Reputation: 15100
I've looked at this post which addresses how to loop over arrays that aren't zero-based using the boost::multi_array::origin()
function, but that only creates a single loop.
How does one traverse each dimension of a multi_array
, for example:
for(index i = <origin of dim 1>; ...) {
for(index j = <origin of dim 2>; ...) {
for(index k = <origin of dim 3>; ...) {
myArray[i][j][k] = <something>;
}
}
}
when given an array where both upper and lower bounds are unknown?
Upvotes: 4
Views: 2140
Reputation: 29209
The index_bases
member function returns a container with each dimension's index base. The shape
member function returns a container with each dimension's extent (size). You can use both of these to determine the range of indices for each dimension:
typedef boost::multi_array<int, 3> array_type;
void printArray(const array_type& a)
{
// Query extents of each array dimension
index iMin = a.index_bases()[0];
index iMax = iMin + a.shape()[0] - 1;
index jMin = a.index_bases()[1];
index jMax = jMin + a.shape()[1] - 1;
index kMin = a.index_bases()[2];
index kMax = kMin + a.shape()[2] - 1;
for (index i=iMin; i<=iMax; ++i)
{
for (index j=jMin; j<=jMax; ++j)
{
for (index k=kMin; k<=kMax; ++k)
{
std::cout << a[i][j][k] << " ";
}
}
}
}
int main()
{
typedef array_type::extent_range range;
typedef array_type::index index;
array_type::extent_gen extents;
// Extents are hard-coded here, but can come from user/disk.
array_type a(extents[2][range(1,4)][range(-1,3)]);
// Populate array with values...
// Pass the array to a function. The function will query
// the extents of the given array.
print(a);
return 0;
}
Upvotes: 5