Let's say I have two files with lists of ip-addresses. Lines in the first file are unique. Lines in the second may or may not be the same as in the first one.
What I need is to compare two files, and remove possible doubles from the second file in order to merge it with the base file later.
I've managed to write the following code and it seems to work properly, but I have a solid feeling that this code can be improved or I may be totally missing some important concept.
Are there any ways to solve the task without using complex data structures, i.e. hashrefs?
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my $base = shift @ARGV;
my $input = shift @ARGV;
my $res = 'result.txt';
open ("BASE","<","$base");
open ("INP","<","$input");
open ("RES", ">", "$res");
my $rhash = {}; # result hash
while (my $line = <BASE>) {chomp($line); $rhash->{$line}{'res'} = 1;} # create uniq table
while (my $line = <INP>) { chomp($line); $rhash->{$line}{'res'}++; $rhash->{$line}{'new'} = 1; } # create compare table marking it's entries as new and incrementing double keys
close BASE;
close INP;
for my $line (sort keys %$rhash) {
next if $line =~ /\#/; # removing comments
printf("%-30s%3s%1s", $line, $rhash->{$line}{'res'}, "\n") if $rhash->{$line}{'res'} > 1; # kinda diagnosti output of doubles
if (($rhash->{$line}{'new'}) and ($rhash->{$line}{'res'} < 2)) {
print RES "$line\n"; # printing new uniq entries to result file
}
}
close RES;
printf
line says that the line has either been seen in file1 and (file2 1 or more times) OR more than once in file2. Theprint
line if the line is unique in file2 only. I think a hash is necessary to solve your problem. And I'm not sure your code accomplishes your goal.uniq
unix command as an extreme measure