Book Image

C++17 STL Cookbook

By : Jacek Galowicz
Book Image

C++17 STL Cookbook

By: Jacek Galowicz

Overview of this book

C++ has come a long way and is in use in every area of the industry. Fast, efficient, and flexible, it is used to solve many problems. The upcoming version of C++ will see programmers change the way they code. If you want to grasp the practical usefulness of the C++17 STL in order to write smarter, fully portable code, then this book is for you. Beginning with new language features, this book will help you understand the language’s mechanics and library features, and offers insight into how they work. Unlike other books, ours takes an implementation-specific, problem-solution approach that will help you quickly overcome hurdles. You will learn the core STL concepts, such as containers, algorithms, utility classes, lambda expressions, iterators, and more, while working on practical real-world recipes. These recipes will help you get the most from the STL and show you how to program in a better way. By the end of the book, you will be up to date with the latest C++17 features and save time and effort while solving tasks elegantly using the STL.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Implementing an automatic file renamer


This recipe is motivated by a situation I find myself in pretty often. When collecting picture files from holidays, for example, from different friends and also different photo devices in one folder, the file endings often look different. Some JPEG files have a .jpg extension, some have .jpeg, and some others even have .JPEG.

Some people might prefer to homogenize all extensions. It would be useful to rename all files with a single command. At the same time, we could remove spaces ' ' and substitute them by underscores '_', for example.

In this recipe, we will implement such a tool and call it renamer. It will accept a range of input patterns and their substitutes like this:

$ renamer jpeg jpg JPEG jpg

In that case, renamer will iterate recursively through the current directory and search for the patterns jpeg and JPEG in all filenames. It will substitute both with jpg.

How to do it...

We will implement a tool that recursively scans all files within a directory...