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Home/ Questions/Q 494507
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T05:30:10+00:00 2026-05-13T05:30:10+00:00

I recently learned about the right way to work with reverse iterators in C++

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I recently learned about the right way to work with reverse iterators in C++ (specifically when you need to erase one). (See this question and this one.)

This is how you’re supposed to do it:

typedef std::vector<int> IV;
for (IV::reverse_iterator rit = iv.rbegin(), rend = iv.rend();
     rit != rend; ++rit)
{
  // Use 'rit' if a reverse_iterator is good enough, e.g.,
  *rit += 10;
  // Use (rit + 1).base() if you need a regular iterator e.g.,
  iv.erase((rit + 1).base());
}

But I think thought this is much better (Don’t do this, not standards compliant, as MooingDuck points out):

for (IV::iterator it = iv.end(), begin = iv.begin();
     it-- != begin; )
{
  // Use 'it' for anything you want
  *it += 10;
  iv.erase(it);
}

Cons:

  • You tell me. What’s wrong with it?
  • It’s not standards compliant, as MooingDuck points out. That pretty much overrules any of the possible advantages below.

Pros:

  • Uses a familiar idiom for reverse for-loops
  • Don’t have to remember (or explain) the +1
  • Less typing
  • Works for std::list too: it = il.erase(it);
  • If you erase an element, you don’t have to adjust the iterator
  • If you erase, you don’t have to recompute the begin iterator
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T05:30:11+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 5:30 am

    The reason for reverse iterators is that the standard algorithms do not know how to iterate over a collection backwards. For example:

    #include <string>
    #include <algorithm>
    std::wstring foo(L"This is a test, with two letter a's involved.");
    std::find(foo.begin(), foo.end(), L'a'); // Returns an iterator pointing
                                            // to the first a character.
    std::find(foo.rbegin(), foo.rend(), L'a').base()-1; //Returns an iterator
                                                     // pointing to the last A.
    std::find(foo.end(), foo.begin(), L'a'); //WRONG!! (Buffer overrun)
    

    Use whichever iterator results in clearer code.

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