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C++
rotate (3C++std) - Tru64 UNIX
Standard C++ Library
Copyright 1996, Rogue Wave Software, Inc.

NAME

  rotate, rotate_copy  - Left rotates the order of items in a collection,
  placing the first item at the end, second item first, etc., until the item
  pointed to by a specified iterator is the first item in the collection.

SYNOPSIS

  #include <algorithm>

  template <class ForwardIterator>
  void rotate (ForwardIterator first,
              ForwardIterator middle,
              ForwardIterator last);

  template <class ForwardIterator, class OutputIterator>
  OutputIterator rotate_copy (ForwardIterator first,
                             ForwardIterator middle,
                             ForwardIterator last,
                             OutputIterator result);

DESCRIPTION

  The rotate algorithm takes three iterator arguments, first, which defines
  the start of a sequence, last, which defines the end of the sequence, and
  middle which defines a point within the sequence.  rotate "swaps" the
  segment that contains elements from first through middle-1 with the segment
  that contains the elements from middle through last.  After rotate has been
  applied, the element that was in position middle, is in position first, and
  the other elements in that segment are in the same order relative to each
  other.  Similarly, the element that was in position first is now in
  position last-middle +1.  An example will illustrate how rotate works:

  Say that we have the sequence:

    2 4 6 8 1 3 5

  If we call rotate with middle = 5, the two segments are

    2 4 6  8      and      1 3 5

  After we apply rotate, the new sequence will be:

    1 3 5 2 4 6 8

  Note that the element that was in the fifth position is now in the first
  position, and the element that was in the first position is in position 4
  (last - first + 1, or 8 - 5 +1 =4).

  The formal description of this algorithms is:  for each non-negative
  integer i < (last - first), rotate places the element from the position
  first + i into position first + (i + (last - middle)) % (last - first).
  [first, middle) and [middle, last) are valid ranges.

  rotate_copy rotates the elements as described above, but instead of
  swapping elements within the same sequence, it copies the result of the
  rotation to a container specified by result.  rotate_copy copies the range
  [first, last) to the range [result, result + (last - first)) such that for
  each non- negative integer i < (last - first) the following assignment
  takes place:

  *(result + (i + (last - middle)) % (last -first)) = *(first + i).

  The ranges [first,  last)  and [result, result, + (last - first)) may not
  overlap.

COMPLEXITY

  For rotate at most last - first swaps are performed.

  For rotate_copy last - first assignments are performed.

EXAMPLE

  //
  // rotate
  //
   #include <algorithm>
   #include <vector>
   #include <iostream.h>

  int main()
   {
     //Initialize a vector with an array of ints
    int arr[10] = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10};
    vector<int> v(arr, arr+10);

     //Print out elements in original (sorted) order
    cout << "Elements before rotate: " << endl << "     ";
    copy(v.begin(),v.end(),ostream_iterator<int,char>(cout," "));
    cout << endl << endl;

     //Rotate the elements
     rotate(v.begin(), v.begin()+4, v.end());

     //Print out the rotated elements
    cout << "Elements after rotate: " << endl << "     ";
    copy(v.begin(),v.end(),ostream_iterator<int,char>(cout," "));
    cout << endl;

    return 0;
   }

  Output :
  Elements before rotate:
      1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
  Elements after rotate:
      5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4

WARNING

  If your compiler does not support default template parameters, then you
  need to always supply the Allocator template argument.  For instance, you
  will need to write :

  vector<int, allocator<int> >

  instead of :

  vector<int>

STANDARDS CONFORMANCE

  ANSI X3J16/ISO WG21 Joint C++ Committee
  

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