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Home/ Questions/Q 3404652
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T05:24:34+00:00 2026-05-18T05:24:34+00:00

I need to iterate over a vector from the end to the beginning. The

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I need to iterate over a vector from the end to the beginning. The "correct" way is

for(std::vector<SomeT>::reverse_iterator rit = v.rbegin(); rit != v.rend(); ++rit)
{
    //do Something
}

When //do Something involves knowing the actual index, then some calculations need to be done with rit to obtain it, like index = v.size() - 1 - (rit - v.rbegin)

If the index is needed anyway, then I strongly believe it is better to iterate using that index

for(int i = v.size() - 1; i >= 0; --i)
{
    //do something with v[i] and i; 
}

This gives a warning that i is signed and v.size() is unsigned.
Changing to

for(unsigned i = v.size() - 1; i >= 0; --i) is just functionally wrong, because this is essentially an endless loop :)

What is an aesthetically good way to do what I want to do which

  • is warning-free
  • doesn’t involve casts
  • is not overly verbose
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T05:24:34+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 5:24 am

    As you’ve noted, the problem with a condition of i >= 0 when it’s unsigned is that the condition is always true. Instead of subtracting 1 when you initialize i and then again after each iteration, subtract 1 after checking the loop condition:

    for (unsigned i = v.size(); i-- > 0; )
    

    I like this style for several reasons:

    • Although i will wrap around to UINT_MAX at the end of the loop, it doesn’t rely on that behavior — it would work the same if the types were signed. Relying on unsigned wraparound feels like a bit of a hack to me.
    • It calls size() exactly once.
    • It doesn’t use >=. Whenever I see that operator in a for loop, I have to re-read it to make sure there isn’t an off-by-one error.
    • If you change the spacing in the conditional, you can make it use the “goes to” operator.
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