407 lines
		
	
	
		
			15 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			407 lines
		
	
	
		
			15 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| # diff-sequences
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| 
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| Compare items in two sequences to find a **longest common subsequence**.
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| 
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| The items not in common are the items to delete or insert in a **shortest edit script**.
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| 
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| To maximize flexibility and minimize memory, you write **callback** functions as configuration:
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| 
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| **Input** function `isCommon(aIndex, bIndex)` compares items at indexes in the sequences and returns a truthy/falsey value. This package might call your function more than once for some pairs of indexes.
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| 
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| - Because your function encapsulates **comparison**, this package can compare items according to `===` operator, `Object.is` method, or other criterion.
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| - Because your function encapsulates **sequences**, this package can find differences in arrays, strings, or other data.
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| 
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| **Output** function `foundSubsequence(nCommon, aCommon, bCommon)` receives the number of adjacent items and starting indexes of each common subsequence. If sequences do not have common items, then this package does not call your function.
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| 
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| If N is the sum of lengths of sequences and L is length of a longest common subsequence, then D = N – 2L is the number of **differences** in the corresponding shortest edit script.
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| 
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| [_An O(ND) Difference Algorithm and Its Variations_](http://xmailserver.org/diff2.pdf) by Eugene W. Myers is fast when sequences have **few** differences.
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| 
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| This package implements the **linear space** variation with optimizations so it is fast even when sequences have **many** differences.
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| 
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| ## Usage
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| 
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| To add this package as a dependency of a project, do either of the following:
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| 
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| - `npm install diff-sequences`
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| - `yarn add diff-sequences`
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| 
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| To use `diff` as the name of the default export from this package, do either of the following:
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| 
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| - `var diff = require('diff-sequences'); // CommonJS modules`
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| - `import diff from 'diff-sequences'; // ECMAScript modules`
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| 
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| Call `diff` with the **lengths** of sequences and your **callback** functions:
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| 
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| ```js
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| /* eslint-disable no-var */
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| var a = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'b', 'a'];
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| var b = ['c', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'c'];
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| 
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| function isCommon(aIndex, bIndex) {
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|   return a[aIndex] === b[bIndex];
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| }
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| function foundSubsequence(nCommon, aCommon, bCommon) {
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|   // see examples
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| }
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| 
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| diff(a.length, b.length, isCommon, foundSubsequence);
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| ```
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| 
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| ## Example of longest common subsequence
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| 
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| Some sequences (for example, `a` and `b` in the example of usage) have more than one longest common subsequence.
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| 
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| This package finds the following common items:
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| 
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| | comparisons of common items      | values     |            output arguments |
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| | :------------------------------- | :--------- | --------------------------: |
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| | `a[2] === b[0]`                  | `'c'`      | `foundSubsequence(1, 2, 0)` |
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| | `a[4] === b[1]`                  | `'b'`      | `foundSubsequence(1, 4, 1)` |
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| | `a[5] === b[3] && a[6] === b[4]` | `'b', 'a'` | `foundSubsequence(2, 5, 3)` |
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| 
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| The “edit graph” analogy in the Myers paper shows the following common items:
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| 
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| | comparisons of common items      | values     |
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| | :------------------------------- | :--------- |
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| | `a[2] === b[0]`                  | `'c'`      |
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| | `a[3] === b[2] && a[4] === b[3]` | `'a', 'b'` |
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| | `a[6] === b[4]`                  | `'a'`      |
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| 
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| Various packages which implement the Myers algorithm will **always agree** on the **length** of a longest common subsequence, but might **sometimes disagree** on which **items** are in it.
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| 
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| ## Example of callback functions to count common items
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| 
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| ```js
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| /* eslint-disable no-var */
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| // Return length of longest common subsequence according to === operator.
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| function countCommonItems(a, b) {
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|   var n = 0;
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|   function isCommon(aIndex, bIndex) {
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|     return a[aIndex] === b[bIndex];
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|   }
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|   function foundSubsequence(nCommon) {
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|     n += nCommon;
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|   }
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| 
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|   diff(a.length, b.length, isCommon, foundSubsequence);
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| 
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|   return n;
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| }
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| 
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| var commonLength = countCommonItems(
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|   ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'b', 'a'],
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|   ['c', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'c'],
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| );
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| ```
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| 
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| | category of items  |                expression | value |
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| | :----------------- | ------------------------: | ----: |
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| | in common          |            `commonLength` |   `4` |
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| | to delete from `a` | `a.length - commonLength` |   `3` |
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| | to insert from `b` | `b.length - commonLength` |   `2` |
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| 
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| If the length difference `b.length - a.length` is:
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| 
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| - negative: its absolute value is the minimum number of items to **delete** from `a`
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| - positive: it is the minimum number of items to **insert** from `b`
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| - zero: there is an **equal** number of items to delete from `a` and insert from `b`
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| - non-zero: there is an equal number of **additional** items to delete from `a` and insert from `b`
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| 
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| In this example, `6 - 7` is:
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| 
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| - negative: `1` is the minimum number of items to **delete** from `a`
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| - non-zero: `2` is the number of **additional** items to delete from `a` and insert from `b`
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| 
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| ## Example of callback functions to find common items
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| 
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| ```js
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| // Return array of items in longest common subsequence according to Object.is method.
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| const findCommonItems = (a, b) => {
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|   const array = [];
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|   diff(
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|     a.length,
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|     b.length,
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|     (aIndex, bIndex) => Object.is(a[aIndex], b[bIndex]),
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|     (nCommon, aCommon) => {
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|       for (; nCommon !== 0; nCommon -= 1, aCommon += 1) {
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|         array.push(a[aCommon]);
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|       }
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|     },
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|   );
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|   return array;
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| };
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| 
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| const commonItems = findCommonItems(
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|   ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'b', 'a'],
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|   ['c', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'c'],
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| );
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| ```
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| 
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| | `i` | `commonItems[i]` | `aIndex` |
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| | --: | :--------------- | -------: |
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| | `0` | `'c'`            |      `2` |
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| | `1` | `'b'`            |      `4` |
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| | `2` | `'b'`            |      `5` |
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| | `3` | `'a'`            |      `6` |
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| 
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| ## Example of callback functions to diff index intervals
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| 
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| Instead of slicing array-like objects, you can adjust indexes in your callback functions.
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| 
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| ```js
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| // Diff index intervals that are half open [start, end) like array slice method.
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| const diffIndexIntervals = (a, aStart, aEnd, b, bStart, bEnd) => {
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|   // Validate: 0 <= aStart and aStart <= aEnd and aEnd <= a.length
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|   // Validate: 0 <= bStart and bStart <= bEnd and bEnd <= b.length
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| 
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|   diff(
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|     aEnd - aStart,
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|     bEnd - bStart,
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|     (aIndex, bIndex) => Object.is(a[aStart + aIndex], b[bStart + bIndex]),
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|     (nCommon, aCommon, bCommon) => {
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|       // aStart + aCommon, bStart + bCommon
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|     },
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|   );
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| 
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|   // After the last common subsequence, do any remaining work.
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| };
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| ```
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| 
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| ## Example of callback functions to emulate diff command
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| 
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| Linux or Unix has a `diff` command to compare files line by line. Its output is a **shortest edit script**:
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| 
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| - **c**hange adjacent lines from the first file to lines from the second file
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| - **d**elete lines from the first file
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| - **a**ppend or insert lines from the second file
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| 
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| ```js
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| // Given zero-based half-open range [start, end) of array indexes,
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| // return one-based closed range [start + 1, end] as string.
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| const getRange = (start, end) =>
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|   start + 1 === end ? `${start + 1}` : `${start + 1},${end}`;
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| 
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| // Given index intervals of lines to delete or insert, or both, or neither,
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| // push formatted diff lines onto array.
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| const pushDelIns = (aLines, aIndex, aEnd, bLines, bIndex, bEnd, array) => {
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|   const deleteLines = aIndex !== aEnd;
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|   const insertLines = bIndex !== bEnd;
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|   const changeLines = deleteLines && insertLines;
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|   if (changeLines) {
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|     array.push(getRange(aIndex, aEnd) + 'c' + getRange(bIndex, bEnd));
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|   } else if (deleteLines) {
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|     array.push(getRange(aIndex, aEnd) + 'd' + String(bIndex));
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|   } else if (insertLines) {
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|     array.push(String(aIndex) + 'a' + getRange(bIndex, bEnd));
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|   } else {
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|     return;
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|   }
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| 
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|   for (; aIndex !== aEnd; aIndex += 1) {
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|     array.push('< ' + aLines[aIndex]); // delete is less than
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|   }
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| 
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|   if (changeLines) {
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|     array.push('---');
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|   }
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| 
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|   for (; bIndex !== bEnd; bIndex += 1) {
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|     array.push('> ' + bLines[bIndex]); // insert is greater than
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|   }
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| };
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| 
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| // Given content of two files, return emulated output of diff utility.
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| const findShortestEditScript = (a, b) => {
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|   const aLines = a.split('\n');
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|   const bLines = b.split('\n');
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|   const aLength = aLines.length;
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|   const bLength = bLines.length;
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| 
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|   const isCommon = (aIndex, bIndex) => aLines[aIndex] === bLines[bIndex];
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| 
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|   let aIndex = 0;
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|   let bIndex = 0;
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|   const array = [];
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|   const foundSubsequence = (nCommon, aCommon, bCommon) => {
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|     pushDelIns(aLines, aIndex, aCommon, bLines, bIndex, bCommon, array);
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|     aIndex = aCommon + nCommon; // number of lines compared in a
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|     bIndex = bCommon + nCommon; // number of lines compared in b
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|   };
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| 
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|   diff(aLength, bLength, isCommon, foundSubsequence);
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| 
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|   // After the last common subsequence, push remaining change lines.
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|   pushDelIns(aLines, aIndex, aLength, bLines, bIndex, bLength, array);
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| 
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|   return array.length === 0 ? '' : array.join('\n') + '\n';
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| };
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| ```
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| 
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| ## Example of callback functions to format diff lines
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| 
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| Here is simplified code to format **changed and unchanged lines** in expected and received values after a test fails in Jest:
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| 
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| ```js
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| // Format diff with minus or plus for change lines and space for common lines.
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| const formatDiffLines = (a, b) => {
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|   // Jest depends on pretty-format package to serialize objects as strings.
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|   // Unindented for comparison to avoid distracting differences:
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|   const aLinesUn = format(a, {indent: 0 /*, other options*/}).split('\n');
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|   const bLinesUn = format(b, {indent: 0 /*, other options*/}).split('\n');
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|   // Indented to display changed and unchanged lines:
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|   const aLinesIn = format(a, {indent: 2 /*, other options*/}).split('\n');
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|   const bLinesIn = format(b, {indent: 2 /*, other options*/}).split('\n');
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| 
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|   const aLength = aLinesIn.length; // Validate: aLinesUn.length === aLength
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|   const bLength = bLinesIn.length; // Validate: bLinesUn.length === bLength
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| 
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|   const isCommon = (aIndex, bIndex) => aLinesUn[aIndex] === bLinesUn[bIndex];
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| 
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|   // Only because the GitHub Flavored Markdown doc collapses adjacent spaces,
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|   // this example code and the following table represent spaces as middle dots.
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|   let aIndex = 0;
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|   let bIndex = 0;
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|   const array = [];
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|   const foundSubsequence = (nCommon, aCommon, bCommon) => {
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|     for (; aIndex !== aCommon; aIndex += 1) {
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|       array.push('-·' + aLinesIn[aIndex]); // delete is minus
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|     }
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|     for (; bIndex !== bCommon; bIndex += 1) {
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|       array.push('+·' + bLinesIn[bIndex]); // insert is plus
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|     }
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|     for (; nCommon !== 0; nCommon -= 1, aIndex += 1, bIndex += 1) {
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|       // For common lines, received indentation seems more intuitive.
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|       array.push('··' + bLinesIn[bIndex]); // common is space
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|     }
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|   };
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| 
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|   diff(aLength, bLength, isCommon, foundSubsequence);
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| 
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|   // After the last common subsequence, push remaining change lines.
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|   for (; aIndex !== aLength; aIndex += 1) {
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|     array.push('-·' + aLinesIn[aIndex]);
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|   }
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|   for (; bIndex !== bLength; bIndex += 1) {
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|     array.push('+·' + bLinesIn[bIndex]);
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|   }
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| 
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|   return array;
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| };
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| 
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| const expected = {
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|   searching: '',
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|   sorting: {
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|     ascending: true,
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|     fieldKey: 'what',
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|   },
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| };
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| const received = {
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|   searching: '',
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|   sorting: [
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|     {
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|       descending: false,
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|       fieldKey: 'what',
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|     },
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|   ],
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| };
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| 
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| const diffLines = formatDiffLines(expected, received);
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| ```
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| 
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| If N is the sum of lengths of sequences and L is length of a longest common subsequence, then N – L is length of an array of diff lines. In this example, N is 7 + 9, L is 5, and N – L is 11.
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| 
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| |  `i` | `diffLines[i]`                     | `aIndex` | `bIndex` |
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| | ---: | :--------------------------------- | -------: | -------: |
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| |  `0` | `'··Object {'`                     |      `0` |      `0` |
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| |  `1` | `'····"searching": "",'`           |      `1` |      `1` |
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| |  `2` | `'-···"sorting": Object {'`        |      `2` |          |
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| |  `3` | `'-·····"ascending": true,'`       |      `3` |          |
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| |  `4` | `'+·····"sorting": Array ['`       |          |      `2` |
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| |  `5` | `'+·······Object {'`               |          |      `3` |
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| |  `6` | `'+·········"descending": false,'` |          |      `4` |
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| |  `7` | `'··········"fieldKey": "what",'`  |      `4` |      `5` |
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| |  `8` | `'········},'`                     |      `5` |      `6` |
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| |  `9` | `'+·····],'`                       |          |      `7` |
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| | `10` | `'··}'`                            |      `6` |      `8` |
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| 
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| ## Example of callback functions to find diff items
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| 
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| Here is simplified code to find changed and unchanged substrings **within adjacent changed lines** in expected and received values after a test fails in Jest:
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| 
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| ```js
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| // Return diff items for strings (compatible with diff-match-patch package).
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| const findDiffItems = (a, b) => {
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|   const isCommon = (aIndex, bIndex) => a[aIndex] === b[bIndex];
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| 
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|   let aIndex = 0;
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|   let bIndex = 0;
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|   const array = [];
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|   const foundSubsequence = (nCommon, aCommon, bCommon) => {
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|     if (aIndex !== aCommon) {
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|       array.push([-1, a.slice(aIndex, aCommon)]); // delete is -1
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|     }
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|     if (bIndex !== bCommon) {
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|       array.push([1, b.slice(bIndex, bCommon)]); // insert is 1
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|     }
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| 
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|     aIndex = aCommon + nCommon; // number of characters compared in a
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|     bIndex = bCommon + nCommon; // number of characters compared in b
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|     array.push([0, a.slice(aCommon, aIndex)]); // common is 0
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|   };
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| 
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|   diff(a.length, b.length, isCommon, foundSubsequence);
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| 
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|   // After the last common subsequence, push remaining change items.
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|   if (aIndex !== a.length) {
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|     array.push([-1, a.slice(aIndex)]);
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|   }
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|   if (bIndex !== b.length) {
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|     array.push([1, b.slice(bIndex)]);
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|   }
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| 
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|   return array;
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| };
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| 
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| const expectedDeleted = ['"sorting": Object {', '"ascending": true,'].join(
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|   '\n',
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| );
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| const receivedInserted = [
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|   '"sorting": Array [',
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|   'Object {',
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|   '"descending": false,',
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| ].join('\n');
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| 
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| const diffItems = findDiffItems(expectedDeleted, receivedInserted);
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| ```
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| 
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| | `i` | `diffItems[i][0]` | `diffItems[i][1]` |
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| | --: | ----------------: | :---------------- |
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| | `0` |               `0` | `'"sorting": '`   |
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| | `1` |               `1` | `'Array [\n'`     |
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| | `2` |               `0` | `'Object {\n"'`   |
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| | `3` |              `-1` | `'a'`             |
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| | `4` |               `1` | `'de'`            |
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| | `5` |               `0` | `'scending": '`   |
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| | `6` |              `-1` | `'tru'`           |
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| | `7` |               `1` | `'fals'`          |
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| | `8` |               `0` | `'e,'`            |
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| 
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| The length difference `b.length - a.length` is equal to the sum of `diffItems[i][0]` values times `diffItems[i][1]` lengths. In this example, the difference `48 - 38` is equal to the sum `10`.
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| 
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| | category of diff item | `[0]` |      `[1]` lengths | subtotal |
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| | :-------------------- | ----: | -----------------: | -------: |
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| | in common             |   `0` | `11 + 10 + 11 + 2` |      `0` |
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| | to delete from `a`    |  `–1` |            `1 + 3` |     `-4` |
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| | to insert from `b`    |   `1` |        `8 + 2 + 4` |     `14` |
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| 
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| Instead of formatting the changed substrings with escape codes for colors in the `foundSubsequence` function to save memory, this example spends memory to **gain flexibility** before formatting, so a separate heuristic algorithm might modify the generic array of diff items to show changes more clearly:
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| 
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| | `i` | `diffItems[i][0]` | `diffItems[i][1]` |
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| | --: | ----------------: | :---------------- |
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| | `6` |              `-1` | `'true'`          |
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| | `7` |               `1` | `'false'`         |
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| | `8` |               `0` | `','`             |
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| 
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| For expected and received strings of serialized data, the result of finding changed **lines**, and then finding changed **substrings** within adjacent changed lines (as in the preceding two examples) sometimes displays the changes in a more intuitive way than the result of finding changed substrings, and then splitting them into changed and unchanged lines.
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