I think that introducing Multi-Pass Input Iterator isn't the right solution. Do you also want to define Multi-Pass Bidirectionnal Iterator and Multi-Pass Random Access Iterator ? I don't, definitly. It only confuses the issue. The problem lies into the existing hierarchy of iterators, which mixes movabillity, modifiabillity and lvalue-ness, and these are clearly independant.
The terms Forward, Bidirectionnal and Random Access are about movabillity and shouldn't be used to mean anything else. In a completly orthogonal way, iterators can be immutable, mutable, or neither. Lvalueness of iterators is also orthogonal with immutabillity. With these clean concepts, your Multi-Pass Input Iterator is just called a Forward Iterator.
Other translations are:
std::Forward Iterator -> ForwardIterator & Lvalue Iterator
std::Bidirectionnal Iterator -> Bidirectionnal Iterator & Lvalue Iterator
std::Random Access Iterator -> Random Access Iterator & Lvalue Iterator
Note that in practice the only operation not allowed on my Forward Iterator which is allowed on std::Forward Iterator is &*it. I think that &* is rarely needed in generic code.
reply by Jeremy Siek:
The above analysis by Valentin is right on. Of course, there is
the problem with backward compatibility. The current STL implementations
are based on the old definition of Forward Iterator. The right course
of action is to get Forward Iterator, etc. changed in the C++ standard.
Once that is done we can drop Multi-Pass Input Iterator.
Copyright © 2000 | Jeremy Siek, Univ.of Notre Dame ([email protected]) |