I have been trying to find the intersection between two std::set
in C++, but I keep getting an error.
I created a small sample test for this
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include <algorithm>
#include <set>
using namespace std;
int main() {
set<int> s1;
set<int> s2;
s1.insert(1);
s1.insert(2);
s1.insert(3);
s1.insert(4);
s2.insert(1);
s2.insert(6);
s2.insert(3);
s2.insert(0);
set_intersection(s1.begin(),s1.end(),s2.begin(),s2.end());
return 0;
}
The latter program does not generate any output, but I expect to have a new set (let's call it s3
) with the following values:
s3 = [ 1 , 3 ]
Instead, I'm getting the error:
test.cpp: In function ‘int main()’:
test.cpp:19: error: no matching function for call to ‘set_intersection(std::_Rb_tree_const_iterator<int>, std::_Rb_tree_const_iterator<int>, std::_Rb_tree_const_iterator<int>, std::_Rb_tree_const_iterator<int>)’
What I understand out of this error, is that there's no definition in set_intersection
that accepts Rb_tree_const_iterator<int>
as a parameter.
Furthermore, I suppose the std::set.begin()
method returns an object of such type,
Is there a better way to find the intersection of two std::set
in C++? Preferably a built-in function?
You haven't provided an output iterator for set_intersection
template <class InputIterator1, class InputIterator2, class OutputIterator>
OutputIterator set_intersection ( InputIterator1 first1, InputIterator1 last1,
InputIterator2 first2, InputIterator2 last2,
OutputIterator result );
Fix this by doing something like
...;
set<int> intersect;
set_intersection(s1.begin(), s1.end(), s2.begin(), s2.end(),
std::inserter(intersect, intersect.begin()));
You need a std::insert
iterator since the set is as of now empty. We cannot use std::back_inserter
or std::front_inserter
since set doesn't support those operations.