注意: The foreach keyword was introduced before the C++11 range-based loops existed. New code should prefer C++11 range-based loops.
The
foreach
keyword is a Qt-specific addition to the C++ language, and is implemented using the preprocessor.
Its syntax is:
foreach
(
variable
,
container
)
语句
. For example, here's how to use
foreach
to iterate over a
QList
<
QString
>:
QList<QString> values; ... QString str; foreach (str, values) qDebug() << str;
The
foreach
code is significantly shorter than the equivalent code that uses iterators:
QList<QString> values; ... QListIterator<QString> i(values); while (i.hasNext()) { QString s = i.next(); qDebug() << s; }
Unless the data type contains a comma (e.g.,
QPair<int, int>
), the variable used for iteration can be defined within the
foreach
语句:
QList<QString> values; ... foreach (const QString &str, values) qDebug() << str;
And like any other C++ loop construct, you can use braces around the body of a
foreach
loop, and you can use
break
to leave the loop:
QList<QString> values; ... foreach (const QString &str, values) { if (str.isEmpty()) break; qDebug() << str; }
采用
QMap
and
QHash
,
foreach
accesses the value component of the (key, value) pairs automatically, so you should not call values() on the container (it would generate an unnecessary copy, see below). If you want to iterate over both the keys and the values, you can use iterators (which are faster), or you can obtain the keys, and use them to get the values too:
QMap<QString, int> map; ... foreach (const QString &str, map.keys()) qDebug() << str << ':' << map.value(str);
For a multi-valued map:
QMultiMap<QString, int> map; ... foreach (const QString &str, map.uniqueKeys()) { foreach (int i, map.values(str)) qDebug() << str << ':' << i; }
Qt automatically takes a copy of the container when it enters a
foreach
loop. If you modify the container as you are iterating, that won't affect the loop. (If you do not modify the container, the copy still takes place, but thanks to
隐式共享
copying a container is very fast.)
Since foreach creates a copy of the container, using a non-const reference for the variable does not allow you to modify the original container. It only affects the copy, which is probably not what you want.
An alternative to Qt's
foreach
loop is the range-based
for
that is part of C++11 and newer. However, keep in mind that the range-based
for
might force a Qt container to
detach
,而
foreach
would not. But using
foreach
always copies the container, which is usually not cheap for STL containers. If in doubt, prefer
foreach
for Qt containers, and range based
for
for STL ones.