----- Original Message -----
From: ""Tony Heal"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Newsgroups: perl.beginners
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2007 4:23 PM
Subject: comparing elements of arrays
There has got to be a better way (or more elegant way) to do this.
I have 2 DNS files from bind9. I have removed everything but the relevant
info I want. That info is as follows:
aaaa A 123.213.123.123
aaaaa-staging A 123.123.123.122
bbbb CNAME software.mycompany.com
cccc A 12.12.12.12
One file (db.cust.com.new) is an updated version of the other
(db.cust.com).
I want to compare the 2 and create a new file (or update db.cust.com )
I need to remove and log any entry that is in db.cust.com and not in
db.cust.com.new
I need to log and add any entry in db.cust.com.new that is not in
db.cust.com.
I need to keep any entry that is in both
I need to log any differences
Most of the logging I have been saving for later.
The script below is what I have so far and it does this:
Reads both files into separate arrays after replacing any white space with
a single ',' in each element
Rotates thru db.cust.com.new and splits each element into a new array then
determine if the 1st element of that arrays
exists in the 2nd array
If it does it compares the 2nd element then the 3rd
It print anything that matches all three elements to a file and print to
screen all differences.
The last else will print new records to the file, but does so for the
total number of elements in array #2 i.e. 200 time
for each new element
Also this script is only one way. If an element exists in array ! and not
in array 2 it records that
If an element exists in array 2 and not in array 1 it does not even know
it and never will.
So my real question is.... is there a better, more elegant way to do this
or should I keep going?
Thanks
Tony
[snip code]
Below is one approach to see the differences in 2 arrays (by Randal
Schwartz).
Chris
The> How do I compute the difference of two arrays? How do I compute the
The> intersection of two arrays?
Here's code that doesn't require that uniqueness, and would be a better
candidate for the FAQ:
my %tally;
$tally{$_} .= "a" for @array_a;
$tally{$_} .= "b" for @array_b;
my @union = keys %tally;
my @intersection = grep $tally{$_} =~ /ab/, @union;
my @a_not_b = grep $tally{$_} =~ /a$/, @union;
my @b_not_a = grep $tally{$_} =~ /^b/, @union;
print "Just another Perl hacker,";
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