in reply to Longest Common Substring
Enlil's right, my code was a bit slovenly. I believe this is both more correct and more efficient, but I can't guarentee it doesn't fail on some edge case or another.
#! perl -slw use strict; sub lcss (\$\$) { my ($needle, $haystack) = @_; ($needle, $haystack) = ($haystack, $needle) if length $$needle > length $$haystack; my ($longest_c, $longest) = 0; for my $start (0..length $$needle) { for my $len ( reverse $start+1 .. length $$needle) { my $substr = substr($$needle, $start, $len); length $1 > $longest_c and ($longest_c, $longest) = (lengt +h $1, $1) while $$haystack =~ m[($substr)]g; } } return $longest; } my $needle = 'the lazy cat'; my $haystack = 'the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog'; print "The longest common substring between\n" , $needle, "\nand\n" , $haystack, "\nis '" , lcss($needle, $haystack) , "'"; $needle = 'i pushed the lazy dog into a creek, the quick brown fox tol +d me to'; $haystack = 'the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog'; print "The longest common substring between\n" , $needle, "\nand\n" , $haystack, "\nis '" , lcss($needle, $haystack) , "'"; __END__ C:\test>249239.pl The longest common substring between the lazy cat and the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog is 'the lazy ' The longest common substring between i pushed the lazy dog into a creek, the quick brown fox told me to and the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog is 'the quick brown fox '
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