You can always go your own way and implement an iterator yourself. I haven't verified this code but it should work. Emphasis on "I haven't verified."
template <class Container>
class push_insert_iterator:
public iterator<output_iterator_tag,void,void,void,void>
{
protected:
Container* container;
public:
typedef Container container_type;
explicit push_insert_iterator(Container& x) : container(&x) {}
push_insert_iterator<Container>& operator= (typename Container::const_reference value){
container->push(value); return *this; }
push_insert_iterator<Container>& operator* (){ return *this; }
push_insert_iterator<Container>& operator++ (){ return *this; }
push_insert_iterator<Container> operator++ (int){ return *this; }
};
I'd also add in the following function to help use it:
template<typename Container>
push_insert_iterator<Container> push_inserter(Container container){
return push_insert_iterator<Container>(container);
}
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