merge

merge

template<class InIt1, class InIt2, class OutIt>
    OutIt merge(InIt1 first1, InIt1 last1,
        InIt2 first2, InIt2 last2, OutIt x);
template<class InIt1, class InIt2, class OutIt, class Pred>
    OutIt merge(InIt1 first1, InIt1 last1,
        InIt2 first2, InIt2 last2, OutIt x, Pred pr);

The first template function determines K, the number of elements to copy as (last1 - first1) + (last2 - first2). It then alternately copies two sequences, designated by iterators in the ranges [first1, last1) and [first2, last2) and each ordered byoperator<, to form a merged sequence of length K beginning at x, also ordered by operator<. The function then returns x + K.

The merge occurs without altering the relative order of elements within either sequence. Moreover, for any two elements from different sequences that have equivalent ordering, the element from the ordered range [first1, last1) precedes the other. Thus, the function merges two ordered sequences to form another ordered sequence.

If x and first1 designate regions of storage, the range [x, x + K) must not overlap the range [first1, last1). If x and first2 designate regions of storage, the range [x, x + K) must not overlap the range [first2, last2). The function evaluates the ordering predicate X < Y at most K - 1 times.

The second template function behaves the same, except that it replaces operator<(X, Y) with pr(X, Y).

Sample programs: merge and merge (predicate version).