs )
{
   osIn << "CInt( " << rhs.m_nVal << " )";
   return osIn;
}

// Return whether modulus of elem1 is less than modulus of elem2
bool mod_lesser ( int elem1, int elem2 )
{
   if ( elem1 < 0 )
      elem1 = - elem1;
   if ( elem2 < 0 )
      elem2 = - elem2;
   return elem1 < elem2;
};

int main( )
{
   // Reordering the elements of type CInt in a deque
   // using the prev_permutation algorithm
   CInt c1 = 5, c2 = 1, c3 = 10;
   bool deq1Result;
   deque<CInt> deq1, deq2, deq3;
   deque<CInt>::iterator d1_Iter;

   deq1.push_back ( c1 );
   deq1.push_back ( c2 );
   deq1.push_back ( c3 );

   cout << "The original deque of CInts is deq1 = (";
   for ( d1_Iter = deq1.begin( ); d1_Iter != --deq1.end( ); d1_Iter++ )
      cout << " " << *d1_Iter << ",";
   d1_Iter = --deq1.end( );
   cout << " " << *d1_Iter << " )." << endl;

   deq1Result = next_permutation ( deq1.begin ( ) , deq1.end ( ) );

   if ( deq1Result )
      cout << "The lexicographically next permutation "
           << "exists and has\nreplaced the original "
           << "ordering of the sequence in deq1." << endl;
   else
      cout << "The lexicographically next permutation doesn't "
           << "exist\n and the lexicographically "
           << "smallest permutation\n has replaced the "
           << "original ordering of the sequence in deq1." << endl;

   cout << "After one application of next_permutation,\n deq1 = (";
   for ( d1_Iter = deq1.begin( ); d1_Iter != --deq1.end( ); d1_Iter++ )
      cout << " " << *d1_Iter << ",";
   d1_Iter = --deq1.end( );
   cout << " " << *d1_Iter << " )." << endl << endl;

   // Permuting vector elements with binary function mod_lesser
   vector <int> v1;
   vector <int>::iterator Iter1;

   int i;
   for ( i = -3 ; i <= 3 ; i++ )
   {
      v1.push_back( i );
   }

   cout << "Vector v1 is ( " ;
   for ( Iter1 = v1.begin( ) ; Iter1 != v1.end( ) ; Iter1++ )
      cout << *Iter1 << " ";
   cout << ")." << endl;

   next_permutation ( v1.begin ( ) , v1.end ( ) , mod_lesser );

   cout << "After the first next_permutation, vector v1 is:\n v1 = ( " ;
   for ( Iter1 = v1.begin( ) ; Iter1 != v1.end( ) ; Iter1++ )
      cout << *Iter1 << " ";
   cout << ")." << endl;

   int iii = 1;
   while ( iii <= 5 ) {
      next_permutation ( v1.begin ( ) , v1.end ( ) , mod_lesser );
      cout << "After another next_permutation of vector v1,\n v1 =   ( " ;
      for ( Iter1 = v1.begin( ) ; Iter1 != v1.end( ) ;Iter1 ++ )
         cout << *Iter1  << " ";
      cout << ")." << endl;
      iii++;
   }
}
The original deque of CInts is deq1 = ( CInt( 5 ), CInt( 1 ), CInt( 10 ) ).
The lexicographically next permutation exists and has
replaced the original ordering of the sequence in deq1.
After one application of next_permutation,
 deq1 = ( CInt( 5 ), CInt( 10 ), CInt( 1 ) ).

Vector v1 is ( -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 ).
After the first next_permutation, vector v1 is:
 v1 = ( -3 -2 -1 0 1 3 2 ).
After another next_permutation of vector v1,
 v1 =   ( -3 -2 -1 0 2 1 3 ).
After another next_permutation of vector v1,
 v1 =   ( -3 -2 -1 0 2 3 1 ).
After another next_permutation of vector v1,
 v1 =   ( -3 -2 -1 0 3 1 2 ).
After another next_permutation of vector v1,
 v1 =   ( -3 -2 -1 0 3 2 1 ).
After another next_permutation of vector v1,
 v1 =   ( -3 -2 -1 1 0 2 3 ).

Requirements

Header: <algorithm>

Namespace: std

See Also

Reference

next_permutation (STL Samples)

Predicate Version of next_permutation

Standard Template Library