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generate
Prototypetemplate <class ForwardIterator, class Generator> void generate(ForwardIterator first, ForwardIterator last, Generator gen); DescriptionGenerate assigns the result of invoking gen, a function object that takes no arguments, to each element in the range [first, last). [1]DefinitionDefined in the standard header algorithm, and in the nonstandard backward-compatibility header algo.h.Requirements on types
Preconditions
ComplexityLinear. Exactly last - first invocations of gen. [1]ExampleFill a vector with random numbers, using the standard C library function rand.vector<int> V; ... generate(V.begin(), V.end(), rand); Notes[1] The function object gen is invoked for each iterator in the range [first, last), as opposed to just being invoked a single time outside the loop. This distinction is important because a Generator need not return the same result each time it is invoked; it is permitted to read from a file, refer to and modify local state, and so on. [2] The reason that generate requires its argument to be a mutable Forward Iterator, rather than just an Output Iterator, is that it uses a range [first, last) of iterators. There is no sensible way to describe a range of Output Iterators, because it is impossible to compare two Output Iterators for equality. The generate_n algorithm does have an interface that permits use of an Output Iterator. See alsocopy, fill, fill_n, generate_n, iotaCopyright © 1999 Silicon Graphics, Inc. All Rights Reserved. TrademarkInformation
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