| 
    insert
   
    Syntax:
   #include <map> iterator insert( iterator pos, const TYPE& val ); iterator insert( const TYPE& val ); void insert( input_iterator start, input_iterator end ); The function insert() either: 
 For example, the following code uses the insert() function to add several <name,ID> pairs to a employee multimap: 
  multimap<string,int> m;
  int employeeID = 0;
  m.insert( pair<string,int>("Bob Smith",employeeID++) );
  m.insert( pair<string,int>("Bob Thompson",employeeID++) );
  m.insert( pair<string,int>("Bob Smithey",employeeID++) );
  m.insert( pair<string,int>("Bob Smith",employeeID++) );
  cout << "Number of employees named 'Bob Smith': " << m.count("Bob Smith") << endl;
  cout << "Number of employees named 'Bob Thompson': " << m.count("Bob Thompson") << endl;
  cout << "Number of employees named 'Bob Smithey': " << m.count("Bob Smithey") << endl;
  cout << "Employee list: " << endl;
  for( multimap<string, int>::iterator iter = m.begin(); iter != m.end(); ++iter ) {
    cout << " Name: " << iter->first << ", ID #" << iter->second << endl;
  }
When run, the above code produces the following output: Number of employees named 'Bob Smith': 2 Number of employees named 'Bob Thompson': 1 Number of employees named 'Bob Smithey': 1 Employee list: Name: Bob Smith, ID #0 Name: Bob Smith, ID #3 Name: Bob Smithey, ID #2 Name: Bob Thompson, ID #1 |