Example 1: stl sort in c++
sort(arr, arr+n); // sorts in ascending order
Example 2: c++ sort
int arr[]= {2,3,5,6,1,2,3,6,10,100,200,0,-10};
int n = sizeof(arr)/sizeof(int);
sort(arr,arr+n);
for(int i: arr)
{
cout << i << " ";
}
Example 3: array sort c++
#include <iostream>
2 #include <array>
3 #include <string>
4 #include <algorithm>
5
6 using namespace std;
7
8 int main(){
9 array<string, 4> colours = {"blue", "black", "red", "green"};
10 for (string colour : colours){
11 cout << colour << ' ';
12 }
13 cout << endl;
14 sort(colours.begin(), colours.end());
15 for (string colour : colours){
16 cout << colour << ' ';
17 }
18 return 0;
19 }
66
20
21 /*
22 Output:
23 blue black red green
24 black blue green red
25 */
Example 4: stl sort in c++
sort(arr, arr+n, greater<int>()); // sorts in descending order
Example 5: c++ sort
std::vector s = {5, 1, 3, 6, 2,};
std::sort(s.begin(), s.end());
Example 6: c++ stl sort
// sort algorithm example
#include <iostream> // std::cout
#include <algorithm> // std::sort
#include <vector> // std::vector
bool myfunction (int i,int j) { return (i<j); }
struct myclass {
bool operator() (int i,int j) { return (i<j);}
} myobject;
int main () {
int myints[] = {32,71,12,45,26,80,53,33};
std::vector<int> myvector (myints, myints+8); // 32 71 12 45 26 80 53 33
// using default comparison (operator <):
std::sort (myvector.begin(), myvector.begin()+4); //(12 32 45 71)26 80 53 33
// using function as comp
std::sort (myvector.begin()+4, myvector.end(), myfunction); // 12 32 45 71(26 33 53 80)
// using object as comp
std::sort (myvector.begin(), myvector.end(), myobject); //(12 26 32 33 45 53 71 80)
// print out content:
std::cout << "myvector contains:";
for (std::vector<int>::iterator it=myvector.begin(); it!=myvector.end(); ++it)
std::cout << ' ' << *it;
std::cout << '\n';
return 0;
}