Feature #11815
Updated by CaryInVictoria (Cary Swoveland) about 8 years ago
I propose that a method `Array#difference` be added to the Ruby core. It is similar to [Array#-](http://ruby-doc.org/core-2.2.0/Array.html#method-i-2D) but for each element of the (array) argument it removes only one matching element from the receiver. For example:
a = [1,2,3,4,3,2,2,4]
b = [2,3,4,4,4]
a - b #=> [1]
c = a.difference b #=> [1, 3, 2, 2]
As you see, `a` contains three `2`'s and `b` contains `1`, so the first `2` in `a` has been removed from `a` in constructing `c`. When `b` contains as least as many instances of an element as does `a`, `c` contains no instances of that element.
It could be implemented as follows:
class Array
def difference(other)
h = other.each_with_object(Hash.new(0)) { |e,h| h[e] += 1 }
reject { |e| h[e] > 0 && h[e] -= 1 }
end
end
Here are a few examples of its use:
*Determine if two arrays of the same size contain the same elements*
a = [2,1,4,2,5,3,3,1]
b = [3,4,1,1,2,3,5,2]
a.difference(b).empty?
#=> true
*Identify an array's unique elements*
a = [1,3,2,4,3,4]
u = a.uniq #=> [1, 2, 3, 4]
u - a.difference(u) #=> [1, 2]
*Identify a maximal number of 1-1 matches between the elements of two arrays and return an array of all elements from both arrays that were not matched*
a = [1, 2, 4, 2, 1, 7, 4, 2, 9]
b = [4, 7, 3, 2, 2, 7]
a.difference(b).concat(b.difference(a))
#=> [1, 1, 4, 2, 9, 3, 7]
To remove elements from `a` starting at the end (rather the beginning) of `a`:
a = [1,2,3,4,3,2,2,4]
b = [2,3,4,4,4]
a.reverse.difference(b).reverse #=> [1,2,3,2]
`Array#difference!` could be defined in the obvious way.
More information is in my answer to [this SO question](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/24987054/how-to-select-unique-elements).
Note: I initially wrote the method as follows:
class Array
def difference(other)
dup.tap do |cpy|
other.each do |e|
ndx = cpy.index(e)
cpy.delete_at(ndx) if ndx
end
end
end
end