std::regex_iterator
<regex> 
     class BidirIt,
    class CharT = typename std::iterator_traits <BidirIt>::value_type,
    class Traits = std::regex_traits <CharT>
std::regex_iterator is a read-only iterator that accesses the individual matches of a regular expression within the underlying character sequence. It meets the requirements of a LegacyForwardIterator, except that for dereferenceable values a and b with a == b, *a and *b will not be bound to the same object.
On construction, and on every increment, it calls std::regex_search and remembers the result (that is, saves a copy of the std::match_results <BidirIt> value). The first object may be read when the iterator is constructed or when the first dereferencing is done. Otherwise, dereferencing only returns a copy of the most recently obtained regex match.
The default-constructed std::regex_iterator is the end-of-sequence iterator. When a valid std::regex_iterator is incremented after reaching the last match (std::regex_search  returns false), it becomes equal to the end-of-sequence iterator. Dereferencing or incrementing it further invokes undefined behavior.
A typical implementation of std::regex_iterator holds the begin and the end iterators for the underlying sequence (two instances of BidirIt), a pointer to the regular expression (const regex_type*), the match flags (std::regex_constants::match_flag_type ), and the current match (std::match_results <BidirIt>).
Contents
[edit] Type requirements
BidirIt must meet the requirements of LegacyBidirectionalIterator.
[edit] Specializations
Several specializations for common character sequence types are defined:
<regex>  std::cregex_iterator
 std::regex_iterator<const char*>
std::wcregex_iterator
 std::regex_iterator<const wchar_t*>
[edit] Member types
value_type
 std::match_results <BidirIt>
difference_type
 std::ptrdiff_t 
pointer
 const value_type*
reference
 const value_type&
iterator_category
 std::forward_iterator_tag 
regex_type
 std::basic_regex <CharT, Traits>
[edit] Data members
BidiIt begin (private)
 the begin iterator(exposition-only member object*)
BidiIt end (private)
 the end iterator(exposition-only member object*)
pregex (private)
 a pointer to a regular expression(exposition-only member object*)
flags (private)
 a flag(exposition-only member object*)
match (private)
 the current match(exposition-only member object*)
[edit] Member functions
regex_iterator, including the cached value (public member function) [edit]
[edit] Notes
It is the programmer's responsibility to ensure that the std::basic_regex object passed to the iterator's constructor outlives the iterator. Because the iterator stores a pointer to the regex, incrementing the iterator after the regex was destroyed accesses a dangling pointer.
If the part of the regular expression that matched is just an assertion (^, $, \b, \B), the match stored in the iterator is a zero-length match, that is, match[0].first == match[0].second.
[edit] Example
#include <iostream> #include <iterator> #include <regex> #include <string> int main() { const std::string s = "Quick brown fox."; std::regex words_regex("[^\\s]+"); auto words_begin = std::sregex_iterator(s.begin(), s.end(), words_regex); auto words_end = std::sregex_iterator(); std::cout << "Found " << std::distance (words_begin, words_end) << " words:\n"; for (std::sregex_iterator i = words_begin; i != words_end; ++i) { std::smatch match = *i; std::string match_str = match.str(); std::cout << match_str << '\n'; } }
Output:
Found 3 words: Quick brown fox.
[edit] Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior | 
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 3698 (P2770R0) | C++20 | regex_iteratorwas aforward_iteratorwhile being a stashing iterator | made input_iterator[1] | 
- ↑  iterator_categorywas unchanged by the resolution, because changing it to std::input_iterator_tag might break too much existing code.
[edit] See also
(class template) [edit]
(function template) [edit]