All I need is to know if something exists and how many times it exist. I will iterate over the existent things and query how much of that exists.
My implementation so fa
Three possible approaches:
std::unique
to create a temporary collection of unique values. This might make the code a little more readable, but less efficient.std::multiset::upper_bound
rather than increments: for( auto each = a.begin(); each != a.end(); each=a.upper_bound(*each))
- that way you don't need the if
check insider your loop, plus it is guaranteed to be logarithmic in size. Pretty cool (didn't know that before I looked it up). For the following suggestion, all credit goes to @MarkRansom: Using std::upper_bound
from <algorithm>
, you can specify a range in which to look for the upper bound. In your case, you already have a good candidate for the start of that range, so this method is likely to be more efficient, depending on the implementation in your standard library.map<thing, unsingned>
or even unordered_map<thing,unsigned>
where the unsigned
just keeps track of the number of equivalent thing
s you have. That implies rewriting your insertion/deletion code though.