jeudi 30 juillet 2015

Range-based for with brace-initializer over non-const values?

I am trying to iterate over a number of std::lists, sorting each of them. This is the naive approach:

#include<list>
using namespace std;
int main(void){
    list<int> a,b,c;
    for(auto& l:{a,b,c}) l.sort();
}

producing

aa.cpp:5:25: error: no matching member function for call to 'sort'
        for(auto& l:{a,b,c}) l.sort();
                             ~~^~~~
/usr/bin/../lib64/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.9/../../../../include/c++/4.9/bits/stl_list.h:1586:7: note: 
      candidate function not viable: 'this' argument has type 'const
      std::list<int, std::allocator<int> >', but method is not marked const
      sort();
      ^
/usr/bin/../lib64/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.9/../../../../include/c++/4.9/bits/stl_list.h:1596:9: note: 
      candidate function template not viable: requires 1 argument, but 0 were
      provided
        sort(_StrictWeakOrdering);
        ^
1 error generated.

Am I correctly guessing that brace-initializer is creating copy of those lists? And is there a way to not copy them, and make them modifiable inside the loop? (other than making list of pointers to them, which is my current workaround).

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