Obsolete Members for <QtAlgorithms>

The following members of class <QtAlgorithms> are obsolete. They are provided to keep old source code working. We strongly advise against using them in new code.

Functions

(obsolete) RandomAccessIterator qBinaryFind(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value)
(obsolete) RandomAccessIterator qBinaryFind(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value, LessThan lessThan)
(obsolete) Container::const_iterator qBinaryFind(const Container &container, const T &value)
(obsolete) OutputIterator qCopy(InputIterator begin1, InputIterator end1, OutputIterator begin2)
(obsolete) BiIterator2 qCopyBackward(BiIterator1 begin1, BiIterator1 end1, BiIterator2 end2)
(obsolete) void qCount(InputIterator begin, InputIterator end, const T &value, Size &n)
(obsolete) void qCount(const Container &container, const T &value, Size &n)
(obsolete) bool qEqual(InputIterator1 begin1, InputIterator1 end1, InputIterator2 begin2)
(obsolete) void qFill(ForwardIterator begin, ForwardIterator end, const T &value)
(obsolete) void qFill(Container &container, const T &value)
(obsolete) InputIterator qFind(InputIterator begin, InputIterator end, const T &value)
(obsolete) Container::const_iterator qFind(const Container &container, const T &value)
(obsolete) LessThan qGreater()
(obsolete) LessThan qLess()
(obsolete) RandomAccessIterator qLowerBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value)
(obsolete) RandomAccessIterator qLowerBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value, LessThan lessThan)
(obsolete) Container::const_iterator qLowerBound(const Container &container, const T &value)
(obsolete) void qSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end)
(obsolete) void qSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, LessThan lessThan)
(obsolete) void qSort(Container &container)
(obsolete) void qStableSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end)
(obsolete) void qStableSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, LessThan lessThan)
(obsolete) void qStableSort(Container &container)
(obsolete) void qSwap(T &var1, T &var2)
(obsolete) RandomAccessIterator qUpperBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value)
(obsolete) RandomAccessIterator qUpperBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value, LessThan lessThan)
(obsolete) Container::const_iterator qUpperBound(const Container &container, const T &value)

Function Documentation

RandomAccessIterator qBinaryFind(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value)

Use std::binary_search or std::lower_bound instead.

Performs a binary search of the range [begin, end) and returns the position of an occurrence of value. If there are no occurrences of value, returns end.

The items in the range [begin, end) must be sorted in ascending order; see qSort().

If there are many occurrences of the same value, any one of them could be returned. Use qLowerBound() or qUpperBound() if you need finer control.

Example:

QVector<int> vect;
vect << 3 << 3 << 6 << 6 << 6 << 8;

QVector<int>::iterator i =
        qBinaryFind(vect.begin(), vect.end(), 6);
// i == vect.begin() + 2 (or 3 or 4)

This function requires the item type (in the example above, QString) to implement operator<().

See also qLowerBound(), qUpperBound(), and random access iterators.

RandomAccessIterator qBinaryFind(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value, LessThan lessThan)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::binary_search or std::lower_bound instead.

Uses the lessThan function instead of operator<() to compare the items.

Note that the items in the range must be sorted according to the order specified by the lessThan object.

Container::const_iterator qBinaryFind(const Container &container, const T &value)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::binary_search or std::lower_bound instead.

This is the same as qBinaryFind(container.begin(), container.end(), value);

OutputIterator qCopy(InputIterator begin1, InputIterator end1, OutputIterator begin2)

Use std::copy instead.

Copies the items from range [begin1, end1) to range [begin2, ...), in the order in which they appear.

The item at position begin1 is assigned to that at position begin2; the item at position begin1 + 1 is assigned to that at position begin2 + 1; and so on.

Example:

QStringList list;
list << "one" << "two" << "three";

QVector<QString> vect1(3);
qCopy(list.begin(), list.end(), vect1.begin());
// vect: [ "one", "two", "three" ]

QVector<QString> vect2(8);
qCopy(list.begin(), list.end(), vect2.begin() + 2);
// vect: [ "", "", "one", "two", "three", "", "", "" ]

See also qCopyBackward(), input iterators, and output iterators.

BiIterator2 qCopyBackward(BiIterator1 begin1, BiIterator1 end1, BiIterator2 end2)

Use std::copy_backward instead.

Copies the items from range [begin1, end1) to range [..., end2).

The item at position end1 - 1 is assigned to that at position end2 - 1; the item at position end1 - 2 is assigned to that at position end2 - 2; and so on.

Example:

QStringList list;
list << "one" << "two" << "three";

QVector<QString> vect(5);
qCopyBackward(list.begin(), list.end(), vect.end());
// vect: [ "", "", "one", "two", "three" ]

See also qCopy() and bidirectional iterators.

void qCount(InputIterator begin, InputIterator end, const T &value, Size &n)

Use std::count instead.

Returns the number of occurrences of value in the range [begin, end), which is returned in n. n is never initialized, the count is added to n. It is the caller's responsibility to initialize n.

Example:

QList<int> list;
list << 3 << 3 << 6 << 6 << 6 << 8;

int countOf6 = 0;
qCount(list.begin(), list.end(), 6, countOf6);
// countOf6 == 3

int countOf7 = 0;
qCount(list.begin(), list.end(), 7, countOf7);
// countOf7 == 0

This function requires the item type (in the example above, int) to implement operator==().

See also input iterators.

void qCount(const Container &container, const T &value, Size &n)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::count instead.

Instead of operating on iterators, as in the other overload, this function operates on the specified container to obtain the number of instances of value in the variable passed as a reference in argument n.

bool qEqual(InputIterator1 begin1, InputIterator1 end1, InputIterator2 begin2)

Use std::equal instead.

Compares the items in the range [begin1, end1) with the items in the range [begin2, ...). Returns true if all the items compare equal; otherwise returns false.

Example:

QStringList list;
list << "one" << "two" << "three";

QVector<QString> vect(3);
vect[0] = "one";
vect[1] = "two";
vect[2] = "three";

bool ret1 = qEqual(list.begin(), list.end(), vect.begin());
// ret1 == true

vect[2] = "seven";
bool ret2 = qEqual(list.begin(), list.end(), vect.begin());
// ret2 == false

This function requires the item type (in the example above, QString) to implement operator==().

See also input iterators.

void qFill(ForwardIterator begin, ForwardIterator end, const T &value)

Use std::fill instead.

Fills the range [begin, end) with value.

Example:

QStringList list;
list << "one" << "two" << "three";

qFill(list.begin(), list.end(), "eleven");
// list: [ "eleven", "eleven", "eleven" ]

qFill(list.begin() + 1, list.end(), "six");
// list: [ "eleven", "six", "six" ]

See also qCopy() and forward iterators.

void qFill(Container &container, const T &value)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::fill instead.

This is the same as qFill(container.begin(), container.end(), value);

InputIterator qFind(InputIterator begin, InputIterator end, const T &value)

Use std::find instead.

Returns an iterator to the first occurrence of value in a container in the range [begin, end). Returns end if value isn't found.

Example:

QStringList list;
list << "one" << "two" << "three";

QStringList::iterator i1 = qFind(list.begin(), list.end(), "two");
// i1 == list.begin() + 1

QStringList::iterator i2 = qFind(list.begin(), list.end(), "seventy");
// i2 == list.end()

This function requires the item type (in the example above, QString) to implement operator==().

If the items in the range are in ascending order, you can get faster results by using qLowerBound() or qBinaryFind() instead of qFind().

See also qBinaryFind() and input iterators.

Container::const_iterator qFind(const Container &container, const T &value)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::find instead.

This is the same as qFind(container.constBegin(), container.constEnd(), value);

LessThan qGreater()

Use std::greater instead.

Returns a functional object, or functor, that can be passed to qSort() or qStableSort().

Example:

QList<int> list;
list << 33 << 12 << 68 << 6 << 12;
qSort(list.begin(), list.end(), qGreater<int>());
// list: [ 68, 33, 12, 12, 6 ]

See also qLess<T>().

LessThan qLess()

Use std::less instead.

Returns a functional object, or functor, that can be passed to qSort() or qStableSort().

Example:

QList<int> list;
list << 33 << 12 << 68 << 6 << 12;
qSort(list.begin(), list.end(), qLess<int>());
// list: [ 6, 12, 12, 33, 68 ]

See also qGreater<T>().

RandomAccessIterator qLowerBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value)

Use std::lower_bound instead.

Performs a binary search of the range [begin, end) and returns the position of the first occurrence of value. If no such item is found, returns the position where it should be inserted.

The items in the range [begin, end) must be sorted in ascending order; see qSort().

Example:

QList<int> list;
list << 3 << 3 << 6 << 6 << 6 << 8;

QList<int>::iterator i = qLowerBound(list.begin(), list.end(), 5);
list.insert(i, 5);
// list: [ 3, 3, 5, 6, 6, 6, 8 ]

i = qLowerBound(list.begin(), list.end(), 12);
list.insert(i, 12);
// list: [ 3, 3, 5, 6, 6, 6, 8, 12 ]

This function requires the item type (in the example above, int) to implement operator<().

qLowerBound() can be used in conjunction with qUpperBound() to iterate over all occurrences of the same value:

QVector<int> vect;
vect << 3 << 3 << 6 << 6 << 6 << 8;
QVector<int>::iterator begin6 =
        qLowerBound(vect.begin(), vect.end(), 6);
QVector<int>::iterator end6 =
        qUpperBound(begin6, vect.end(), 6);

QVector<int>::iterator i = begin6;
while (i != end6) {
    *i = 7;
    ++i;
}
// vect: [ 3, 3, 7, 7, 7, 8 ]

See also qUpperBound() and qBinaryFind().

RandomAccessIterator qLowerBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value, LessThan lessThan)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::lower_bound instead.

Uses the lessThan function instead of operator<() to compare the items.

Note that the items in the range must be sorted according to the order specified by the lessThan object.

Container::const_iterator qLowerBound(const Container &container, const T &value)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::lower_bound instead.

For read-only iteration over containers, this function is broadly equivalent to qLowerBound(container.begin(), container.end(), value). However, since it returns a const iterator, you cannot use it to modify the container; for example, to insert items.

void qSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end)

Use std::sort instead.

Sorts the items in range [begin, end) in ascending order using the quicksort algorithm.

Example:

QList<int> list;
list << 33 << 12 << 68 << 6 << 12;
qSort(list.begin(), list.end());
// list: [ 6, 12, 12, 33, 68 ]

The sort algorithm is efficient on large data sets. It operates in linear-logarithmic time, O(n log n).

This function requires the item type (in the example above, int) to implement operator<().

If neither of the two items is "less than" the other, the items are taken to be equal. It is then undefined which one of the two items will appear before the other after the sort.

See also qStableSort() and random access iterators.

void qSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, LessThan lessThan)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::sort instead.

Uses the lessThan function instead of operator<() to compare the items.

For example, here's how to sort the strings in a QStringList in case-insensitive alphabetical order:

bool caseInsensitiveLessThan(const QString &s1, const QString &s2)
{
    return s1.toLower() < s2.toLower();
}

int doSomething()
{
    QStringList list;
    list << "AlPha" << "beTA" << "gamma" << "DELTA";
    qSort(list.begin(), list.end(), caseInsensitiveLessThan);
    // list: [ "AlPha", "beTA", "DELTA", "gamma" ]
}

To sort values in reverse order, pass qGreater<T>() as the lessThan parameter. For example:

QList<int> list;
list << 33 << 12 << 68 << 6 << 12;
qSort(list.begin(), list.end(), qGreater<int>());
// list: [ 68, 33, 12, 12, 6 ]

If neither of the two items is "less than" the other, the items are taken to be equal. It is then undefined which one of the two items will appear before the other after the sort.

An alternative to using qSort() is to put the items to sort in a QMap, using the sort key as the QMap key. This is often more convenient than defining a lessThan function. For example, the following code shows how to sort a list of strings case insensitively using QMap:

QStringList list;
list << "AlPha" << "beTA" << "gamma" << "DELTA";

QMap<QString, QString> map;
foreach (const QString &str, list)
    map.insert(str.toLower(), str);

list = map.values();

See also QMap.

void qSort(Container &container)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::sort instead.

This is the same as qSort(container.begin(), container.end());

void qStableSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end)

Use std::stable_sort instead.

Sorts the items in range [begin, end) in ascending order using a stable sorting algorithm.

If neither of the two items is "less than" the other, the items are taken to be equal. The item that appeared before the other in the original container will still appear first after the sort. This property is often useful when sorting user-visible data.

Example:

QList<int> list;
list << 33 << 12 << 68 << 6 << 12;
qStableSort(list.begin(), list.end());
// list: [ 6, 12, 12, 33, 68 ]

The sort algorithm is efficient on large data sets. It operates in linear-logarithmic time, O(n log n).

This function requires the item type (in the example above, int) to implement operator<().

See also qSort() and random access iterators.

void qStableSort(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, LessThan lessThan)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::stable_sort instead.

Uses the lessThan function instead of operator<() to compare the items.

For example, here's how to sort the strings in a QStringList in case-insensitive alphabetical order:

bool caseInsensitiveLessThan(const QString &s1, const QString &s2)
{
    return s1.toLower() < s2.toLower();
}

int doSomething()
{
    QStringList list;
    list << "AlPha" << "beTA" << "gamma" << "DELTA";
    qStableSort(list.begin(), list.end(), caseInsensitiveLessThan);
    // list: [ "AlPha", "beTA", "DELTA", "gamma" ]
}

Note that earlier versions of Qt allowed using a lessThan function that took its arguments by non-const reference. From 4.3 and on this is no longer possible, the arguments has to be passed by const reference or value.

To sort values in reverse order, pass qGreater<T>() as the lessThan parameter. For example:

QList<int> list;
list << 33 << 12 << 68 << 6 << 12;
qStableSort(list.begin(), list.end(), qGreater<int>());
// list: [ 68, 33, 12, 12, 6 ]

If neither of the two items is "less than" the other, the items are taken to be equal. The item that appeared before the other in the original container will still appear first after the sort. This property is often useful when sorting user-visible data.

void qStableSort(Container &container)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::stable_sort instead.

This is the same as qStableSort(container.begin(), container.end());

void qSwap(T &var1, T &var2)

Use std::swap instead.

Exchanges the values of variables var1 and var2.

Example:

double pi = 3.14;
double e = 2.71;

qSwap(pi, e);
// pi == 2.71, e == 3.14

RandomAccessIterator qUpperBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value)

Use std::upper_bound instead.

Performs a binary search of the range [begin, end) and returns the position of the one-past-the-last occurrence of value. If no such item is found, returns the position where the item should be inserted.

The items in the range [begin, end) must be sorted in ascending order; see qSort().

Example:

QList<int> list;
list << 3 << 3 << 6 << 6 << 6 << 8;

QList<int>::iterator i = qUpperBound(list.begin(), list.end(), 5);
list.insert(i, 5);
// list: [ 3, 3, 5, 6, 6, 6, 8 ]

i = qUpperBound(list.begin(), list.end(), 12);
list.insert(i, 12);
// list: [ 3, 3, 5, 6, 6, 6, 8, 12 ]

This function requires the item type (in the example above, int) to implement operator<().

qUpperBound() can be used in conjunction with qLowerBound() to iterate over all occurrences of the same value:

QVector<int> vect;
vect << 3 << 3 << 6 << 6 << 6 << 8;
QVector<int>::iterator begin6 =
        qLowerBound(vect.begin(), vect.end(), 6);
QVector<int>::iterator end6 =
        qUpperBound(vect.begin(), vect.end(), 6);

QVector<int>::iterator i = begin6;
while (i != end6) {
    *i = 7;
    ++i;
}
// vect: [ 3, 3, 7, 7, 7, 8 ]

See also qLowerBound() and qBinaryFind().

RandomAccessIterator qUpperBound(RandomAccessIterator begin, RandomAccessIterator end, const T &value, LessThan lessThan)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::upper_bound instead.

Uses the lessThan function instead of operator<() to compare the items.

Note that the items in the range must be sorted according to the order specified by the lessThan object.

Container::const_iterator qUpperBound(const Container &container, const T &value)

This is an overloaded function.

Use std::upper_bound instead.

This is the same as qUpperBound(container.begin(), container.end(), value);

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