Book Image

C++20 STL Cookbook

By : Bill Weinman
Book Image

C++20 STL Cookbook

By: Bill Weinman

Overview of this book

Fast, efficient, and flexible, the C++ programming language has come a long way and is used in every area of the industry to solve many problems. The latest version C++20 will see programmers change the way they code as it brings a whole array of features enabling the quick deployment of applications. This book will get you up and running with using the STL in the best way possible. Beginning with new language features in C++20, this book will help you understand the language's mechanics and library features and offer insights into how they work. Unlike other books, the C++20 STL Cookbook takes an implementation-specific, problem-solution approach that will help you overcome hurdles quickly. You'll learn core STL concepts, such as containers, algorithms, utility classes, lambda expressions, iterators, and more, while working on real-world recipes. This book is a reference guide for using the C++ STL with its latest capabilities and exploring the cutting-edge features in functional programming and lambda expressions. By the end of the book C++20 book, you'll be able to leverage the latest C++ features and save time and effort while solving tasks elegantly using the STL.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

A word frequency counter with map

This recipe uses the unique key property of the map container to count duplicate words from a stream of text.

The STL map container is an associative container. It consists of elements organized in key-value pairs. The keys are used for lookup and must be unique.

In this recipe, we will leverage the unique key requirement of the STL map container to count the number of occurrences of each word in a text file.

How to do it…

There are a few parts to this task that we can solve separately:

  1. We need to get the text from a file. We'll use the cin stream for this.
  2. We need to separate words from punctuation and other non-word content. We'll use the regex (Regular Expression) library for this.
  3. We need to count the frequency of each word. This is the main objective of the recipe. We'll use the STL map container for this.
  4. Finally, we need to sort the results, first by frequency and then alphabetically by word...