Compare two Lists for differences

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逝去的感伤
逝去的感伤 2020-11-27 13:04

I would like some feedback on how we can best write a generic function that will enable two Lists to be compared. The Lists contain class objects and we would like to iterat

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  • 2020-11-27 13:18

    I think you're looking for a method like this:

    public static IEnumerable<TResult> CompareSequences<T1, T2, TResult>(IEnumerable<T1> seq1,
        IEnumerable<T2> seq2, Func<T1, T2, TResult> comparer)
    {
        var enum1 = seq1.GetEnumerator();
        var enum2 = seq2.GetEnumerator();
    
        while (enum1.MoveNext() && enum2.MoveNext())
        {
            yield return comparer(enum1.Current, enum2.Current);
        }
    }
    

    It's untested, but it should do the job nonetheless. Note that what's particularly useful about this method is that it's full generic, i.e. it can take two sequences of arbitrary (and different) types and return objects of any type.

    This solution of course assumes that you want to compare the nth item of seq1 with the nth item in seq2. If you want to do match the elements in the two sequences based on a particular property/comparison, then you'll want to perform some sort of join operation (as suggested by danbruc using Enumerable.Join. Do let me know if it neither of these approaches is quite what I'm after and maybe I can suggest something else.

    Edit: Here's an example of how you might use the CompareSequences method with the comparer function you originally posted.

    // Prints out to the console all the results returned by the comparer function (CompareTwoClass_ReturnDifferences in this case).
    var results = CompareSequences(list1, list2, CompareTwoClass_ReturnDifferences);
    int index;    
    
    foreach(var element in results)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("{0:#000} {1}", index++, element.ToString());
    }
    
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  • 2020-11-27 13:18

    I hope that I am understing your question correctly, but you can do this very quickly with Linq. I'm assuming that universally you will always have an Id property. Just create an interface to ensure this.

    If how you identify an object to be the same changes from class to class, I would recommend passing in a delegate that returns true if the two objects have the same persistent id.

    Here is how to do it in Linq:

    List<Employee> listA = new List<Employee>();
            List<Employee> listB = new List<Employee>();
    
            listA.Add(new Employee() { Id = 1, Name = "Bill" });
            listA.Add(new Employee() { Id = 2, Name = "Ted" });
    
            listB.Add(new Employee() { Id = 1, Name = "Bill Sr." });
            listB.Add(new Employee() { Id = 3, Name = "Jim" });
    
            var identicalQuery = from employeeA in listA
                                 join employeeB in listB on employeeA.Id equals employeeB.Id
                                 select new { EmployeeA = employeeA, EmployeeB = employeeB };
    
            foreach (var queryResult in identicalQuery)
            {
                Console.WriteLine(queryResult.EmployeeA.Name);
                Console.WriteLine(queryResult.EmployeeB.Name);
            }
    
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  • 2020-11-27 13:26

    This solution produces a result list, that contains all differences from both input lists. You can compare your objects by any property, in my example it is ID. The only restriction is that the lists should be of the same type:

    var DifferencesList = ListA.Where(x => !ListB.Any(x1 => x1.id == x.id))
                .Union(ListB.Where(x => !ListA.Any(x1 => x1.id == x.id)));
    
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  • 2020-11-27 13:37

    This approach from Microsoft works very well and provides the option to compare one list to another and switch them to get the difference in each. If you are comparing classes simply add your objects to two separate lists and then run the comparison.

    http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb397894.aspx

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  • 2020-11-27 13:38

    .... but how do we find the equivalent class in the second List to pass to the method below;

    This is your actual problem; you must have at least one immutable property, a id or something like that, to identify corresponding objects in both lists. If you do not have such a property you, cannot solve the problem without errors. You can just try to guess corresponding objects by searching for minimal or logical changes.

    If you have such an property, the solution becomes really simple.

    Enumerable.Join(
       listA, listB,
       a => a.Id, b => b.Id,
       (a, b) => CompareTwoClass_ReturnDifferences(a, b))
    

    thanks to you both danbruc and Noldorin for your feedback. both Lists will be the same length and in the same order. so the method above is close, but can you modify this method to pass the enum.Current to the method i posted above?

    Now I am confused ... what is the problem with that? Why not just the following?

    for (Int32 i = 0; i < Math.Min(listA.Count, listB.Count); i++)
    {
        yield return CompareTwoClass_ReturnDifferences(listA[i], listB[i]);
    }
    

    The Math.Min() call may even be left out if equal length is guaranted.


    Noldorin's implementation is of course smarter because of the delegate and the use of enumerators instead of using ICollection.

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