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Home/ Questions/Q 7882621
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 3, 20262026-06-03T04:19:47+00:00 2026-06-03T04:19:47+00:00

I’ve just noticed something about the std::list class in C++ I find curious. Briefly,

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I’ve just noticed something about the std::list class in C++ I find curious. Briefly, it concerns the manner in which the list’s iterators work. Consider the following code:

std::list<int> alist;
alist.push_back(0);
alist.push_back(1);
alist.push_back(2);

Obviously enough, this creates a list with three integer elements in it. I can define an iterator to the start of the list and use it to, say, print out the value contained in the first element as follows:

std::list<int>::iterator iter = alist.begin();
std::cout << *iter << std::endl;  // Prints "0" to stdout

What I find mildly odd is that if I now decrement the iterator, it “loops around” and ends up pointing at the last element in the list:

--iter;
std::cout << *iter << std::endl;  // Prints "2" to stdout

Is this reasonable behaviour for something that’s supposedly implemented as a doubly linked list? I’d quite expect to similar behaviour from the iterator if the list was a circularly linked list, but I find this quite odd.

Are there any practical uses for this iterator behaviour that you’ve used in the past? Are there any gotchas associated with this behaviour that I should keep an eye out for?

(By the way, this happens with gcc 4.7.0 (MinGW). I haven’t tested it with any other version or compiler.)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-03T04:19:48+00:00Added an answer on June 3, 2026 at 4:19 am

    Decrementing the iterator beyond begin invokes undefined behaviour. The behaviour you’re seeing is quite likely to be coincidence (indeed, see what happens with a different compiler here).

    If you want to confirm this, you can simply take a look at the implementation of GCC’s list; you can usually find the source at /usr/include/c++/4.x.y/bits/stl_list.h.

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