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Algorithm::Diff(3pm)  User Contributed Perl Documentation  Algorithm::Diff(3pm)

NAME
       Algorithm::Diff - Compute `intelligent' differences between two files /
       lists

SYNOPSIS
           require Algorithm::Diff;

           # This example produces traditional 'diff' output:

           my $diff = Algorithm::Diff->new( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

           $diff->Base( 1 );   # Return line numbers, not indices
           while(  $diff->Next()  ) {
               next   if  $diff->Same();
               my $sep = '';
               if(  ! $diff->Items(2)  ) {
                   printf "%d,%dd%d\n",
                       $diff->Get(qw( Min1 Max1 Max2 ));
               } elsif(  ! $diff->Items(1)  ) {
                   printf "%da%d,%d\n",
                       $diff->Get(qw( Max1 Min2 Max2 ));
               } else {
                   $sep = "---\n";
                   printf "%d,%dc%d,%d\n",
                       $diff->Get(qw( Min1 Max1 Min2 Max2 ));
               }
               print "< $_"   for  $diff->Items(1);
               print $sep;
               print "> $_"   for  $diff->Items(2);
           }

           # Alternate interfaces:

           use Algorithm::Diff qw(
               LCS LCS_length LCSidx
               diff sdiff compact_diff
               traverse_sequences traverse_balanced );

           @lcs    = LCS( \@seq1, \@seq2 );
           $lcsref = LCS( \@seq1, \@seq2 );
           $count  = LCS_length( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

           ( $seq1idxref, $seq2idxref ) = LCSidx( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

           # Complicated interfaces:

           @diffs  = diff( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

           @sdiffs = sdiff( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

           @cdiffs = compact_diff( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

           traverse_sequences(
               \@seq1,
               \@seq2,
               {   MATCH     => \&callback1,
                   DISCARD_A => \&callback2,
                   DISCARD_B => \&callback3,
               },
               \&key_generator,
               @extra_args,
           );

           traverse_balanced(
               \@seq1,
               \@seq2,
               {   MATCH     => \&callback1,
                   DISCARD_A => \&callback2,
                   DISCARD_B => \&callback3,
                   CHANGE    => \&callback4,
               },
               \&key_generator,
               @extra_args,
           );

INTRODUCTION
       (by Mark-Jason Dominus)

       I once read an article written by the authors of "diff"; they said that
       they worked very hard on the algorithm until they found the right one.

       I think what they ended up using (and I hope someone will correct me,
       because I am not very confident about this) was the `longest common
       subsequence' method.  In the LCS problem, you have two sequences of
       items:

           a b c d f g h j q z

           a b c d e f g i j k r x y z

       and you want to find the longest sequence of items that is present in
       both original sequences in the same order.  That is, you want to find a
       new sequence S which can be obtained from the first sequence by deleting
       some items, and from the second sequence by deleting other items.  You
       also want S to be as long as possible.  In this case S is

           a b c d f g j z

       From there it's only a small step to get diff-like output:

           e   h i   k   q r x y
           +   - +   +   - + + +

       This module solves the LCS problem.  It also includes a canned function
       to generate "diff"-like output.

       It might seem from the example above that the LCS of two sequences is
       always pretty obvious, but that's not always the case, especially when
       the two sequences have many repeated elements.  For example, consider

           a x b y c z p d q
           a b c a x b y c z

       A naive approach might start by matching up the "a" and "b" that appear
       at the beginning of each sequence, like this:

           a x b y c         z p d q
           a   b   c a b y c z

       This finds the common subsequence "a b c z".  But actually, the LCS is
       "a x b y c z":

                 a x b y c z p d q
           a b c a x b y c z

       or

           a       x b y c z p d q
           a b c a x b y c z

USAGE
       (See also the README file and several example scripts include with this
       module.)

       This module now provides an object-oriented interface that uses less
       memory and is easier to use than most of the previous procedural
       interfaces.  It also still provides several exportable functions.  We'll
       deal with these in ascending order of difficulty:  "LCS", "LCS_length",
       "LCSidx", OO interface, "prepare", "diff", "sdiff",
       "traverse_sequences", and "traverse_balanced".

   "LCS"
       Given references to two lists of items, LCS returns an array containing
       their longest common subsequence.  In scalar context, it returns a
       reference to such a list.

           @lcs    = LCS( \@seq1, \@seq2 );
           $lcsref = LCS( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

       "LCS" may be passed an optional third parameter; this is a CODE
       reference to a key generation function.  See "KEY GENERATION FUNCTIONS".

           @lcs    = LCS( \@seq1, \@seq2, \&keyGen, @args );
           $lcsref = LCS( \@seq1, \@seq2, \&keyGen, @args );

       Additional parameters, if any, will be passed to the key generation
       routine.

   "LCS_length"
       This is just like "LCS" except it only returns the length of the longest
       common subsequence.  This provides a performance gain of about 9%
       compared to "LCS".

   "LCSidx"
       Like "LCS" except it returns references to two arrays.  The first array
       contains the indices into @seq1 where the LCS items are located.  The
       second array contains the indices into @seq2 where the LCS items are
       located.

       Therefore, the following three lists will contain the same values:

           my( $idx1, $idx2 ) = LCSidx( \@seq1, \@seq2 );
           my @list1 = @seq1[ @$idx1 ];
           my @list2 = @seq2[ @$idx2 ];
           my @list3 = LCS( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

   "new"
           $diff = Algorithm::Diff->new( \@seq1, \@seq2 );
           $diff = Algorithm::Diff->new( \@seq1, \@seq2, \%opts );

       "new" computes the smallest set of additions and deletions necessary to
       turn the first sequence into the second and compactly records them in
       the object.

       You use the object to iterate over hunks, where each hunk represents a
       contiguous section of items which should be added, deleted, replaced, or
       left unchanged.

       The following summary of all of the methods looks a lot like Perl code
       but some of the symbols have different meanings:

           [ ]     Encloses optional arguments
           :       Is followed by the default value for an optional argument
           |       Separates alternate return results

       Method summary:

           $obj        = Algorithm::Diff->new( \@seq1, \@seq2, [ \%opts ] );
           $pos        = $obj->Next(  [ $count : 1 ] );
           $revPos     = $obj->Prev(  [ $count : 1 ] );
           $obj        = $obj->Reset( [ $pos : 0 ] );
           $copy       = $obj->Copy(  [ $pos, [ $newBase ] ] );
           $oldBase    = $obj->Base(  [ $newBase ] );

       Note that all of the following methods "die" if used on an object that
       is "reset" (not currently pointing at any hunk).

           $bits       = $obj->Diff(  );
           @items|$cnt = $obj->Same(  );
           @items|$cnt = $obj->Items( $seqNum );
           @idxs |$cnt = $obj->Range( $seqNum, [ $base ] );
           $minIdx     = $obj->Min(   $seqNum, [ $base ] );
           $maxIdx     = $obj->Max(   $seqNum, [ $base ] );
           @values     = $obj->Get(   @names );

       Passing in "undef" for an optional argument is always treated the same
       as if no argument were passed in.

       "Next"
               $pos = $diff->Next();    # Move forward 1 hunk
               $pos = $diff->Next( 2 ); # Move forward 2 hunks
               $pos = $diff->Next(-5);  # Move backward 5 hunks

           "Next"  moves  the  object  to  point  at the next hunk.  The object
           starts out "reset", which means it isn't pointing at any  hunk.   If
           the object is reset, then "Next()" moves to the first hunk.

           "Next"  returns  a  true  value iff the move didn't go past the last
           hunk.  So Next(0) will return true iff the object is not reset.

           Actually, "Next" returns the  object's  new  position,  which  is  a
           number  between  1 and the number of hunks (inclusive), or returns a
           false value.

       "Prev"
           "Prev($N)" is almost identical to "Next(-$N)"; it moves to the  $Nth
           previous  hunk.  On a 'reset' object, "Prev()" [and "Next(-1)"] move
           to the last hunk.

           The position returned by "Prev" is relative to the end of the hunks;
           -1 for the last hunk, -2 for the second-to-last, etc.

       "Reset"
               $diff->Reset();     # Reset the object's position
               $diff->Reset($pos); # Move to the specified hunk
               $diff->Reset(1);    # Move to the first hunk
               $diff->Reset(-1);   # Move to the last hunk

           "Reset"  returns  the  object,  so,  for  example,  you  could   use
           "$diff->Reset()->Next(-1)" to get the number of hunks.

       "Copy"
               $copy = $diff->Copy( $newPos, $newBase );

           "Copy"  returns  a  copy  of  the object.  The copy and the original
           object share most of their data, so making copies takes very  little
           memory.   The  copy  maintains  its  own position (separate from the
           original), which is the main purpose of copies.  It  also  maintains
           its own base.

           By  default, the copy's position starts out the same as the original
           object's position.  But "Copy" takes an optional first  argument  to
           set   the   new  position,  so  the  following  three  snippets  are
           equivalent:

               $copy = $diff->Copy($pos);

               $copy = $diff->Copy();
               $copy->Reset($pos);

               $copy = $diff->Copy()->Reset($pos);

           "Copy" takes an optional second argument to set  the  base  for  the
           copy.   If  you  wish  to  change the base of the copy but leave the
           position the same as in the original, here are two equivalent ways:

               $copy = $diff->Copy();
               $copy->Base( 0 );

               $copy = $diff->Copy(undef,0);

           Here are two equivalent way to get a "reset" copy:

               $copy = $diff->Copy(0);

               $copy = $diff->Copy()->Reset();

       "Diff"
               $bits = $obj->Diff();

           "Diff" returns a true value iff the current hunk contains items that
           are different between the two sequences.  It actually returns one of
           the follow 4 values:

           3   "3==(1|2)".  This hunk contains items from @seq1 and  the  items
               from  @seq2  that  should  replace  them.  Both sequence 1 and 2
               contain changed items so both the 1 and 2 bits are set.

           2   This hunk only contains items from @seq2 that should be inserted
               (not items from @seq1).  Only sequence 2 contains changed  items
               so only the 2 bit is set.

           1   This  hunk only contains items from @seq1 that should be deleted
               (not items from @seq2).  Only sequence 1 contains changed  items
               so only the 1 bit is set.

           0   This  means  that  the  items  in this hunk are the same in both
               sequences.  Neither sequence 1 nor 2 contain  changed  items  so
               neither the 1 nor the 2 bits are set.

       "Same"
           "Same" returns a true value iff the current hunk contains items that
           are  the  same  in  both sequences.  It actually returns the list of
           items if they are the same or an empty list if they  aren't.   In  a
           scalar context, it returns the size of the list.

       "Items"
               $count = $diff->Items(2);
               @items = $diff->Items($seqNum);

           "Items"  returns  the  (number of) items from the specified sequence
           that are part of the current hunk.

           If the current hunk contains only insertions, then "$diff->Items(1)"
           will return an empty list (0 in a scalar context).  If  the  current
           hunk  contains only deletions, then "$diff->Items(2)" will return an
           empty list (0 in a scalar context).

           If the hunk contains replacements, then both  "$diff->Items(1)"  and
           "$diff->Items(2)" will return different, non-empty lists.

           Otherwise,  the  hunk  contains  identical  items  and  all  of  the
           following will return the same lists:

               @items = $diff->Items(1);
               @items = $diff->Items(2);
               @items = $diff->Same();

       "Range"
               $count = $diff->Range( $seqNum );
               @indices = $diff->Range( $seqNum );
               @indices = $diff->Range( $seqNum, $base );

           "Range" is like "Items" except that it returns a list of indices  to
           the  items  rather than the items themselves.  By default, the index
           of the first item (in each sequence) is 0 but this can be changed by
           calling the "Base"  method.   So,  by  default,  the  following  two
           snippets return the same lists:

               @list = $diff->Items(2);
               @list = @seq2[ $diff->Range(2) ];

           You can also specify the base to use as the second argument.  So the
           following two snippets always return the same lists:

               @list = $diff->Items(1);
               @list = @seq1[ $diff->Range(1,0) ];

       "Base"
               $curBase = $diff->Base();
               $oldBase = $diff->Base($newBase);

           "Base" sets and/or returns the current base (usually 0 or 1) that is
           used  when you request range information.  The base defaults to 0 so
           that range information is returned as array indices.   You  can  set
           the  base  to  1  if  you  want  to  report traditional line numbers
           instead.

       "Min"
               $min1 = $diff->Min(1);
               $min = $diff->Min( $seqNum, $base );

           "Min" returns the first value that "Range" would return  (given  the
           same  arguments) or returns "undef" if "Range" would return an empty
           list.

       "Max"
           "Max" returns the last value that "Range" would return or "undef".

       "Get"
               ( $n, $x, $r ) = $diff->Get(qw( min1 max1 range1 ));
               @values = $diff->Get(qw( 0min2 1max2 range2 same base ));

           "Get" returns one or more scalar values.  You pass in a list of  the
           names  of the values you want returned.  Each name must match one of
           the following regexes:

               /^(-?\d+)?(min|max)[12]$/i
               /^(range[12]|same|diff|base)$/i

           The 1 or 2 after a name says which sequence you want the information
           for (and where allowed, it is required).  The optional number before
           "min" or "max" is the base to  use.   So  the  following  equalities
           hold:

               $diff->Get('min1') == $diff->Min(1)
               $diff->Get('0min2') == $diff->Min(2,0)

           Using  "Get" in a scalar context when you've passed in more than one
           name is a fatal error ("die" is called).

   "prepare"
       Given a reference to a list of items, "prepare" returns a reference to a
       hash which can be used when comparing this sequence to  other  sequences
       with "LCS" or "LCS_length".

           $prep = prepare( \@seq1 );
           for $i ( 0 .. 10_000 )
           {
               @lcs = LCS( $prep, $seq[$i] );
               # do something useful with @lcs
           }

       "prepare"  may  be  passed  an  optional third parameter; this is a CODE
       reference to a key generation function.  See "KEY GENERATION FUNCTIONS".

           $prep = prepare( \@seq1, \&keyGen );
           for $i ( 0 .. 10_000 )
           {
               @lcs = LCS( $seq[$i], $prep, \&keyGen );
               # do something useful with @lcs
           }

       Using "prepare" provides a performance gain of about  50%  when  calling
       LCS many times compared with not preparing.

   "diff"
           @diffs     = diff( \@seq1, \@seq2 );
           $diffs_ref = diff( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

       "diff" computes the smallest set of additions and deletions necessary to
       turn  the  first  sequence into the second, and returns a description of
       these changes.  The description is a list of hunks; each hunk represents
       a contiguous section  of  items  which  should  be  added,  deleted,  or
       replaced.  (Hunks containing unchanged items are not included.)

       The  return value of "diff" is a list of hunks, or, in scalar context, a
       reference to such a list.  If there are no differences, the list will be
       empty.

       Here is an example.  Calling "diff" for the following two sequences:

           a b c e h j l m n p
           b c d e f j k l m r s t

       would produce the following list:

           (
             [ [ '-', 0, 'a' ] ],

             [ [ '+', 2, 'd' ] ],

             [ [ '-', 4, 'h' ],
               [ '+', 4, 'f' ] ],

             [ [ '+', 6, 'k' ] ],

             [ [ '-',  8, 'n' ],
               [ '-',  9, 'p' ],
               [ '+',  9, 'r' ],
               [ '+', 10, 's' ],
               [ '+', 11, 't' ] ],
           )

       There are five hunks here.  The first hunk says that the "a" at position
       0 of the first sequence should be deleted ("-").  The second  hunk  says
       that  the  "d"  at  position 2 of the second sequence should be inserted
       ("+").  The third hunk says that the "h" at  position  4  of  the  first
       sequence  should be removed and replaced with the "f" from position 4 of
       the second sequence.  And so on.

       "diff" may be passed  an  optional  third  parameter;  this  is  a  CODE
       reference to a key generation function.  See "KEY GENERATION FUNCTIONS".

       Additional  parameters,  if  any,  will  be passed to the key generation
       routine.

   "sdiff"
           @sdiffs     = sdiff( \@seq1, \@seq2 );
           $sdiffs_ref = sdiff( \@seq1, \@seq2 );

       "sdiff" computes all necessary components  to  show  two  sequences  and
       their  minimized  differences  side  by side, just like the Unix-utility
       sdiff does:

           same             same
           before     |     after
           old        <     -
           -          >     new

       It returns a list of array refs, each pointing to an  array  of  display
       instructions.  In  scalar context it returns a reference to such a list.
       If there are no differences, the list will have one entry per item, each
       indicating that the item was unchanged.

       Display instructions consist of three  elements:  A  modifier  indicator
       ("+": Element added, "-": Element removed, "u": Element unmodified, "c":
       Element  changed)  and  the  value  of  the  old and new elements, to be
       displayed side-by-side.

       An "sdiff" of the following two sequences:

           a b c e h j l m n p
           b c d e f j k l m r s t

       results in

           ( [ '-', 'a', ''  ],
             [ 'u', 'b', 'b' ],
             [ 'u', 'c', 'c' ],
             [ '+', '',  'd' ],
             [ 'u', 'e', 'e' ],
             [ 'c', 'h', 'f' ],
             [ 'u', 'j', 'j' ],
             [ '+', '',  'k' ],
             [ 'u', 'l', 'l' ],
             [ 'u', 'm', 'm' ],
             [ 'c', 'n', 'r' ],
             [ 'c', 'p', 's' ],
             [ '+', '',  't' ],
           )

       "sdiff" may be passed an  optional  third  parameter;  this  is  a  CODE
       reference to a key generation function.  See "KEY GENERATION FUNCTIONS".

       Additional  parameters,  if  any,  will  be passed to the key generation
       routine.

   "compact_diff"
       "compact_diff" is much like  "sdiff"  except  it  returns  a  much  more
       compact  description  consisting  of  just one flat list of indices.  An
       example helps explain the format:

           my @a = qw( a b c   e  h j   l m n p      );
           my @b = qw(   b c d e f  j k l m    r s t );
           @cdiff = compact_diff( \@a, \@b );
           # Returns:
           #   @a      @b       @a       @b
           #  start   start   values   values
           (    0,      0,   #       =
                0,      0,   #    a  !
                1,      0,   #  b c  =  b c
                3,      2,   #       !  d
                3,      3,   #    e  =  e
                4,      4,   #    f  !  h
                5,      5,   #    j  =  j
                6,      6,   #       !  k
                6,      7,   #  l m  =  l m
                8,      9,   #  n p  !  r s t
               10,     12,   #
           );

       The 0th, 2nd, 4th, etc. entries are all indices into @seq1  (@a  in  the
       above  example) indicating where a hunk begins.  The 1st, 3rd, 5th, etc.
       entries are all indices into @seq2 (@b in the above example)  indicating
       where the same hunk begins.

       So  each  pair  of indices (except the last pair) describes where a hunk
       begins (in each sequence).  Since each hunk must end at  the  item  just
       before  the item that starts the next hunk, the next pair of indices can
       be used to determine where the hunk ends.

       So, the first 4 entries (0..3) describe the first hunk.  Entries 0 and 1
       describe where the first  hunk  begins  (and  so  are  always  both  0).
       Entries  2  and  3 describe where the next hunk begins, so subtracting 1
       from each tells us where the first hunk ends.  That is, the  first  hunk
       contains items $diff[0] through "$diff[2] - 1" of the first sequence and
       contains items $diff[1] through "$diff[3] - 1" of the second sequence.

       In  other  words,  the first hunk consists of the following two lists of
       items:

                      #  1st pair     2nd pair
                      # of indices   of indices
           @list1 = @a[ $cdiff[0] .. $cdiff[2]-1 ];
           @list2 = @b[ $cdiff[1] .. $cdiff[3]-1 ];
                      # Hunk start   Hunk end

       Note that the hunks will always alternate between those that are part of
       the LCS (those that contain unchanged  items)  and  those  that  contain
       changes.   This  means  that all we need to be told is whether the first
       hunk is a 'same' or 'diff' hunk and we can determine which of the  other
       hunks contain 'same' items or 'diff' items.

       By  convention,  we  always make the first hunk contain unchanged items.
       So the 1st, 3rd, 5th, etc. hunks (all odd-numbered hunks  if  you  start
       counting  from  1)  all contain unchanged items.  And the 2nd, 4th, 6th,
       etc. hunks (all even-numbered hunks if you start counting  from  1)  all
       contain changed items.

       Since  @a  and @b don't begin with the same value, the first hunk in our
       example is empty (otherwise we'd violate the  above  convention).   Note
       that  the  first 4 index values in our example are all zero.  Plug these
       values into our previous code block and we get:

           @hunk1a = @a[ 0 .. 0-1 ];
           @hunk1b = @b[ 0 .. 0-1 ];

       And "0..-1" returns the empty list.

       Move down one pair of indices (2..5) and we get the  offset  ranges  for
       the second hunk, which contains changed items.

       Since  @diff[2..5]  contains  (0,0,1,0)  in our example, the second hunk
       consists of these two lists of items:

               @hunk2a = @a[ $cdiff[2] .. $cdiff[4]-1 ];
               @hunk2b = @b[ $cdiff[3] .. $cdiff[5]-1 ];
           # or
               @hunk2a = @a[ 0 .. 1-1 ];
               @hunk2b = @b[ 0 .. 0-1 ];
           # or
               @hunk2a = @a[ 0 .. 0 ];
               @hunk2b = @b[ 0 .. -1 ];
           # or
               @hunk2a = ( 'a' );
               @hunk2b = ( );

       That is, we would delete item 0 ('a') from @a.

       Since @diff[4..7] contains (1,0,3,2) in  our  example,  the  third  hunk
       consists of these two lists of items:

               @hunk3a = @a[ $cdiff[4] .. $cdiff[6]-1 ];
               @hunk3a = @b[ $cdiff[5] .. $cdiff[7]-1 ];
           # or
               @hunk3a = @a[ 1 .. 3-1 ];
               @hunk3a = @b[ 0 .. 2-1 ];
           # or
               @hunk3a = @a[ 1 .. 2 ];
               @hunk3a = @b[ 0 .. 1 ];
           # or
               @hunk3a = qw( b c );
               @hunk3a = qw( b c );

       Note  that  this  third  hunk contains unchanged items as our convention
       demands.

       You can continue this process until you  reach  the  last  two  indices,
       which  will  always  be  the  number of items in each sequence.  This is
       required so that subtracting one from each will give you the indices  to
       the last items in each sequence.

   "traverse_sequences"
       "traverse_sequences"  used  to  be the most general facility provided by
       this module (the new OO interface is more powerful and  much  easier  to
       use).

       Imagine  that  there  are  two  arrows.  Arrow A points to an element of
       sequence A, and arrow  B  points  to  an  element  of  the  sequence  B.
       Initially,  the  arrows  point  to  the first elements of the respective
       sequences.  "traverse_sequences" will advance  the  arrows  through  the
       sequences  one  element at a time, calling an appropriate user-specified
       callback function before each advance.  It will advance  the  arrows  in
       such  a way that if there are equal elements $A[$i] and $B[$j] which are
       equal and which are part of the LCS, there will be  some  moment  during
       the execution of "traverse_sequences" when arrow A is pointing to $A[$i]
       and   arrow   B   is   pointing   to   $B[$j].    When   this   happens,
       "traverse_sequences" will call the "MATCH" callback function and then it
       will advance both arrows.

       Otherwise, one of the arrows is pointing to an element of  its  sequence
       that  is  not  part  of the LCS.  "traverse_sequences" will advance that
       arrow and  will  call  the  "DISCARD_A"  or  the  "DISCARD_B"  callback,
       depending  on which arrow it advanced.  If both arrows point to elements
       that are not part of the LCS, then "traverse_sequences" will advance one
       of them and call the appropriate callback, but it is not specified which
       it will call.

       The arguments to "traverse_sequences" are the two sequences to traverse,
       and a hash which specifies the callback functions, like this:

           traverse_sequences(
               \@seq1, \@seq2,
               {   MATCH => $callback_1,
                   DISCARD_A => $callback_2,
                   DISCARD_B => $callback_3,
               }
           );

       Callbacks for MATCH, DISCARD_A, and DISCARD_B are invoked with at  least
       the indices of the two arrows as their arguments.  They are not expected
       to  return  any  values.  If a callback is omitted from the table, it is
       not called.

       Callbacks for A_FINISHED and B_FINISHED are invoked with  at  least  the
       corresponding index in A or B.

       If  arrow  A  reaches  the  end  of  its  sequence, before arrow B does,
       "traverse_sequences"  will  call  the  "A_FINISHED"  callback  when   it
       advances  arrow  B,  if  there  is  such a function; if not it will call
       "DISCARD_B"   instead.    Similarly   if   arrow   B   finishes   first.
       "traverse_sequences"  returns  when both arrows are at the ends of their
       respective sequences.  It returns true on success and false on  failure.
       At present there is no way to fail.

       "traverse_sequences" may be passed an optional fourth parameter; this is
       a  CODE  reference  to  a  key generation function.  See "KEY GENERATION
       FUNCTIONS".

       Additional parameters, if any, will be  passed  to  the  key  generation
       function.

       If  you  want to pass additional parameters to your callbacks, but don't
       need a custom key generation  function,  you  can  get  the  default  by
       passing undef:

           traverse_sequences(
               \@seq1, \@seq2,
               {   MATCH => $callback_1,
                   DISCARD_A => $callback_2,
                   DISCARD_B => $callback_3,
               },
               undef,     # default key-gen
               $myArgument1,
               $myArgument2,
               $myArgument3,
           );

       "traverse_sequences"  does  not  have  a  useful  return  value; you are
       expected  to  plug  in  the  appropriate  behavior  with  the   callback
       functions.

   "traverse_balanced"
       "traverse_balanced" is an alternative to "traverse_sequences". It uses a
       different  algorithm to iterate through the entries in the computed LCS.
       Instead  of  sticking  to  one  side  and  showing  element  changes  as
       insertions  and  deletions only, it will jump back and forth between the
       two sequences and report changes occurring  as  deletions  on  one  side
       followed immediately by an insertion on the other side.

       In  addition  to  the  "DISCARD_A",  "DISCARD_B",  and "MATCH" callbacks
       supported  by  "traverse_sequences",  "traverse_balanced"   supports   a
       "CHANGE" callback indicating that one element got "replaced" by another:

           traverse_balanced(
               \@seq1, \@seq2,
               {   MATCH => $callback_1,
                   DISCARD_A => $callback_2,
                   DISCARD_B => $callback_3,
                   CHANGE    => $callback_4,
               }
           );

       If  no  "CHANGE"  callback  is  specified,  "traverse_balanced" will map
       "CHANGE"  events  to  "DISCARD_A"  and  "DISCARD_B"  actions,  therefore
       resulting  in a similar behaviour as "traverse_sequences" with different
       order of events.

       "traverse_balanced" might be a  bit  slower  than  "traverse_sequences",
       noticeable only while processing huge amounts of data.

       The   "sdiff"  function  of  this  module  is  implemented  as  call  to
       "traverse_balanced".

       "traverse_balanced" does  not  have  a  useful  return  value;  you  are
       expected   to  plug  in  the  appropriate  behavior  with  the  callback
       functions.

KEY GENERATION FUNCTIONS
       Most of the functions accept an optional extra  parameter.   This  is  a
       CODE reference to a key generating (hashing) function that should return
       a  string  that  uniquely  identifies a given element.  It should be the
       case that if two elements are to be considered equal, their keys  should
       be  the  same (and the other way around).  If no key generation function
       is provided, the key will be the element as a string.

       By default, comparisons will use "eq" and elements will be  turned  into
       keys using the default stringizing operator '""'.

       Where  this  is  important is when you're comparing something other than
       strings.  If it is the case that you  have  multiple  different  objects
       that  should  be  considered  to  be  equal,  you  should  supply  a key
       generation function. Otherwise, you have to make sure that  your  arrays
       contain unique references.

       For instance, consider this example:

           package Person;

           sub new
           {
               my $package = shift;
               return bless { name => '', ssn => '', @_ }, $package;
           }

           sub clone
           {
               my $old = shift;
               my $new = bless { %$old }, ref($old);
           }

           sub hash
           {
               return shift()->{'ssn'};
           }

           my $person1 = Person->new( name => 'Joe', ssn => '123-45-6789' );
           my $person2 = Person->new( name => 'Mary', ssn => '123-47-0000' );
           my $person3 = Person->new( name => 'Pete', ssn => '999-45-2222' );
           my $person4 = Person->new( name => 'Peggy', ssn => '123-45-9999' );
           my $person5 = Person->new( name => 'Frank', ssn => '000-45-9999' );

       If you did this:

           my $array1 = [ $person1, $person2, $person4 ];
           my $array2 = [ $person1, $person3, $person4, $person5 ];
           Algorithm::Diff::diff( $array1, $array2 );

       everything  would  work  out  OK (each of the objects would be converted
       into a string like "Person=HASH(0x82425b0)" for comparison).

       But if you did this:

           my $array1 = [ $person1, $person2, $person4 ];
           my $array2 = [ $person1, $person3, $person4->clone(), $person5 ];
           Algorithm::Diff::diff( $array1, $array2 );

       $person4 and $person4->clone() (which have the same name and SSN)  would
       be  seen  as  different  objects.  If  you  wanted them to be considered
       equivalent, you would have to pass in a key generation function:

           my $array1 = [ $person1, $person2, $person4 ];
           my $array2 = [ $person1, $person3, $person4->clone(), $person5 ];
           Algorithm::Diff::diff( $array1, $array2, \&Person::hash );

       This would use the 'ssn' field in each Person as a comparison  key,  and
       so would consider $person4 and $person4->clone() as equal.

       You  may  also pass additional parameters to the key generation function
       if you wish.

ERROR CHECKING
       If you pass these routines a non-reference and they expect a  reference,
       they will die with a message.

AUTHOR
       This version released by Tye McQueen (http://perlmonks.org/?node=tye).

LICENSE
       Parts  Copyright (c) 2000-2004 Ned Konz.  All rights reserved.  Parts by
       Tye McQueen.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  it
       under the same terms as Perl.

MAILING LIST
       Mark-Jason still maintains a mailing list.  To join a low-volume mailing
       list  for  announcements  related  to  diff and Algorithm::Diff, send an
       empty mail message to mjd-perl-diff-request@plover.com.

CREDITS
       Versions through 0.59 (and much of this documentation) were written by:

       Mark-Jason Dominus

       This version borrows some documentation and  routine  names  from  Mark-
       Jason's, but Diff.pm's code was completely replaced.

       This  code  was  adapted  from  the  Smalltalk  code  of  Mario  Wolczko
       <mario@wolczko.com>,        which        is         available         at
       ftp://st.cs.uiuc.edu/pub/Smalltalk/MANCHESTER/manchester/4.0/diff.st

       "sdiff"   and   "traverse_balanced"   were   written   by  Mike  Schilli
       <m@perlmeister.com>.

       The algorithm is that  described  in  A  Fast  Algorithm  for  Computing
       Longest  Common  Subsequences, CACM, vol.20, no.5, pp.350-353, May 1977,
       with a few minor improvements to improve the speed.

       Much work was done by Ned Konz (perl@bike-nomad.com).

       The OO interface and some other changes are by Tye McQueen.

perl v5.32.0                       2020-12-17              Algorithm::Diff(3pm)

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