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Home/ Questions/Q 8772369
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T18:01:03+00:00 2026-06-13T18:01:03+00:00

I have the following Python snippet that I would like to reproduce using C++:

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I have the following Python snippet that I would like to reproduce using C++:

from itertools import count, imap

source = count(1)
pipe1 = imap(lambda x: 2 * x, source)
pipe2 = imap(lambda x: x + 1, pipe1)
sink = imap(lambda x: 3 * x, pipe2)
for i in sink:
    print i

I’ve heard of Boost Phoenix, but I couldn’t find an example of a lazy transform behaving in the same way as Python’s imap.

Edit: to clarify my question, the idea is not only to apply functions in sequence using a for, but rather to be able to use algorithms like std::transform on infinite generators. The way the functions are composed (in a more functional language like dialect) is also important, as the next step is function composition.

Update: thanks bradgonesurfing, David Brown, and Xeo for the amazing answers! I chose Xeo’s because it’s the most concise and it gets me right where I wanted to be, but David’s was very important into getting the concepts through. Also, bradgonesurfing’s tipped Boost::Range :).

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T18:01:04+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 6:01 pm

    Employing Boost.Range:

    int main(){
      auto map = boost::adaptors::transformed; // shorten the name
      auto sink = generate(1) | map([](int x){ return 2*x; })
                              | map([](int x){ return x+1; })
                              | map([](int x){ return 3*x; });
      for(auto i : sink)
        std::cout << i << "\n";
    }
    

    Live example including the generate function.

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