std::vector to string with custom delimiter

2019-01-15 12:53发布

问题:

I would like to copy the contents of a vector to one long string with a custom delimiter. So far, I've tried:

// .h
string getLabeledPointsString(const string delimiter=",");
// .cpp
string Gesture::getLabeledPointsString(const string delimiter) {
    vector<int> x = getLabeledPoints();
    stringstream  s;
    copy(x.begin(),x.end(), ostream_iterator<int>(s,delimiter));
    return s.str();
}

but I get

no matching function for call to ‘std::ostream_iterator<int, char, std::char_traits<char> >::ostream_iterator(std::stringstream&, const std::string&)’

I've tried with charT* but I get

error iso c++ forbids declaration of charT with no type

Then I tried using char and ostream_iterator<int>(s,&delimiter) but I get strange characters in the string.

Can anyone help me make sense of what the compiler is expecting here?

回答1:

Use delimiter.c_str() as the delimiter:

copy(x.begin(),x.end(), ostream_iterator<int>(s,delimiter.c_str()));

That way, you get a const char* pointing to the string, which is what ostream_operator expects from your std::string.



回答2:

C++11:

vector<string> x = {"1", "2", "3"};
string s = std::accumulate(std::begin(x), std::end(x), string(),
                                [](string &ss, string &s)
                                {
                                    return ss.empty() ? s : ss + "," + s;
                                });


回答3:

Another way to do it:

#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
#include <sstream>
using namespace std;

template <typename T>
string join(const T& v, const string& delim) {
    ostringstream s;
    for (const auto& i : v) {
        if (&i != &v[0]) {
            s << delim;
        }
        s << i;
    }
    return s.str();
}

int main() {
    cout << join(vector<int>({1, 2, 3, 4, 5}), ",") << endl;
}

(c++11 range-based for loop and 'auto' though)



回答4:

std::string Gesture::getLabeledPointsString(const std::string delimiter) {
  return boost::join(getLabeledPoints(), delimiter);
}

I am not that convinced about introducting getLabeledPointsString at this point ;)



回答5:

This is an extension to the two answers already provided above as run-time performance seemed to be a theme in the comments. I would have added it as comments, but I do not have that privilege yet.

I tested 2 implementations for run-time performance using Visual Studio 2015:

Using stringstream:

std::stringstream result;
auto it = vec.begin();
result << (unsigned short)*it++;
for (; it != vec.end(); it++) {
    result << delimiter;
    result << (unsigned short)*it;
}
return result.str();

Using accumulate:

std::string result = std::accumulate(std::next(vec.begin()), vec.end(),
    std::to_string(vec[0]),
    [&delimiter](std::string& a, uint8_t b) {
    return a + delimiter+ std::to_string(b);
});
return result;

Release build run-time performance was close with a couple subtleties.

The accumulate implementation was slightly faster (20-50ms, ~10-30% of the overall run-time (~180ms) on 1000 iterations over a 256 element vector). However, the accumulate implementation was only faster when the a parameter to the lambda function was passed by reference. Passing the a parameter by value resulted in a similar run-time difference favoring the stringstream implementation. The accumulate implementation also improved some when the result string was returned directly rather than assigned to a local variable that was immediately returned. YMMV with other C++ compilers.

The Debug build was 5-10 times slower using accumulate so I think the extra string creation noted in several comments above is resolved by the optimizer.

I was looking at a specific implementation using a vector of uint8_t values. The full test code follows:

#include <vector>
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
#include <numeric>
#include <chrono>

using namespace std;
typedef vector<uint8_t> uint8_vec_t;

string concat_stream(const uint8_vec_t& vec, string& delim = string(" "));
string concat_accumulate(const uint8_vec_t& vec, string& delim = string(" "));

string concat_stream(const uint8_vec_t& vec, string& delimiter)
{
    stringstream result;

    auto it = vec.begin();
    result << (unsigned short)*it++;
    for (; it != vec.end(); it++) {
        result << delimiter;
        result << (unsigned short)*it;
    }
    return result.str();
}

string concat_accumulate(const uint8_vec_t& vec, string& delimiter)
{
    return accumulate(next(vec.begin()), vec.end(),
        to_string(vec[0]),
        [&delimiter](string& a, uint8_t b) {
        return a + delimiter + to_string(b);
    });
}

int main()
{
    const int elements(256);
    const int iterations(1000);

    uint8_vec_t test(elements);
    iota(test.begin(), test.end(), 0);

    int i;
    auto stream_start = chrono::steady_clock::now();
    string join_with_stream;
    for (i = 0; i < iterations; ++i) {
        join_with_stream = concat_stream(test);
    }
    auto stream_end = chrono::steady_clock::now();

    auto acc_start = chrono::steady_clock::now();
    string join_with_acc;
    for (i = 0; i < iterations; ++i) {
        join_with_acc = concat_accumulate(test);
    }
    auto acc_end = chrono::steady_clock::now();

    cout << "Stream Results:" << endl;
    cout << "    elements: " << elements << endl;
    cout << "    iterations: " << iterations << endl;
    cout << "    runtime: " << chrono::duration<double, milli>(stream_end - stream_start).count() << " ms" << endl;
    cout << "    result: " << join_with_stream << endl;

    cout << "Accumulate Results:" << endl;
    cout << "    elements: " << elements << endl;
    cout << "    iterations: " << iterations << endl;
    cout << "    runtime: " << chrono::duration<double, milli>(acc_end - acc_start).count() << " ms" << endl;
    cout << "    result:" << join_with_acc << endl;

    return 0;
}


回答6:

int array[ 6 ] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 };
std::vector< int > a( array, array + 6 );
stringstream dataString; 
ostream_iterator<int> output_iterator(dataString, ";"); // here ";" is delimiter 
std::copy(a.begin(), a.end(), output_iterator);
cout<<dataString.str()<<endl;

output= 1;2;3;4;5;6;



回答7:

string join(const vector<string> & v, const string & delimiter = ",") {
    string out;
    if (auto i = v.begin(), e = v.end(); i != e) {
        out += *i++;
        for (; i != e; ++i) out.append(delimiter).append(*i);
    }
    return out;
}

A few points:

  • you don't need an extra conditional to avoid an extra trailing delimiter
  • make sure you don't crash when the vector is empty
  • don't make a bunch of temporaries (e.g. don't do this: x = x + d + y)


回答8:

faster variant:

vector<string> x = {"1", "2", "3"};
string res;
res.reserve(16);

std::accumulate(std::begin(x), std::end(x), 0,
                [&res](int &, string &s)
                {
                    if (!res.empty())
                    {
                        res.append(",");
                    }
                    res.append(s);
                    return 0;
               });

it doesn't create interim strings, but just allocate memory once for the whole string result and appends each elem to the end of &res