std::for_each
From cppreference.com
                    
                                        
                    
                    
                                                            
                    | Defined in header  <algorithm> | ||
| template< class InputIt, class UnaryFunction > UnaryFunction for_each( InputIt first, InputIt last, UnaryFunction f ); | ||
Applies the given function object f to the result of dereferencing every iterator in the range [first, last), in order. 
If InputIt is a mutable iterator, f may modify the elements of the range through the dereferenced iterator. If f returns a result, the result is ignored.
| Contents | 
[edit] Parameters
| first, last | - | the range to apply the function to | 
| f | - | function object,  to be applied to the result of dereferencing every iterator in the range [first, last)The signature of the function should be equivalent to the following: void fun(const Type &a); The signature does not need to have const &.   | 
| Type requirements | ||
| - InputItmust meet the requirements ofInputIterator. | ||
| - UnaryFunctionmust meet the requirements ofMoveConstructible. Does not have to beCopyConstructible | ||
[edit] Return value
| f | (until C++11) | 
| std::move(f) | (since C++11) | 
[edit] Complexity
Exactly last - first applications of f
[edit] Possible implementation
| template<class InputIt, class UnaryFunction> UnaryFunction for_each(InputIt first, InputIt last, UnaryFunction f) { for (; first != last; ++first) { f(*first); } return f; } | 
[edit] Example
 The following example uses a lambda function to increment all of the elements of a vector and then uses an overloaded operator() in a functor to compute their sum:
 
Run this code
#include <vector> #include <algorithm> #include <iostream> struct Sum { Sum() { sum = 0; } void operator()(int n) { sum += n; } int sum; }; int main() { std::vector<int> nums{3, 4, 2, 9, 15, 267}; std::cout << "before:"; for (auto n : nums) { std::cout << ' ' << n; } std::cout << '\n'; std::for_each(nums.begin(), nums.end(), [](int &n){ n++; }); // Calls Sum::operator() for each number Sum s = std::for_each(nums.begin(), nums.end(), Sum()); std::cout << "after: "; for (auto n : nums) { std::cout << ' ' << n; } std::cout << '\n'; std::cout << "sum: " << s.sum << '\n'; }
Output:
before: 3 4 2 9 15 267 after: 4 5 3 10 16 268 sum: 306
[edit] See also
| applies a function to a range of elements (function template) | |
| range-for loop | executes loop over range (since C++11) | 
| (parallelism TS) | similar to std::for_each except returns void (function template) | 
| (parallelism TS) | applies a function object to the first n elements of a sequence (function template) | 


