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Home/ Questions/Q 6710439
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T08:01:23+00:00 2026-05-26T08:01:23+00:00

I’m trying to implement a reverse-iterator adaptor for my iterator and const_iterator classes with

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I’m trying to implement a reverse-iterator adaptor for my iterator and const_iterator classes with a little bit of trouble. If anyone could guide me through this, that would be greatly appreciated!

The idea is that I should be able to create a reverse-iterator from my rbegin() and rend() function calls

reverse_iterator rbegin();
reverse_iterator rend();
const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const;
const_reverse_iterator rend() const;

I’m using the following typedef’s in the class:

typedef btree_iterator<T> iterator;
typedef const_btree_iterator<T> const_iterator;
typedef reverse_btree_iterator<iterator> reverse_iterator;
typedef reverse_btree_iterator<const_iterator> const_reverse_iterator;

As you can see, I would like to be able to create reverse-iterators using templates, giving the reverse_iterator class either an iterator or const_iterator.

Unfortunately, it is this bit I’m stuck on…

Below is the class definition that I currently have, with errors.

template <typename I> class reverse_btree_iterator {

  typedef ptrdiff_t                     difference_type;
  typedef bidirectional_iterator_tag    iterator_category;

public:

  reverse_btree_iterator() : base_(I()) {}
  template <typename T> reverse_btree_iterator(const btree_iterator<T>& rhs) : base_(rhs) {}

  I base() { return base_; }

  I::reference operator*() const;
  I::pointer operator->() const;
  I& operator++();
  I operator++(int);
  I& operator--();
  I operator--(int);
  bool operator==(const I& other) const;
  bool operator!=(const I& other) const;

private:

  I base_;

};

I’ve never used templates like this before, so it is very likely I’m completely misunderstanding how they can be used…

Since I can be an iterator or a const_iterator, the typedef of reference and pointer vary between the two classes. The lines that aren’t compiling are these:

I::reference operator*() const;
I::pointer operator->() const;

I’m not sure how else I can make the one reverse_iterator class work for both iterator and const_iterator if I’m not able to do I::reference and I::pointer. I also tried adding template in front of those, since they are defined in the iterator class (for example) as:

typedef T*                            pointer;
typedef T&                            reference;
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T08:01:24+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 8:01 am

    reference and pointer are dependent names, so you have to use

    typename I::reference operator*() const;
    typename I::pointer operator->() const;
    

    In addition, the constructor should accept just the I.

    However, there is no need to write this class at all. The standard library has reverse_iterator for this. Or if you are not happy with that, there’s also Boost.ReverseIterator.

    All it takes is just

    typedef std::reverse_iterator<iterator> reverse_iterator;
    typedef std::reverse_iterator<const_iterator> const_reverse_iterator;
    
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