Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
41 lines (31 loc) · 1.58 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

41 lines (31 loc) · 1.58 KB

StringDiff2

This java application highlights text differences between two plain strings by generating html fragment to show changes, based on longest common subsequences.

The markTextDiff2() markups changes between text1 and text2 using the longestCommonSubsequence() method.

The Hirschberg algorithm provides Longest Common Subsequence using a linear amount of memory.

Java 8 or later is required to run the application.

Compile

Run following command to build the application:

javac StringDiff2.java

Run

Just use the following command to run the application:

java StringDiff2

Example

Setting the following strings:

text1 = "Do not change this section. Please check any misqelling! Note that this section is obsolete.";
text2 = "New section added. Do not change this section. Please check any mispelling!";

running the command "java StringDiff2" will generate the following html fragment:

<ins style='background-color:#00ff66'>New section added. </ins>Do not change this section. Please check any mis<del style='background-color:#ff9933'>q</del><ins style='background-color:#00ff66'>p</ins>elling!<del style='background-color:#ff9933'> Note that this section is obsolete.</del>

If you load the html fragment with a browser, you get the following result:

html fragment in a browser

Credits

The java implementation of the longest common subsequence Hirschberg algorithm is credited to https://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-text/index.html

Caveat

This algorithm has O(n * m) complexity. In case of very long strings it is very slow.