I can't seem to be able to find an easy simple solution, how to get bidirectional iterator from char *buffer
with defined bufferSize
. I don't want to copy the buffer to std::string
(too expensive), I just want something like std_whatever::buffer_wrapper myWrappedBuffer(myBuffer, mySize);
and then use myWrappedBuffer.begin()
and myWrappedBuffer.end()
in <algorithm>
functions. What is the simplest way to do that? I really don't want to implement the iterator myself. I know there is boost::string_ref
and maybe std::string_view
, but I don't want to use boost just for this and can't use c++17.
char *b=buffer;
This is your beginning iterator.
char *e=buffer+buffersize;
This is your ending iterator.
Plain, garden variety pointers meet all requirements of not just bi-directional, but random access iterators, and can generally be used anywhere any kind of an iterator is required, and they'll work just like one. All (well-written) iterator-based templates will work with pointers just fine.
You can even feed them to std::iterator_traits
, and get meaningful results. Try it yourself and see what happens.