Range-based for loop add-ons inspired by the Python builtins and itertools library. Like itertools and the Python3 builtins, this library uses lazy evaluation wherever possible.
Note: Everything is inside the iter
namespace.
Follow @cppitertools for updates.
Status | Compilers |
---|---|
gcc-7 gcc-8 gcc-9 clang-5.0 clang-6.0 clang-7 clang-8 clang-9 | |
MSVC 2017 MSVC 2019 |
range
enumerate
zip
zip_longest
imap
filter
filterfalse
unique_everseen
unique_justseen
takewhile
dropwhile
cycle
repeat
count
groupby
starmap
accumulate
compress
sorted
chain
chain.from_iterable
reversed
slice
sliding_window
chunked
batched
product
combinations
combinations_with_replacement
permutations
powerset
This library is header-only and relies only on the C++ standard
library. The only exception is zip_longest
which uses boost::optional
.
#include <cppitertools/itertools.hpp>
will include all of the provided
tools except for zip_longest
which must be included separately. You may
also include individual pieces with the relevant header
(#include <cppitertools/enumerate.hpp>
for example).
You may use either scons
or bazel
to build the tests. scons
seems
to work better with viewing the test output, but the same bazel
command
can be run from any directory.
To run tests with scons you must be within the test
directory
test$ # build and run all tests
test$ scons
test$ ./test_all
test$ # build and run a specific test
test$ scons test_enumerate
test$ ./test_enumerate
test$ valgrind ./test_enumerate
bazel
absolute commands can be run from any directory inside the project
$ bazel test //test:all # runs all tests
$ bazel test //test:test_enumerate # runs a specific test
Most itertools will work with iterables using InputIterators and not copy
or move any underlying elements. The itertools that need ForwardIterators or
have additional requirements are noted in this document. However, the cases
should be fairly obvious: any time an element needs to appear multiple times
(as in combinations
or cycle
) or be looked at more than once (specifically,
sorted
).
This library takes every effort to rely on as little as possible from the
underlying iterables, but if anything noteworthy is needed it is described
in this document.
By implementations, I mean the objects returned by the API's functions. All of the implementation classes are move-constructible, not copy-constructible, not assignable. All iterators that work over another iterable are tagged as InputIterators and behave as such.
If you find anything not working as you expect, not compiling when you believe it should, a divergence from the python itertools behavior, or any sort of error, please let me know. The preferable means would be to open an issue on GitHub. If you want to talk about an issue that you don't feel would be appropriate as a GitHub issue (or you just don't want to open one), you can email me directly with whatever code you have that describes the problem; I've been pretty responsive in the past. If I believe you are "misusing" the library, I'll try to put the blame on myself for being unclear in this document and take the steps to clarify it. So please, contact me with any concerns, I'm open to feedback.
The library functions create and return objects that are properly templated on the iterable they are passed. These exact names of these types or precisely how they are templated is unspecified, you should rely on the functions described in this document. If you plan to use these functions in very simple, straight forward means as in the examples on this page, then you will be fine. If you feel like you need to open the header files, then I've probably under-described something, let me know.
The rules are pretty simple, and the library can be largely used without knowledge of them. Let's take an example
std::vector<int> vec{2,4,6,8};
for (auto&& p : enumerate(vec)) { /* ... */ }
In this case, enumerate
will return an object that has bound a reference to
vec
. No copies are produced here, neither of vec
nor of the elements it
holds.
If an rvalue was passed to enumerate, binding a reference would be unsafe. Consider:
for (auto&& p : enumerate(std::vector<int>{2,4,6,8})) { /* ... */ }
Instead, enumerate
will return an object that has the temporary moved into
it. That is, the returned object will contain a std::vector<int>
rather than
just a reference to one. This may seem like a contrived example, but it matters
when enumerate
is passed the result of a function call like enumerate(f())
,
or, more obviously, something like enumerate(zip(a, b))
. The object returned
from zip
must be moved into the enumerate
object. As a more specific
result, itertools can be mixed and nested.
Wherever it makes sense, I've implemented the "pipe" operator that has become common in similar libraries. When the syntax is available, it is done by pulling out the iterable from the call and placing it before the tool. For example:
filter(pred, seq); // regular call
seq | filter(pred); // pipe-style
enumerate(seq); // regular call
seq | enumerate; // pipe-style.
The following tools support pipe. The remaining I left out because although some of them have multiple reasonable versions, it wasn't obvious to me how I would expect them to behave:
- accumulate
- chain.from_iterable
- chunked
- batched
- combinations
- combinations_with_replacement
- cycle
- dropwhile
- enumerate
- filter
- filterfalse
- groupby
- imap
- permutations
- powerset
- reversed
- slice
- sliding_window
- sorted
- starmap
- takewhile
- unique_everseen (*only without custom hash and equality callables)
- unique_justseen
I don't personally care for the piping style, but it seemed to be desired by the users.
Uses an underlying iterator to achieve the same effect of the python range
function. range
can be used in three different ways:
Only the stopping point is provided. Prints 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
for (auto i : range(10)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
The start and stop are both provided. Prints 10 11 12 13 14
for (auto i : range(10, 15)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
The start, stop, and step are all provided. Prints 20 22 24 26 28
for (auto i : range(20, 30, 2)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Negative values are allowed as well. Prints 2 1 0 -1 -2
for (auto i : range(2, -3, -1)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
A step size of 0 results in an empty range (Python's raises an exception). The following prints nothing
for (auto i : range(0, 10, 0)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
In addition to normal integer range operations, doubles and other numeric types are supported through the template
Prints: 5.0 5.5 6.0
... 9.5
for(auto i : range(5.0, 10.0, 0.5)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Implementation Note: Typical ranges have their current value incremented by
the step size repeatedly (value += step
). Floating point range value are
recomputed at each step to avoid accumulating floating point inaccuracies
(value = start + (step * steps_taken
). The result of the latter is a bit
slower but more accurate.
range
also supports the following operations:
.size()
to get the number of elements in the range (not enabled for floating point ranges).- Accessors for
.start()
,.stop()
, and.step()
. - Indexing. Given a range
r
,r[n]
is then
th element in the range.
Continually "yields" containers similar to pairs. They are structs with
the index in .first
, and the element in .second
, and also work with structured
binding declarations.
Usage appears as:
vector<int> vec{2, 4, 6, 8};
for (auto&& [i, e] : enumerate(vec)) {
cout << i << ": " << e << '\n';
}
Called as filter(predicate, iterable)
. The predicate can be any callable.
filter
will only yield values that are true under the predicate.
Prints values greater than 4: 5 6 7 8
vector<int> vec{1, 5, 4, 0, 6, 7, 3, 0, 2, 8, 3, 2, 1};
for (auto&& i : filter([] (int i) { return i > 4; }, vec)) {
cout << i <<'\n';
}
If no predicate is passed, the elements themselves are tested for truth
Prints only non-zero values.
for(auto&& i : filter(vec)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Similar to filter, but only prints values that are false under the predicate.
Prints values not greater than 4: 1 4 3 2 3 2 1
vector<int> vec{1, 5, 4, 0, 6, 7, 3, 0, 2, 8, 3, 2, 1};
for (auto&& i : filterfalse([] (int i) { return i > 4; }, vec)) {
cout << i <<'\n';
}
If no predicate is passed, the elements themselves are tested for truth.
Prints only zero values.
for(auto&& i : filterfalse(vec)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: Underlying values must be copy-constructible.
This is a filter adaptor that only generates values that have never been seen before.
Prints 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
vector<int> v {1,2,3,4,3,2,1,5,6,7,7,8,9,8,9,6};
for (auto&& i : unique_everseen(v)) {
cout << i << ' ';
}
unique_everseen
uses an undordered_set
so it needs hashable elements. For
types that don't work with std::hash
or std::equal_to
, unique_everseen
also provides an overload taking a hash callable and an equality callable.
This does not work with the pipe syntax.
vector<Widget> v { /* ... */ };
for (auto&& w : unique_everseen(v, WidgetHash{}, WidgetEq{})) {
cout << w.name() << ' ';
}
Another filter adaptor that only omits consecutive duplicates.
Prints 1 2 3 4 3 2 1
Example Usage:
vector<int> v {1,1,1,2,2,3,3,3,4,3,2,1,1,1};
for (auto&& i : unique_justseen(v)) {
cout << i << ' ';
}
If elements cannot be directly compared with equality, you can pass in a key callable.
vector<Person> v { /* ... */ };
for (auto&& p : unique_justseen(v, [] (const Person& p) { return p.name; }))
cout << p.name() << ' ' << p.age() << '\n';
}
Yields elements from an iterable until the first element that is false under the predicate is encountered.
Prints 1 2 3 4
. (5 is false under the predicate)
vector<int> ivec{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1};
for (auto&& i : takewhile([] (int i) {return i < 5;}, ivec)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Yields all elements after and including the first element that is true under the predicate.
Prints 5 6 7 1 2
vector<int> ivec{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 1, 2};
for (auto&& i : dropwhile([] (int i) {return i < 5;}, ivec)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator
Repeatedly produces all values of an iterable. The loop will be infinite, so a
break
or other control flow structure is necessary to exit.
Prints 1 2 3
repeatedly until some_condition
is true
vector<int> vec{1, 2, 3};
for (auto&& i : cycle(vec)) {
cout << i << '\n';
if (some_condition) {
break;
}
}
Repeatedly produces a single argument forever, or a given number of times.
repeat
will bind a reference when passed an lvalue and move when given
an rvalue. It will then yield a reference to the same item until completion.
The below prints 1
five times.
for (auto&& e : repeat(1, 5)) {
cout << e << '\n';
}
The below prints 2
forever
for (auto&& e : repeat(2)) {
cout << e << '\n';
}
Effectively a range
without a stopping point.
count()
with no arguments will start counting from 0 with a positive
step of 1.
count(i)
will start counting from i
with a positive step of 1.
count(i, st)
will start counting from i
with a step of st
.
Technical limitations: Unlike Python which can use its long integer
types when needed, count()
would eventually exceed the
maximum possible value for its type (or minimum with a negative step).
count
is actually implemented as a range
with the stopping point
being the std::numeric_limits<T>::max()
for the integral type (long
by default)
The below will print 0 1 2
... etc
for (auto&& i : count()) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: If the Input's iterator's operator*()
returns
a reference, the reference must remain valid after the iterator is incremented.
Roughly equivalent to requiring the Input have a ForwardIterator.
Separate an iterable into groups sharing a common key. The following example creates a new group whenever a string of a different length is encountered.
vector<string> vec = {
"hi", "ab", "ho",
"abc", "def",
"abcde", "efghi"
};
for (auto&& gb : groupby(vec, [] (const string &s) {return s.length(); })) {
cout << "key: " << gb.first << '\n';
cout << "content: ";
for (auto&& s : gb.second) {
cout << s << " ";
}
cout << '\n';
}
Note: Just like Python's itertools.groupby
, this doesn't do any sorting.
It just iterates through, making a new group each time there is a key change.
Thus, if the group is unsorted, the same key may appear multiple times.
Takes a sequence of tuple-like objects (anything that works with std::get
)
and unpacks each object into individual arguments for each function call.
The below example takes a vector
of pairs
of ints, and passes them
to a function expecting two ints, with the elements of the pair
being
the first and second arguments to the function.
vector<pair<int, int>> v = {{2, 3}, {5, 2}, {3, 4}}; // {base, exponent}
for (auto&& i : starmap([](int b, int e){return pow(b, e);}, v)) {
// ...
}
starmap
can also work over a tuple-like object of tuple-like objects even
when the contained objects are different as long as the functor works with
multiple types of calls. For example, a Callable
struct with overloads
for its operator()
will work as long as all overloads have the same
return type
struct Callable {
int operator()(int i) const;
int operator()(int i, char c) const;
int operator()(double d, int i, char c) const;
};
This will work with a tuple of mixed types
auto t = make_tuple(
make_tuple(5), // first form
make_pair(3, 'c'), // second
make_tuple(1.0, 1, '1')); // third
for (auto&& i : starmap(Callable{}, t)) {
// ...
}
Additional Requirements: Type return from functor (with reference removed) must be assignable.
Differs from std::accumulate
(which in my humble opinion should be named
std::reduce
or std::foldl
). It is similar to a functional reduce where one
can see all of the intermediate results. By default, it keeps a running sum.
Prints: 1 3 6 10 15
for (auto&& i : accumulate(range(1, 6))) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
A second, optional argument may provide an alternative binary function
to compute results. The following example multiplies the numbers, rather
than adding them.
Prints: 1 2 6 24 120
for (auto&& i : accumulate(range(1, 6), std::multiplies<int>{})) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Note: The intermediate result type must support default construction and assignment.
Takes an arbitrary number of ranges of different types and efficiently iterates over them in parallel (so an iterator to each container is incremented simultaneously). When you dereference an iterator to "zipped" range you get a tuple of the elements the iterators were holding.
Example usage:
array<int,4> iseq{{1,2,3,4}};
vector<float> fseq{1.2,1.4,12.3,4.5,9.9};
vector<string> sseq{"i","like","apples","a lot","dude"};
array<double,5> dseq{{1.2,1.2,1.2,1.2,1.2}};
for (auto&& [i, f, s, d] : zip(iseq, fseq, sseq, dseq)) {
cout << i << ' ' << f << ' ' << s << ' ' << d << '\n';
f = 2.2f; // modifies the underlying 'fseq' sequence
}
Terminates on the longest sequence instead of the shortest.
Repeatedly yields a tuple of boost::optional<T>
s where T
is the type
yielded by the sequences' respective iterators. Because of its boost
dependency, zip_longest
is not in itertools.hpp
and must be included
separately.
The following loop prints either "Just <item>" or "Nothing" for each
element in each tuple yielded.
vector<int> v1 = {0, 1, 2, 3};
vector<int> v2 = {10, 11};
for (auto&& [x, y] : zip_longest(v1, v2)) {
cout << '{';
if (x) {
cout << "Just " << *x;
} else {
cout << "Nothing";
}
cout << ", ";
if (y) {
cout << "Just " << *y;
} else {
cout << "Nothing";
}
cout << "}\n";
}
The output is:
{Just 0, Just 10}
{Just 1, Just 11}
{Just 2, Nothing}
{Just 3, Nothing}
Takes a function and one or more iterables. The number of iterables must match the number of arguments to the function. Applies the function to each element (or elements) in the iterable(s). Terminates on the shortest sequence.
Prints the squares of the numbers in vec: 1 4 9 16 25
vector<int> vec{1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
for (auto&& i : imap([] (int x) {return x * x;}, vec)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
With more than one sequence, the below adds corresponding elements from
each vector together, printing 11 23 35 47 59 71
vector<int> vec1{1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11};
vector<int> vec2{10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60};
for (auto&& i : imap([] (int x, int y) { return x + y; }, vec1, vec2)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Note: The name imap
is chosen to prevent confusion/collision with
std::map
, and because it is more related to itertools.imap
than
the python builtin map
.
Yields only the values corresponding to true in the selectors iterable. Terminates on the shortest sequence.
Prints 2 6
vector<int> ivec{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6};
vector<bool> bvec{false, true, false, false, false, true};
for (auto&& i : compress(ivec, bvec) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator
Allows iteration over a sequence in sorted order. sorted
does
not produce a new sequence, copy elements, or modify the original
sequence. It only provides a way to iterate over existing elements.
sorted
also takes an optional second
comparator
argument. If not provided, defaults to std::less
.
Iterables passed to sorted are required to have an iterator with
an operator*() const
member.
The below outputs 0 1 2 3 4
.
unordered_set<int> nums{4, 0, 2, 1, 3};
for (auto&& i : sorted(nums)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: The underlying iterators of all containers'
operator*
must have the exact same type
This can chain any set of ranges together as long as their iterators dereference to the same type.
vector<int> empty{};
vector<int> vec1{1,2,3,4,5,6};
array<int,4> arr1{{7,8,9,10}};
for (auto&& i : chain(empty,vec1,arr1)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Similar to chain, but rather than taking a variadic number of iterables, it takes an iterable of iterables and chains the contained iterables together. A simple example is shown below using a vector of vectors to represent a 2d ragged array, and prints it in row-major order.
vector<vector<int>> matrix = {
{1, 2, 3},
{4, 5},
{6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12}
};
for (auto&& i : chain.from_iterable(matrix)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: Input must be compatible with std::rbegin()
and
std::rend()
Iterates over elements of a sequence in reverse order.
for (auto&& i : reversed(a)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Returns selected elements from a range, parameters are start, stop and step. the range returned is [start,stop) where you only take every step element
This outputs 0 3 6 9 12
vector<int> a{0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13};
for (auto&& i : slice(a,0,15,3)) {
cout << i << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator
Takes a section from a range and increments the whole section. If the
window size is larger than the length of the input, the sliding_window
will
yield nothing (begin == end).
Example:
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
take a section of size 4, output is:
1 2 3 4
2 3 4 5
3 4 5 6
4 5 6 7
5 6 7 8
6 7 8 9
Example Usage:
vector<int> v = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9};
for (auto&& sec : sliding_window(v,4)) {
for (auto&& i : sec) {
cout << i << ' ';
i.get() = 90;
}
cout << '\n';
}
chunked will yield subsequent chunks of an iterable in blocks of a specified size. The final chunk may be shorter than the rest if the chunk size given does not evenly divide the length of the iterable.
Example usage:
vector<int> v {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9};
for (auto&& sec : chunked(v,4)) {
for (auto&& i : sec) {
cout << i << ' ';
}
cout << '\n';
}
The above prints:
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9
batched will yield a given number N of batches containing subsequent elements from an iterable, assuming the iterable contains at least N elements. The size of each batch is immaterial, but the implementation guarantees that no two batches will differ in size by more than 1.
Example usage:
vector<int> v {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9};
for (auto&& sec : batched(v,4)) {
for (auto&& i : sec) {
cout << i << ' ';
}
cout << '\n';
}
The above prints:
1 2 3
4 5
6 7
8 9
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator
Generates the cartesian product of the given ranges put together.
Example usage:
vector<int> v1{1,2,3};
vector<int> v2{7,8};
vector<string> v3{"the","cat"};
vector<string> v4{"hi","what's","up","dude"};
for (auto&& [a, b, c, d] : product(v1,v2,v3,v4)) {
cout << a << ", " << b << ", " << c << ", " << d << '\n';
}
Product also accepts a "repeat" as a template argument. Currently this is the only way to do repeats. If you are reading this and need product(seq, 3)
instead of product<3>(seq)
please open an issue.
Example usage:
std::string s = "abc";
// equivalent of product(s, s, s);
for (auto&& t : product<3>(s)) {
// ...
}
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator
Generates n length unique sequences of the input range.
Example usage:
vector<int> v = {1,2,3,4,5};
for (auto&& i : combinations(v,3)) {
for (auto&& j : i ) cout << j << " ";
cout << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator
Like combinations, but with replacement of each element. The below is printed by the loop that follows:
{A, A}
{A, B}
{A, C}
{B, B}
{B, C}
{C, C}
for (auto&& v : combinations_with_replacement(s, 2)) {
cout << '{' << v[0] << ", " << v[1] << "}\n";
}
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator. Iterator must
have an operator*() const
.
Generates all the permutations of a range using std::next_permutation
.
Example usage:
vector<int> v = {1,2,3,4,5};
for (auto&& vec : permutations(v)) {
for (auto&& i : vec) {
cout << i << ' ';
}
cout << '\n';
}
Additional Requirements: Input must have a ForwardIterator
Generates every possible subset of a set, runs in O(2^n).
Example usage:
vector<int> vec {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9};
for (auto&& v : powerset(vec)) {
for (auto&& i : v) {
cout << i << " ";
}
cout << '\n';
}