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Home/ Questions/Q 8631375
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 12, 20262026-06-12T09:12:40+00:00 2026-06-12T09:12:40+00:00

I’ve got this code and I cannot understand part where equal_range method returns iterators.

  • 0

I’ve got this code and I cannot understand part where equal_range method returns iterators.
I know range is pair object with two multimap objects inside, but what I don’t get, is why there is 'for (it = range.first; it != range.second; ++it)' – What does this mean exactly ?

// multmap.cpp -- use a multimap
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <map>
#include <algorithm>

typedef int KeyType;
typedef std::pair<const KeyType, std::string> Pair;
typedef std::multimap<KeyType, std::string> MapCode;

int main()
{
using namespace std;
MapCode codes;
codes.insert(Pair(415, "San Francisco"));
codes.insert(Pair(510, "Oakland"));
codes.insert(Pair(718, "Brooklyn"));
 codes.insert(Pair(718, "Staten Island"));
  codes.insert(Pair(415, "San Rafael"));
  codes.insert(Pair(510, "Berkeley"));

  cout << "Number of cities with area code 415: "
    << codes.count(415) << endl;
  cout << "Number of cities with area code 718: "
    << codes.count(718) << endl;
  cout << "Number of cities with area code 510: "
    << codes.count(510) << endl;
  cout << "Area Code City\n";

  MapCode::iterator it;
  for (it = codes.begin(); it != codes.end(); ++it)
  cout << " " << (*it).first << " "
  << (*it).second << endl;

  pair<MapCode::iterator, MapCode::iterator> range
        = codes.equal_range(718);

  cout << "Cities with area code 718:\n";
  for (it = range.first; it != range.second; ++it) //<------------------ here
  cout << (*it).second << endl;
    return 0;
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-12T09:12:41+00:00Added an answer on June 12, 2026 at 9:12 am

    The iterators in the pair define the range of items with keys equal to what you searched for in the manner [range.first, range.second).

    This means that to iterate over that range, you start from range.first and advance the iterator until it reaches range.second, which means that you have just stepped off the equal range. Conceptually it’s the same as what happens when you iterate over a range [container.begin(), container.end()).

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