Like others, I think you are going to have to clarify the rules, or pass a third parameter that indicates the initial offset. This comes close to matching your examples, but it falls down on your second. If the first character of the second string matches the last of the first (char/string respectively), then the overlap of 1 will always win.

P:\test\Vector maps>p1 perl> sub merge{ my( $s1, $s2 ) = @_; my $i=1; $i++ until substr( $s1, -$i ) eq substr( $s2, 0, $i ); return $s1 . substr( $s2, $i ); };; perl> print merge( 'ATTTA', 'TTTAA' );; ATTTAA perl> print merge( 'ATGTA', 'ATGTA' );; ATGTATGTA perl> print merge( 'ATGATG', 'ATGATG' );; ATGATGATG perl> print merge( 'ATGGTAC', 'CCGTAATG' );; ATGGTACCGTAATG

Your addendum about order still doesn't unambiguously resolve the requirement.


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In reply to Re: Merging Two Strings by BrowserUk
in thread Merging Two Strings by monkfan

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