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C++ algorithm copy() function

❮ Algorithm Functions


Example

Copy the contents of a vector into another vector:

vector<int> numbers = {1, 7, 3, 5, 9, 2};
vector<int> copiedNumbers(6);
copy(numbers.begin(), numbers.end(), copiedNumbers.begin());
for (int number : copiedNumbers) {
  cout << number << " ";
}
Try it Yourself »

Definition and Usage

The copy() function copies a the contents of a data range into another data range.

The data ranges are specified by iterators.

Syntax

copy( iterator start, iterator end, iterator destination );

Parameter Values

Parameter Description
start Required. An iterator pointing to the start of the data range being copied.
end Required. An iterator pointing to the end of the data range being copied. Elements up to this position will be copied, but the element at this position will not be included.
destination Required. An iterator pointing to the location that the data will be copied to.

Technical Details

Returns: An iterator pointing to the end of the destination data range.

More Examples

Example

Copy the first three values of a vector into the same vector:

vector<int> numbers = {1, 7, 3, 5, 9, 2};
copy(numbers.begin(), numbers.begin() + 3, numbers.begin() + 3);
for (int number : numbers) {
  cout << number << " ";
}
Try it Yourself »

Related Pages

Read more about data structures in our Data Structures Tutorial.

Read more about iterators in our Iterators Tutorial.

Read more about algorithms in our Algorithms Tutorial.


❮ Algorithm Functions

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