key_iterator Class
class QHash::key_iteratorThe QHash::key_iterator class provides an STL-style const iterator for QHash keys. More...
Public Functions
QHash<Key, T>::const_iterator | base() const |
bool | operator!=(QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator other) const |
const Key & | operator*() const |
QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator & | operator++() |
QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator | operator++(int) |
const Key * | operator->() const |
bool | operator==(QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator other) const |
Detailed Description
QHash::key_iterator is essentially the same as QHash::const_iterator with the difference that operator*() and operator->() return a key instead of a value.
For most uses QHash::iterator and QHash::const_iterator should be used, you can easily access the key by calling QHash::iterator::key():
for (auto it = hash.cbegin(), end = hash.cend(); it != end; ++it) { cout << "The key: " << it.key() << endl; cout << "The value: " << qPrintable(it.value()) << endl; cout << "Also the value: " << qPrintable(*it) << endl; }
However, to have interoperability between QHash's keys and STL-style algorithms we need an iterator that dereferences to a key instead of a value. With QHash::key_iterator we can apply an algorithm to a range of keys without having to call QHash::keys(), which is inefficient as it costs one QHash iteration and memory allocation to create a temporary QList.
// Inefficient, keys() is expensive QList<int> keys = hash.keys(); int numPrimes = std::count_if(keys.cbegin(), keys.cend(), isPrimeNumber); qDeleteAll(hash2.keys()); // Efficient, no memory allocation needed int numPrimes = std::count_if(hash.keyBegin(), hash.keyEnd(), isPrimeNumber); qDeleteAll(hash2.keyBegin(), hash2.keyEnd());
QHash::key_iterator is const, it's not possible to modify the key.
The default QHash::key_iterator constructor creates an uninitialized iterator. You must initialize it using a QHash function like QHash::keyBegin() or QHash::keyEnd().
Warning: Iterators on implicitly shared containers do not work exactly like STL-iterators. You should avoid copying a container while iterators are active on that container. For more information, read Implicit sharing iterator problem.
See also QHash::const_iterator and QHash::iterator.
Member Function Documentation
[noexcept]
QHash<Key, T>::const_iterator key_iterator::base() const
Returns the underlying const_iterator this key_iterator is based on.
[noexcept]
bool key_iterator::operator!=(QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator other) const
Returns true
if other points to a different item than this iterator; otherwise returns false
.
See also operator==().
[noexcept]
const Key &key_iterator::operator*() const
Returns the current item's key.
[noexcept]
QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator &key_iterator::operator++()
The prefix ++ operator (++i
) advances the iterator to the next item in the hash and returns an iterator to the new current item.
Calling this function on QHash::keyEnd() leads to undefined results.
[noexcept]
QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator key_iterator::operator++(int)
This is an overloaded function.
The postfix ++ operator (i++
) advances the iterator to the next item in the hash and returns an iterator to the previous item.
[noexcept]
const Key *key_iterator::operator->() const
Returns a pointer to the current item's key.
[noexcept]
bool key_iterator::operator==(QHash<Key, T>::key_iterator other) const
Returns true
if other points to the same item as this iterator; otherwise returns false
.
See also operator!=().