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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T06:35:57+00:00 2026-05-14T06:35:57+00:00

I am trying to use boost lambda to avoid having to write trivial functors.

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I am trying to use boost lambda to avoid having to write trivial functors.
For example, I want to use the lambda to access a member of a struct or call a method of a class, eg:

#include <vector>
#include <utility>
#include <algorithm>
#include <boost/lambda/lambda.hpp>

using namespace std;
using namespace boost::lambda;

vector< pair<int,int> > vp;

vp.push_back( make_pair<int,int>(1,1) );
vp.push_back( make_pair<int,int>(3,2) );
vp.push_back( make_pair<int,int>(2,3) );

sort(vp.begin(), vp.end(), _1.first > _2.first );

When I try and compile this I get the following errors:

error C2039: 'first' : is not a member of 'boost::lambda::lambda_functor<T>'
        with
        [
            T=boost::lambda::placeholder<1>
        ]
error C2039: 'first' : is not a member of 'boost::lambda::lambda_functor<T>'
        with
        [
            T=boost::lambda::placeholder<2>
        ]

Since vp contains pair<int,int> I thought that _1.first should work. What I am doing wrong?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T06:35:57+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:35 am

    What you want is something akin to:

    #include <boost/lambda/bind.hpp> // new header
    
    // typedefs make code easier
    typedef pair<int,int> pair_type;
    typedef vector<pair_type> vector_type;
    
    vector_type vp;
    
    vp.push_back( make_pair(1,1) ); // don't specify template arguments!
    vp.push_back( make_pair(3,2) ); // the entire point of make_pair is
    vp.push_back( make_pair(2,3) ); // to deduce them.
    
    sort(vp.begin(), vp.end(),
            bind(&pair_type::first, _1) > bind(&pair_type::first, _2) );
    
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