std::remove_copy, std::remove_copy_if
From cppreference.com
                    
                                        
                    
                    
                                                            
                    |   Defined in header  
<algorithm>
  | 
||
|   template< class InputIt, class OutputIt, class T > 
OutputIt remove_copy( InputIt first, InputIt last, OutputIt d_first,  | 
(1) | |
|   template< class InputIt, class OutputIt, class UnaryPredicate > 
OutputIt remove_copy_if( InputIt first, InputIt last, OutputIt d_first,  | 
(2) | |
Copies elements from the range [first, last), to another range beginning at d_first, omitting the elements which satisfy specific criteria. The first version ignores the elements that are equal to value, the second version ignores the elements for which predicate p returns true. Source and destination ranges cannot overlap.
Contents | 
[edit] Parameters
| first, last | - | the range of elements to copy | 
| d_first | - | the beginning of the destination range. | 
| value | - | the value of the elements not to copy | 
| Type requirements | ||
 -
InputIt must meet the requirements of InputIterator.
 | 
||
 -
OutputIt must meet the requirements of OutputIterator.
 | 
||
 -
UnaryPredicate must meet the requirements of Predicate.
 | 
||
[edit] Return value
Iterator to the element past the last element copied.
[edit] Complexity
Exactly last - first applications of the predicate.
[edit] Possible implementation
| First version | 
|---|
template<class InputIt, class OutputIt, class T> OutputIt remove_copy(InputIt first, InputIt last, OutputIt d_first, const T& value) { for (; first != last; ++first) { if (!(*first == value)) { *d_first++ = *first; } } return d_first; }  | 
| Second version | 
template<class InputIt, class OutputIt, class UnaryPredicate> OutputIt remove_copy_if(InputIt first, InputIt last, OutputIt d_first, UnaryPredicate p) { for (; first != last; ++first) { if (!p(*first)) { *d_first++ = *first; } } return d_first; }  | 
[edit] Example
The following code outputs a string while erasing the spaces on the fly.
Run this code
#include <algorithm> #include <iterator> #include <string> #include <iostream> int main() { std::string str = "Text with some spaces"; std::cout << "before: " << str << "\n"; std::cout << "after: "; std::remove_copy(str.begin(), str.end(), std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout), ' '); std::cout << '\n'; }
Output:
before: Text with some spaces after: Textwithsomespaces
[edit] See also
|    removes elements satisfying specific criteria   (function template)  | 
|
|    (C++11) 
 | 
   copies a range of elements to a new location   (function template)  | 
|    (parallelism TS) 
 | 
   parallelized version of std::remove_copy  (function template)  | 
|    (parallelism TS) 
 | 
   parallelized version of std::remove_copy_if  (function template)  |