Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Compare arrays in perl
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Compare arrays in perl Post 302264202 by SFNYC on Wednesday 3rd of December 2008 11:16:56 AM
Old 12-03-2008
I found something in the Perl Cookbook that may help you.


Code:
$ cat ./compare_array.pl
#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict;
use warnings;

my @array1;
my @array2;
my @diff;
my @isect;
my $item;
my %count;

@array1 = (1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8);
@array2 = (1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7);

@isect = ( );
@diff  = ( );
%count = ( );

foreach $item (@array1, @array2) { $count{$item}++;}

foreach $item (keys %count) {
    if ($count{$item} == 2) {
        push @isect, $item;
    } else {
        push @diff, $item;
    }
}

print "\nA Array = @array1\n";

print "\nB Array = @array2\n";

print "\nIntersect Array = @isect\n";

print "\nDiff Array = @diff\n\n";

exit 0;

$ ./compare_array.pl

A Array = 1 2 4 6 7 8

B Array = 1 2 3 5 6 7

Intersect Array = 6 1 7 2

Diff Array = 8 4 3 5

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare two arrays in sh or compare two fields

I want a soultion to compare two arrays in sh with an easy way.I want a solution to synchrose users between different AIX servers where no NIS is available. All users are meant to be same on all 10 servers. So the approach is to consider first server as master user repository and whatever the users... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rijeshpp
0 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl - Compare 2 Arrays

Hi all, I have the following script where the contents of file1 and file2 would be something like this: file1: 56790,0,0,100998765 89756,0,0,100567876 867645,1,3,678777654 file2: 56790,0,0,100998765 65776,0,0,4766457890 +5896,0,0,675489876 What I then want to do is check if... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Donkey25
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

compare/match arrays

Hi there all, I am having a question. Is it posible to compare elements of 2 different arrays? For example I got Array 1 | Array 2 123_abc | 123_bcd 123_bcd | 234_bcd 234_abc | 567_abc 234_bcd | 123_abc than the match is 123_abc & 234_bcd and non of the others. So... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: draco
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

compare 2 arrays in perl

Hi Im supposed to compare lines in a file : KB0005 1019 T IFVATVPVI 0.691 PKC YES KB0005 1036 T YFLQTSQQL 0.785 PKC YES KB0005 1037 S FLQTSQQLK 0.585 DNAPK YES KB0005 1045 S KQLESEGRS 0.669 PKC YES KB0005 1045 S KQLESEGRS 0.880 unsp YES KB204320 1019 T IFVATVPVI 0.699 PKC YES ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: karla
7 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare arrays (perl)

Hi, my first post here! Description of my problem: I have one txt-file with six rows and each row contains seven numbers seperated with whitespaces. I want to: Compare one array with seven numbers with each row of numbers in the txt-file. I have managed to compare one array with... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: mjoh
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl Compare 2 Arrays

Hello, Consider the following 2 arrays: Array1 = qw(Fa0/0 Fa0/1 Fa0/2 Fa0/3); Array1 = qw(Fa0/1 Fa0/2 Fa0/3 Fa0/4); I want to compare the following 2 arrays as follows: Take specific action when elements of Array1 that doesn't exist in Array2 (in my example: Fa0/0). Take another... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ahmed_zaher
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

perl: compare two arrays

Hi friends, I want to compare two arrays and find matched one using perl? Also, I want to delete unmatched one. Plz suggest me solution (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Renesh
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare two arrays

Hi, I am trying to compare two lists that are held in two variables so I believe I need to access the array elements to compare these. I am using ksh 88 and the code I have tried is below: for file in ${origfilelist} do if ]] then print -- "File ${file}... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: frodo61
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Using Diff to compare 2 arrays

I have two arrays and they look like this: array=(`cat /local/mnt/*sys/*includes|grep -v NEW`) array2=(`cat /tmp/*sys.z |grep -v NEW`) I am trying to compare them but I need to use the diff -u command. I am not sure how to do this. I cannot just do diff -u ${array} ${array2} I cannot... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie2010
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Compare bash arrays issue

Hello everyone, I need help comparing 2 arrays. the first array is static; the second array is not .. array1=( "macOS Mojave" "iTunes" ) cd /Volumes array2=( * ) # output of array2 macOS Mojave iTunes Mac me The problem occurs when I compare the arrays with the following code - ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: trexthurman
6 Replies
Array::Unique(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Array::Unique(3pm)

NAME
Array::Unique - Tie-able array that allows only unique values SYNOPSIS
use Array::Unique; tie @a, 'Array::Unique'; Now use @a as a regular array. DESCRIPTION
This package lets you create an array which will allow only one occurrence of any value. In other words no matter how many times you put in 42 it will keep only the first occurrence and the rest will be dropped. You use the module via tie and once you tied your array to this module it will behave correctly. Uniqueness is checked with the 'eq' operator so among other things it is case sensitive. As a side effect the module does not allow undef as a value in the array. EXAMPLES
use Array::Unique; tie @a, 'Array::Unique'; @a = qw(a b c a d e f); push @a, qw(x b z); print "@a "; # a b c d e f x z DISCUSSION
When you are collecting a list of items and you want to make sure there is only one occurrence of each item, you have several option: 1) using an array and extracting the unique elements later You might use a regular array to hold this unique set of values and either remove duplicates on each update by that keeping the array always unique or remove duplicates just before you want to use the uniqueness feature of the array. In either case you might run a function you call @a = unique_value(@a); The problem with this approach is that you have to implement the unique_value function (see later) AND you have to make sure you don't forget to call it. I would say don't rely on remembering this. There is good discussion about it in the 1st edition of the Perl Cookbook of O'Reilly. I have copied the solutions here, you can see further discussion in the book. Extracting Unique Elements from a List (Section 4.6 in the Perl Cookbook 1st ed.) # Straightforward %seen = (); @uniq = (); foreach $item (@list) [ unless ($seen{$item}) { # if we get here we have not seen it before $seen{$item} = 1; push (@uniq, $item); } } # Faster %seen = (); foreach $item (@list) { push(@uniq, $item) unless $seen{$item}++; } # Faster but different %seen; foreach $item (@list) { $seen{$item}++; } @uniq = keys %seen; # Faster and even more different %seen; @uniq = grep {! $seen{$_}++} @list; 2) using a hash Some people use the keys of a hash to keep the items and put an arbitrary value as the values of the hash: To build such a list: %unique = map { $_ => 1 } qw( one two one two three four! ); To print it: print join ", ", sort keys %unique; To add values to it: $unique{$_}=1 foreach qw( one after the nine oh nine ); To remove values: delete @unique{ qw(oh nine) }; To check if a value is there: $unique{ $value }; # which is why I like to use "1" as my value (thanks to Gaal Yahas for the above examples) There are three drawbacks I see: 1) You type more. 2) Your reader might not understand at first why did you use hash and what will be the values. 3) You lose the order. Usually non of them is critical but when I saw this the 10th time in a code I had to understand with 0 documentation I got frustrated. 3) using Array::Unique So I decided to write this module because I got frustrated by my lack of understanding what's going on in that code I mentioned. In addition I thought it might be interesting to write this and then benchmark it. Additionally it is nice to have your name displayed in bright lights all over CPAN ... or at least in a module. Array::Unique lets you tie an array to hmmm, itself (?) and makes sure the values of the array are always unique. Since writing this I am not sure if I really recommend its usage. I would say stick with the hash version and document that the variable is aggregating a unique list of values. 4) Using real SET There are modules on CPAN that let you create and maintain SETs. I have not checked any of those but I guess they just as much of an overkill for this functionality as Unique::Array. BUGS
use Array::Unique; tie @a, 'Array::Unique'; @c = @a = qw(a b c a d e f b); @c will contain the same as @a AND two undefs at the end because @c you get the same length as the right most list. TODO
Test: Change size of the array Elements with false values ('', '0', 0) splice: splice @a; splice @a, 3; splice @a, -3; splice @a, 3, 5; splice @a, 3, -5; splice @a, -3, 5; splice @a, -3, -5; splice @a, ?, ?, @b; Benchmark speed Add faster functions that don't check uniqueness so if I know part of the data that comes from a unique source then I can speed up the process, In short shoot myself in the leg. Enable optional compare with other functions Write even better implementations. AUTHOR
Gabor Szabo <gabor@pti.co.il> LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2002-2008 Gabor Szabo <gabor@pti.co.il> All rights reserved. http://www.pti.co.il/ You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file. No WARRANTY whatsoever. CREDITS
Thanks for suggestions and bug reports to Szabo Balazs (dLux) Shlomo Yona Gaal Yahas Jeff 'japhy' Pinyan Werner Weichselberger VERSION
Version: 0.08 Date: 2008 June 04 perl v5.10.0 2009-03-06 Array::Unique(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:30 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy