std::unordered_set<Key,Hash,KeyEqual,Allocator>::merge

From cppreference.com

 
 
Containers library
Sequence
(C++11)
Associative
Unordered associative
Adaptors
Views
(C++20)
 
 
template<class H2, class P2>
void merge( std::unordered_set<Key, H2, P2, Allocator>& source );
(1) (since C++17)
template<class H2, class P2>
void merge( std::unordered_set<Key, H2, P2, Allocator>&& source );
(2) (since C++17)
template<class H2, class P2>
void merge( std::unordered_multiset<Key, H2, P2, Allocator>& source );
(3) (since C++17)
template<class H2, class P2>
void merge( std::unordered_multiset<Key, H2, P2, Allocator>&& source );
(4) (since C++17)

Attempts to extract ("splice") each element in source and insert it into *this using the hash function and key equality predicate of *this. If there is an element in *this with key equivalent to the key of an element from source, then that element is not extracted from source. No elements are copied or moved, only the internal pointers of the container nodes are repointed. All pointers and references to the transferred elements remain valid, but now refer into *this, not into source. Iterators referring to the transferred elements and all iterators referring to *this are invalidated. Iterators to elements remaining in source remain valid.

The behavior is undefined if get_allocator() != source.get_allocator().

Parameters

source - compatible container to transfer the nodes from

Return value

(none)


Complexity

Average case O(N), worst case O(N*size()+N), where N is source.size().

Example

#include <iostream>
#include <unordered_set>
 
// print out a container
template <class Os, class K>
Os& operator<<(Os& os, const std::unordered_set<K>& v) {
    os << '[' << v.size() << "] {";
    bool o{};
    for (const auto& e : v)
        os << (o ? ", " : (o = 1, " ")) << e;
    return os << " }\n";
}
 
int main()
{
    std::unordered_set<char>
        p{ 'C', 'B', 'B', 'A' }, 
        q{ 'E', 'D', 'E', 'C' };
 
    std::cout << "p: " << p << "q: " << q;
 
    p.merge(q);
 
    std::cout << "p.merge(q);\n" << "p: " << p << "q: " << q;
}

Possible output:

p: [3] { A, B, C }
q: [3] { C, D, E }
p.merge(q);
p: [5] { E, D, A, B, C }
q: [1] { C }

See also

(C++17)
extracts nodes from the container
(public member function)
(C++11)
inserts elements or nodes (since C++17)
(public member function)