I'm trying to find a way to determine the difference between two strings in my script. I could easily do this with diff or comm, but I'm not dealing with files and I'd prefer not to output them to files, do the compare and read it back.

I see that comm, diff, cmp all allow to pass either two files OR a file and standard input - I guess that's good if I don't want to output two files...but it's still kinda sucks.

Been digging around thinking I can use grep or regular expressions - but I guess not.

Thanks in advance,

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1  
what is it you actually want to do? – hop Jan 18 '09 at 2:51
    
You can use substring manipulations and builtin test operations with IFS changes to compare, but you would need to know if you want to compare character by character, word by word, line by line, ignore white space ... – technosaurus Jul 21 '12 at 10:33

Using diff or com or whatever you want:

diff  <(echo "$string1" ) <(echo "$string2")

Greg's Bash FAQ: Process Substitution

or with a named pipe

mkfifo ./p
diff - p <<< "$string1" & echo "$string2" > p

Greg's Bash FAQ: Working with Named Pipes

Named pipe is also known as a FIFO.

The - on its own is for standard input.

<<< is a "here string".

& is like ; but puts it in the background

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3  
+1 for correct answer. +1 for great explanation of symbols. Additionally, Greg's Bash FAQ has moved to: mywiki.wooledge.org The links for the above pages are now at mywiki.wooledge.org/ProcessSubstitution and mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/085 – timemachine3030 Feb 20 '13 at 17:30
    
thx! and also, this will show the dynamic file descriptors FUNC(){ echo "$@"; "$@"; }; FUNC diff <(echo a) <(echo b); – Aquarius Power Apr 16 '15 at 1:30
    
I was looking for that for compairing two shasums. Not sure if there is a more elegant way to do that, but it works. – fuma Aug 23 '16 at 8:29
    
This seems to work if there are multiple lines in $string1 and $string2, and diff outputs the lines that were added or subtracted. What if the string is a single line, and line and there is some difference between the two strings? – alpha_989 Aug 10 '17 at 15:28

I prefer cmp and Process Substitution feature of bash:

$ cmp -bl <(echo -n abcda) <(echo -n aqcde)
  2 142 b    161 q
  5 141 a    145 e

Saying on position 2, a b occurs for the first, but a q for the second. At position 5, another difference is happening. Just replace those strings by variables, and you are done.

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This works only when strings are of the same length! – strpeter May 6 '16 at 11:58

Reminds me of this question: How can you diff two pipelines in Bash?

If you are in a bash session, you could do a:

diff <cmd1 <cmd2
diff <(foo | bar) <(baz | quux)

with < creating anonymous named pipes -- managed by bash -- so they are created and destroyed automatically, unlike temporary files.

So if you manage to isolate your two different string as part of a command (grep, awk, sed, ...), you can do - for instance - something like:

diff < grep string1 myFile < grep string2 myFile

(if you suppose you have in your file lines like string1=very_complicated_value and a string2=another_long_and_complicated_value': without knowing the internal format of your file, I can not recommend a precise command)

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Say you have three strings

a="this is a line"
b="this is"
c="a line"

To remove prefix b from a

echo ${a#"$b"}

To remove suffix c from a

echo ${a%"$c"}
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1  
I guess this is the bash way of doing it. It worked nicely. That syntax is a bit hard to grasp though. – Mikael Roos Nov 5 '14 at 20:39
    
@MikaelRoos Agreed. Easier to read (for me anyway) would be to use sed: echo "$a" | sed "s!^$b!!g" (I swapped out the standard sed separator / for ! in case the variables being dealt with are paths. Also, you could use a here string instead of echo: sed ... <<< $a.) – ACK_stoverflow Sep 8 '16 at 18:06

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