For some definition of "matches", the basic algorithm is
my @out;
for my $i (@in) {
my $delete = 0;
for my $d (@dels) {
if (matches($i, $d)) {
$delete = 1;
last;
}
}
push @out, $i if !$delete;
}
In your original question, you asked for equality, so "matches($i, $d)" would be "$i eq $d".
In your updated question, you asked for substring presence, so "matches($i, $d)" would be "index($i, $d) >= 0" or "$i =~ /\Q$d\E/".
The hash solution and the build-a-regexp solution are simply optimizations of the above algorithm.
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