If the lists are actually sorted (as in your examples),
especially if the lists could be very large, a merge
might be a good choice. Anyone have a more idiomatically
Perl way of writing a merge that doesn't copy nor modify
the original lists?
my @old= ( 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 15 );
my @new= ( 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9 );
my( $i, $j )= ( 0+@old, 0+@new );
my( @add, @del );
while( $i || $j ) {
if( ! $j || $i && $new[$j-1] < $old[$i-1] ) {
push @del, $old[--$i];
} elsif( ! $i || $j && $old[$i-1] < $new[$j-1] ) {
push @add, $new[--$j];
} else {
$i--; $j--;
}
}
print "del: @del\n";
print "add: @add\n";
__END__
del: 15 8 2
add: 9 7 3
-
tye
(but my friends call me "Tye")
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