I have a problem where my current algorithm uses a naive linear search algorithm to retrieve data from several data files through matching strings.
It is something like this (pseudo code):
while count < total number of files
open current file
extract line from this file
build an arrayofStrings from this line
foreach string in arrayofStrings
foreach file in arrayofDataReferenceFiles
search in these files
close file
increment count
For a large real life job, a process can take about 6 hours to complete.
Basically I have a large set of strings that uses the program to search through the the same set of files (for example 10 in 1 instance and can be 3 in the next instance the program runs). Since the reference data files can change, I do not think it is smart to build a permanent index of these files.
I'm pretty much a beginner and am not aware of any faster techniques for unsorted data.
I was thinking since the search gets repetitive after a while, is it possible to prebuild an index of locations of specific lines in the data reference files without using any external perl libraries once the file array gets built (files are known)? This script is going to be ported onto a server that probably only has standard Perl installed.
I figured it might be worth spending 3-5 minutes building some sort of index for a search before processing the job.
Is there a specific concept of indexing/searching that applies to my situation?
Thanks everyone!