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Dyph

Circle CI Code Climate Test Coverage Issue Count Documentation

A library of useful diffing algorithms for Ruby.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'dyph'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install dyph

Quick start

Two way diffing

To diff two arrays:

left = [:a, :b, :c, :d]
right = [:b, :c, :d, :e]
Dyph::Differ.two_way_diff(left, right)

which will return an array of Dyph::Action with offsets

[
  <Action::Delete   @new_index=0, @old_index=1, @value=:a>,
  <Action::NoChange @new_index=0, @old_index=1, @value=:b>,
  <Action::NoChange @new_index=1, @old_index=2, @value=:c>,
  <Action::NoChange @new_index=2, @old_index=3, @value=:d>,
  <Action::Add      @new_index=4, @old_index=4, @value=:e>
]

Three way diffing

Three way diffing is able to detect changes between two documents relative to a common base.

No conflicts

To execute a three way diff and merge:

left  = [:a, :b, :c, :d]
base  = [:a, :b, :c]
right = [:b, :c, :d, :e]
Dyph::Differ.merge(left, base, right)

Which returns a Dyph::MergeResult with a list of result outcomes:

[ <OutCome::Resolved(@result=[:b, :c, :d, :e]> ]

and has MergeResult#conflict set to false

Conflicts

Conflicts are when left and right make a change relative to base in the same relative place, so an end user must determine how to merge

For example:

left  = [:a, :l, :c]
base  = [:a, :b, :c]
right = [:a, :r, :c]
Dyph::Differ.merge(left, base, right)

returns the following MergeResult#result

[
  <Outcome::Resolved   @result=[:a]>
  <Outcome::Conflicted @base=[:b], @left=[:l], @right=[:r]>,
  <Outcome::Resolved   @result=[:c]>
]

and has MergeResult#conflict set to true

Split, Join, and Conflict functions

Dyph works on arrays of objects that implement equatable and hash (see Dyph::Equatable). For various reasons one might want to delegate the splitting and joining of the input/out to Dyph. (i.e. so one would not have to map over the input and output to do the transformation)

With merge parameter lambdas

One can define split_funciton, join_function, and conflict_function to Dyph::Diff.merge such as splitting on word boundries, (but keeping delimiters):

split_function =  ->(string) { string.split(/\b/) }

and then a join function to handle the resulting arrays

join_function =  ->(array) { array.join }

which may be invoked with

left  = "The quick brown fox left the lazy dog"
base  = "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog."
right = "The right brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"
merge_results = Dyph::Differ.merge(left, base, right, split_function: split_function, join_function: join_function)
merge_results.joined_results

will then return

"The right brown fox left the lazy dog"

Conflict Handlers

Similarly one can instruct the differ on how to deal with conflicts. The conflict_function is passed a list of Outcomes from the diff:

conflict_funciton = ->(outcome_list) { ... }

which one can then pass to the Differ#merge method as

Dyph::Differ.merge(left, base, right, conflict_function: conflict_funciton)

Class Level Processor with Example

In addition to argument level split, join, merge functions, Dyph also supports object level processors:

DIFF_PREPROCESSOR = -> (object) { ... }
DIFF_POSTPROCESSOR = -> (array) { ... }
DIFF_CONFLICT_PROCESSOR = ->(outcome_list) { ... }

that will look something like:

class GreetingCard
  attr_reader :message

  #Dyph Processors
  DIFF_PREPROCESSOR  = -> (sentence) { sentence.message.split(/\b/) }
  DIFF_POSTPROCESSOR = -> (array) { array.join }
  DIFF_CONFLICT_PROCESSOR = ->(outcome_list) do
    outcome_list.map do |outcome|
      if outcome.conflicted?
        [
          "<span class='conflict_left'>#{outcome.left.join}</span>",
          "<span class='conflict_base'>#{outcome.base.join}</span>",
          "<span class='conflict_right'>#{outcome.right.join}</span>"
        ].join
      else
        outcome.result.join
      end
    end.join
  end

  def initialize(message)
    @message = message
  end

end

When there are no conflictes:

left = GreetingCard.new("Ho! Ho! Ho! Merry Christmas!")
base = GreetingCard.new("Merry Christmas!")
right = GreetingCard.new("Merry Christmas! And a Happy New Year")
Dyph::Differ.merge(left, base, right).joined_results

=> "Ho! Ho! Ho! Merry Christmas! And a Happy New Year"

and when there are:

left = GreetingCard.new("Happy Christmas!")
base = GreetingCard.new("Merry Christmas!")
right = GreetingCard.new("Just Christmas!")
Dyph::Differ.merge(left, base, right).joined_results

=> "<span class='conflict_left'>Happy</span><span class='conflict_base'>Merry</span><span class='conflict_right'>Just</span> Christmas!"

References:

Three-way file comparison algorithm (python)

Moin Three way differ (python)

Text Diff3 (perl)

##The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright © 2016 Boundless

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.