| Author: | David Abrahams, Jeremy Siek, Thomas Witt | 
|---|---|
| Contact: | dave@boost-consulting.com, jsiek@osl.iu.edu, witt@ive.uni-hannover.de | 
| Organization: | Boost Consulting, Indiana University Open Systems Lab, University of Hanover Institute for Transport Railway Operation and Construction | 
| Date: | 2006-09-11 | 
| Copyright: | Copyright David Abrahams, Jeremy Siek, and Thomas Witt 2003. | 
| abstract: | The reverse iterator adaptor iterates through the adapted iterator range in the opposite direction. | 
|---|
Table of Contents
template <class Iterator>
class reverse_iterator
{
public:
  typedef iterator_traits<Iterator>::value_type value_type;
  typedef iterator_traits<Iterator>::reference reference;
  typedef iterator_traits<Iterator>::pointer pointer;
  typedef iterator_traits<Iterator>::difference_type difference_type;
  typedef /* see below */ iterator_category;
  reverse_iterator() {}
  explicit reverse_iterator(Iterator x) ;
  template<class OtherIterator>
  reverse_iterator(
      reverse_iterator<OtherIterator> const& r
    , typename enable_if_convertible<OtherIterator, Iterator>::type* = 0 // exposition
  );
  Iterator const& base() const;
  reference operator*() const;
  reverse_iterator& operator++();
  reverse_iterator& operator--();
private:
  Iterator m_iterator; // exposition
};
If Iterator models Random Access Traversal Iterator and Readable Lvalue Iterator, then iterator_category is convertible to random_access_iterator_tag. Otherwise, if Iterator models Bidirectional Traversal Iterator and Readable Lvalue Iterator, then iterator_category is convertible to bidirectional_iterator_tag. Otherwise, iterator_category is convertible to input_iterator_tag.
Iterator must be a model of Bidirectional Traversal Iterator. The type iterator_traits<Iterator>::reference must be the type of *i, where i is an object of type Iterator.
A specialization of reverse_iterator models the same iterator traversal and iterator access concepts modeled by its Iterator argument. In addition, it may model old iterator concepts specified in the following table:
| If I models | then reverse_iterator<I> models | 
|---|---|
| Readable Lvalue Iterator, Bidirectional Traversal Iterator | Bidirectional Iterator | 
| Writable Lvalue Iterator, Bidirectional Traversal Iterator | Mutable Bidirectional Iterator | 
| Readable Lvalue Iterator, Random Access Traversal Iterator | Random Access Iterator | 
| Writable Lvalue Iterator, Random Access Traversal Iterator | Mutable Random Access Iterator | 
reverse_iterator<X> is interoperable with reverse_iterator<Y> if and only if X is interoperable with Y.
In addition to the operations required by the concepts modeled by reverse_iterator, reverse_iterator provides the following operations.
reverse_iterator();
| Requires: | Iterator must be Default Constructible. | 
|---|---|
| Effects: | Constructs an instance of reverse_iterator with m_iterator default constructed. | 
explicit reverse_iterator(Iterator x);
| Effects: | Constructs an instance of reverse_iterator with m_iterator copy constructed from x. | 
|---|
template<class OtherIterator>
reverse_iterator(
    reverse_iterator<OtherIterator> const& r
  , typename enable_if_convertible<OtherIterator, Iterator>::type* = 0 // exposition
);
| Requires: | OtherIterator is implicitly convertible to Iterator. | 
|---|---|
| Effects: | Constructs instance of reverse_iterator whose m_iterator subobject is constructed from y.base(). | 
Iterator const& base() const;
| Returns: | m_iterator | 
|---|
reference operator*() const;
| Effects: | 
|---|
Iterator tmp = m_iterator; return *--tmp;
reverse_iterator& operator++();
| Effects: | --m_iterator | 
|---|---|
| Returns: | *this | 
reverse_iterator& operator--();
| Effects: | ++m_iterator | 
|---|---|
| Returns: | *this | 
template <class BidirectionalIterator> reverse_iterator<BidirectionalIterator>n make_reverse_iterator(BidirectionalIterator x);
| Returns: | An instance of reverse_iterator<BidirectionalIterator> with a current constructed from x. | 
|---|
The following example prints an array of characters in reverse order using reverse_iterator.
char letters_[] = "hello world!";
const int N = sizeof(letters_)/sizeof(char) - 1;
typedef char* base_iterator;
base_iterator letters(letters_);
std::cout << "original sequence of letters:\t\t\t" << letters_ << std::endl;
boost::reverse_iterator<base_iterator>
  reverse_letters_first(letters + N),
  reverse_letters_last(letters);
std::cout << "sequence in reverse order:\t\t\t";
std::copy(reverse_letters_first, reverse_letters_last,
          std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout));
std::cout << std::endl;
std::cout << "sequence in double-reversed (normal) order:\t";
std::copy(boost::make_reverse_iterator(reverse_letters_last),
          boost::make_reverse_iterator(reverse_letters_first),
          std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout));
std::cout << std::endl;
The output is:
original sequence of letters: hello world! sequence in reverse order: !dlrow olleh sequence in double-reversed (normal) order: hello world!
The source code for this example can be found here.