Algorithm
Finds the minimum value in a range.
#include <algorithm>
template <class ForwardIterator> ForwardIterator min_element(ForwardIterator first, ForwardIterator last); template <class ForwardIterator, class Compare> InputIterator min_element(ForwardIterator first, ForwardIterator last, Compare comp);
The min_element algorithm returns an iterator that denotes the minimum element in a sequence. If the sequence contains more than one copy of the minimum element, the iterator points to the first occurrence of the element. In the second version of the function, the optional argument comp defines a comparison function that can be used in place of the default operator<. This function can be used with all the datatypes provided by the standard library.
Algorithm min_element returns the first iterator i in the range [first, last) such that for any iterator j in the range same range, the following corresponding conditions hold:
!(*j < *i)
or
comp(*j, *i) == false.
min_element performs exactly max((last - first) - 1, 0) applications of the corresponding comparisons.
// // max_elem.cpp // #include <algorithm> #include <vector> #include <iostream.h> int main(void) { typedef vector<int>::iterator iterator; int d1[5] = {1,3,5,32,64}; // set up vector vector<int> v1(d1,d1 + 5); // find the largest element in the vector iterator it1 = max_element(v1.begin(), v1.end()); // it1 = v1.begin() + 4 // find the largest element in the range from // the beginning of the vector to the 2nd to last iterator it2 = max_element(v1.begin(), v1.end()-1, less<int>()); // it2 = v1.begin() + 3 // find the smallest element iterator it3 = min_element(v1.begin(), v1.end()); // it3 = v1.begin() // find the smallest value in the range from // the beginning of the vector plus 1 to the end iterator it4 = min_element(v1.begin()+1, v1.end(), less<int>()); // it4 = v1.begin() + 1 cout << *it1 << " " << *it2 << " " << *it3 << " " << *it4 << endl; return 0; } Output : 64 32 1 3
If your compiler does not support default template parameters then you need to always supply the Allocator template argument. For instance you'll have to write:
vector<int,allocator>
instead of:
vector<int>