std::basic_string<CharT,Traits,Allocator>::compare
| (1) | ||
| int compare( const basic_string& str ) const; |
(until C++11) | |
| int compare( const basic_string& str ) const noexcept; |
(since C++11) | |
| int compare( size_type pos1, size_type count1, const basic_string& str ) const; |
(2) | |
| (3) | ||
| int compare( size_type pos1, size_type count1, const basic_string& str, |
(until C++14) | |
| int compare( size_type pos1, size_type count1, const basic_string& str, |
(since C++14) | |
| int compare( const CharT* s ) const; |
(4) | |
| int compare( size_type pos1, size_type count1, const CharT* s ) const; |
(5) | |
| int compare( size_type pos1, size_type count1, const CharT* s, size_type count2 ) const; |
(6) | |
| template < class T > int compare( const T& t ) const noexcept(/* see below */); |
(7) | (since C++17) |
| template < class T > int compare( size_type pos1, size_type count1, |
(8) | (since C++17) |
| template < class T > int compare( size_type pos1, size_type count1, |
(9) | (since C++17) |
Compares two character sequences.
[pos1, pos1+count1) substring of this string to str. If count1 > size() - pos1 the substring is [pos1, size()).[pos1, pos1+count1) substring of this string to a substring [pos2, pos2+count2) of str. If count1 > size() - pos1 the first substring is [pos1, size()). Likewise, count2 > str.size() - pos2 the second substring is [pos2, str.size()).Traits::length(s).[pos1, pos1+count1) substring of this string to the null-terminated character sequence beginning at the character pointed to by s with length Traits::length(s) If count1 > size() - pos1 the substring is [pos1, size()).[pos1, pos1+count1) substring of this string to the characters in the range [s, s + count2). If count1 > size() - pos1 the substring is [pos1, size()). (Note: the characters in the range [s, s + count2) may include null characters.)t to a string view sv as if by std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits> sv = t;, then compares this string to sv. This overload only participates in overload resolution if std::is_convertible_v<const T&, std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits>> is true and std::is_convertible_v<const T&, const CharT*> is false.t to a string view sv as if by std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits> sv = t;, then compares a [pos1, pos1+count1) substring of this string to sv, as if by std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits>(*this).substr(pos1, count1).compare(sv). This overload only participates in overload resolution if std::is_convertible_v<const T&, std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits>> is true and std::is_convertible_v<const T&, const CharT*> is false.t to a string view sv as if by std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits> sv = t;, then compares a [pos1, pos1+count1) substring of this string to a substring [pos2, pos2+count2) of sv as if by std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits>(*this).substr(pos1, count1).compare(sv.substr(pos2, count2)). This overload only participates in overload resolution if std::is_convertible_v<const T&, std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits>> is true and std::is_convertible_v<const T&, const CharT*> is false.A character sequence consisting of count1 characters starting at data1 is compared to a character sequence consisting of count2 characters starting at data2 as follows. First, calculate the number of characters to compare, as if by size_type rlen = std::min(count1, count2). Then compare the sequences by calling Traits::compare(data1, data2, rlen). For standard strings this function performs character-by-character lexicographical comparison. If the result is zero (the character sequences are equal so far), then their sizes are compared as follows:
| Condition | Result | Return value | |
|---|---|---|---|
Traits::compare(data1, data2, rlen) < 0
|
data1 is less than data2 | <0 | |
Traits::compare(data1, data2, rlen) == 0
|
size1 < size2 | data1 is less than data2 | <0 |
| size1 == size2 | data1 is equal to data2 | 0 | |
| size1 > size2 | data1 is greater than data2 | >0 | |
Traits::compare(data1, data2, rlen) > 0
|
data1 is greater than data2 | >0 | |
Parameters
| str | - | other string to compare to |
| s | - | pointer to the character string to compare to |
| count1 | - | number of characters of this string to compare |
| pos1 | - | position of the first character in this string to compare |
| count2 | - | number of characters of the given string to compare |
| pos2 | - | position of the first character of the given string to compare |
| t | - | object (convertible to std::basic_string_view) to compare to |
Return value
negative value if *this appears before the character sequence specified by the arguments, in lexicographical order
zero if both character sequences compare equivalent
positive value if *this appears after the character sequence specified by the arguments, in lexicographical order
Exceptions
The overloads taking parameters named pos1 or pos2 throws std::out_of_range if the argument is out of range.
basic_string_view.Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 2946 | C++17 | string_view overload causes ambiguity in some cases
|
avoided by making it a template |
Possible implementation
template<class CharT, class Traits, class Alloc> int basic_string<CharT, Traits, Alloc>::compare(const std::basic_string& s) const noexcept { size_type lhs_sz = size(); size_type rhs_sz = s.size(); int result = traits_type::compare(data(), s.data(), std::min(lhs_sz, rhs_sz)); if (result != 0) return result; if (lhs_sz < rhs_sz) return -1; if (lhs_sz > rhs_sz) return 1; return 0; } |
Notes
For the situations when three-way comparison is not required, std::basic_string provides the usual relational operators (<, <=, ==, >, etc).
By default (with the default std::char_traits), this function is not locale-sensitive. See std::collate::compare for locale-aware three-way string comparison.
Example
#include <cassert> #include <string> #include <iostream> int main() { // 1) Compare with other string { int compare_value{ std::string{"Batman"}.compare(std::string{"Superman"}) }; std::cout << ( compare_value < 0 ? "Batman comes before Superman\n" : compare_value > 0 ? "Superman comes before Batman\n" : "Superman and Batman are the same.\n" ); } // 2) Compare substring with other string { int compare_value{ std::string{"Batman"}.compare(3, 3, std::string{"Superman"}) }; std::cout << ( compare_value < 0 ? "man comes before Superman\n" : compare_value > 0 ? "Superman comes before man\n" : "man and Superman are the same.\n" ); } // 3) Compare substring with other substring { std::string a{"Batman"}; std::string b{"Superman"}; int compare_value{a.compare(3, 3, b, 5, 3)}; std::cout << ( compare_value < 0 ? "man comes before man\n" : compare_value > 0 ? "man comes before man\n" : "man and man are the same.\n" ); // Compare substring with other substring // defaulting to end of other string assert(compare_value == a.compare(3, 3, b, 5)); } // 4) Compare with char pointer { int compare_value{std::string{"Batman"}.compare("Superman")}; std::cout << ( compare_value < 0 ? "Batman comes before Superman\n" : compare_value > 0 ? "Superman comes before Batman\n" : "Superman and Batman are the same.\n" ); } // 5) Compare substring with char pointer { int compare_value{std::string{"Batman"}.compare(3, 3, "Superman")}; std::cout << ( compare_value < 0 ? "man comes before Superman\n" : compare_value > 0 ? "Superman comes before man\n" : "man and Superman are the same.\n" ); } // 6) Compare substring with char pointer substring { int compare_value{std::string{"Batman"}.compare(0, 3, "Superman", 5)}; std::cout << ( compare_value < 0 ? "Bat comes before Super\n" : compare_value > 0 ? "Super comes before Bat\n" : "Super and Bat are the same.\n" ); } }
Output:
Batman comes before Superman Superman comes before man man and man are the same. Batman comes before Superman Superman comes before man Bat comes before Super
See also
| lexicographically compares two strings (function template) | |
| returns a substring (public member function) | |
| defines lexicographical comparison and hashing of strings (class template) | |
| compares two strings in accordance to the current locale (function) | |
| returns true if one range is lexicographically less than another (function template) |