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Home/ Questions/Q 7755685
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T12:37:34+00:00 2026-06-01T12:37:34+00:00

Are strings compared lexicographical when using the overriden bool operator<(const std::string & rhs) operator?

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Are strings compared lexicographical when using the overriden bool operator<(const std::string & rhs) operator? In example:

std::string str1 = "aabbcc"
std::string str2 = "bbaacc"

(str1 < str2) == std::lexicographical_compare(str1.begin(),str1.end(),str2.begin(),str2.end()) // is this statement true?
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T12:37:36+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 12:37 pm

    Yes.

    String’s comparison operators are defined in terms of its traits::compare (that is char_traits<char>::compare) (C++03 21.3.6.8) which is specified to return a value based on the lexicographical ordering of its arguments (21.1.1).

    X::compare(p,q,n) … yields: 0 if for each i in [0,n),
    X::eq(p[i],q[i]) is true; else, a negative
    value if, for some j in [0,n),
    X::lt(p[j],q[j]) is true and for each i in
    [0,j) X::eq(p[i],q[i]) is true; else a positive value.

    In effect, it means comparing string must not be locale sensitive (which could be non-lexicographical in some locales, such as mine).

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