On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Burak Serdar wrote:
> I think I was unclear. This was what I said. You cannot keep references to the
> elements of a vector if you are inserting elements. What I said was, instead of
> storing objects in the vector, you can store references to objects, and instead of
> storing a reference to an element of the vector, you can store a reference to the
> actual object, i.e.
>
> vector<someclass&> v;
>
> and instead of storing vector<someclass&>::iterator reference to an element of the
> vector, use a someclass& reference to the actual object. After an insert
> operation, vector<someclass&>::iterator will be definitely destroyed.
vector is a type of container, it is used to contain my objects, if I
only use vector to store "reference to object", why do I use a 'vector'?
Sincerely Yours,
FengLou Mao
*******************************
ADD:Mr. FengLou Mao
Peking University
BeiJing
P.R.China
Tel:86-10-62751490
Fax:86-10-62751725