I have a string, like e.g. acaddef
or bbaaddgg
. I have to remove from it, as fast as possible, all repeating characters. So, for example, pooaatat
after should look like poat
and ggaatpop
should look like gatpo
. Is there any built-in function or algorithm to do that quickly? I tried to search STL, but without satisfaing result.
3 Answers
Okay, so here are 4 different solutions.
Fixed Array
std::string str = "pooaatat";
// Prints "poat"
short count[256] = {0};
std::copy_if(str.begin(), str.end(), std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout),
[&](unsigned char c) { return count[c]++ == 0; });
Count Algorithm + Iterator
std::string str = "pooaatat";
// Prints "poat"
std::string::iterator iter = str.begin();
std::copy_if(str.begin(), str.end(), std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout),
[&](char c) { return !std::count(str.begin(), iter++, c); });
Unordered Set
std::string str = "pooaatat";
// Prints "poat"
std::unordered_set<char> container;
std::copy_if(str.begin(), str.end(), std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout),
[&](char c) { return container.insert(c).second; });
Unordered Map
std::string str = "pooaatat";
// Prints "poat"
std::unordered_map<char, int> container;
std::copy_if(str.begin(), str.end(), std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout),
[&](char c) { return container[c]++ == 0; });
AFAIK, there is no built-in algorithm for doing this. The std::unique
algorithm is valid if you want to remove only consecutive duplicate characters.
However you can follow the following simple approach:
If the string contains only ASCII characters, you can form a boolean array A[256] denoting whether the respective character has been encountered already or not.
Then simply traverse the input string and copy the character to output if A[character] is still 0 (and make A[character] = 1).
In case the string contains arbitrary characters, then you can use a std::unordered_map
or a std::map
of char to int.
-
ASCII contains only 128 codepoints and is largely irrelevant. With your 256 element array, the restriction is only that the character set have at most 256 codepoints, that each has a 1-byte encoding and that there are no "combining characters," which would need to be kept with preceding codepoint. Sep 20, 2014 at 12:10
Built-in regular expressions should be efficient, i.e.
#include <regex>
[...]
const std::regex pattern("([\\w ])(?!\\1)");
string s = "ssha3akjssss42jj 234444 203488842882387 heeelloooo";
std::string result;
for (std::sregex_iterator i(s.begin(), s.end(), pattern), end; i != end; ++i)
result.append((*i)[1]);
std::cout << result << std::endl;
Of course, you can modify the cpaturing group to your needs. The good thing is that it is supported in Visual Studio 2010 tr1 already. gcc 4.8, however, seems to have a problem with regex iterators.
locale
, on Windows:chcp
.)