5

I'm trying to figure out the most efficient way using SWIFT 4 to loop through an array of numbers, get the range of any consecutive numbers and add those to a new array. I could do the standard loop checks but I believe I can use a map filter? -- can someone point me in the right direction?

Beginning:

myNumbersArray:[Int] = [1,2,3,4,10,11,15,20,21,22,23]

Wanted result:

newNumbersArray = [
   [1,2,3,4],
   [10,11],
   [15],
   [20,21,22,23]
]

I will post my solution if I figure it out...

4 Answers 4

12

My suggestion is IndexSet where consecutive items are stored as ranges.

  • Create the index set from the array.
  • Get the rangeView.
  • Map the ranges to arrays.

let myNumbersArray = [1,2,3,4,10,11,15,20,21,22,23]
let indexSet = IndexSet(myNumbersArray)
let rangeView = indexSet.rangeView
let newNumbersArray = rangeView.map { Array($0.indices) }
1
  • 1
    rangeView.map { Array($0.indices) }
    – Leo Dabus
    Aug 25, 2018 at 17:37
8

This would work also with negative integers:

extension BidirectionalCollection where Element: BinaryInteger, Index == Int {
    var consecutivelyGrouped: [[Element]] { 
        return reduce(into: []) {
            $0.last?.last?.advanced(by: 1) == $1 ? 
            $0[index(before: $0.endIndex)].append($1) :
            $0.append([$1]) 
        }
    }
}

let numbers = [-5,-4,-2,0,1,3,4,10,11,15,20,21,22,23]
let grouped = numbers.consecutivelyGrouped  // [[-5, -4], [-2], [0, 1], [3, 4], [10, 11], [15], [20, 21, 22, 23]]
7
  • 1
    great answer.. Saved lots of time.
    – pallavi
    Dec 5, 2019 at 12:04
  • If I only want to return consecutive values if the amount of values are a certain size, what needs to be added? Lets say I want to return an array of consecutive integers only if there are more than two consecutive integers per each consecutive integer array, i.e. only return [20,21,22,23] @Leo Dabus May 28, 2020 at 20:39
  • I'm thinking of reiterating numbers.consecutivelyGrouped using an if when loop but that sounds like double the work and less efficient May 28, 2020 at 20:42
  • you just need to filter the sub arrays by count > 2 let grouped = numbers.consecutivelyGrouped.filter{$0.count > 2}
    – Leo Dabus
    May 28, 2020 at 21:33
  • if you would like to do it on the fly var consecutivelyGrouped: [[Element]] { var counter = 0 return reduce(into: []) { if $0.last?.last?.advanced(by: 1) == $1 { $0[index(before: $0.endIndex)].append($1) counter += 1 } else { if !$0.isEmpty, counter < 3 { $0.removeLast() } $0.append([$1]) counter = 1 } } } it could also be done by checking the sub array count but it is more efficient to add a counter
    – Leo Dabus
    May 28, 2020 at 22:46
6

While using IndexSet according to @vadian is a good idea, it works only in your case (consecutive and positive integers), and it may be not your purpose to use indices. It's a little hacky to use a similar kind of objects for that, but does nicely the job.

A possible way is to use reduce():

let reduced = myNumbersArray.reduce([[Int]]()) { (current, next) -> [[Int]] in
    var result = current
    //Retrieve the last sequence, check if the current - last item of sequence is 1 to know if they are consecutive or not
    if var lastSequence = result.last, let last = lastSequence.last, next-last == 1 {
        lastSequence.append(next)
        result[result.endIndex-1] = lastSequence
        return result
    } else { //It's not => New array of its own
        result.append([next])
        return result
    }
}
print("reduced: \(reduced)")

Output:

$>reduced: [[1, 2, 3, 4], [10, 11], [15], [20, 21, 22, 23]]

As suggested by @Leo Dabus, with reduce(into:):

let reducedInto = myNumbersArray.reduce(into: [[Int]]()) { (result, next) in
    //Retrieve the last sequence, check if the current - last item of sequence is 1
    if var lastSequence = result.last, let last = lastSequence.last, next-last == 1 {
        lastSequence.append(next)
        result[result.endIndex-1] = lastSequence
    } else { //It's not => New array of its own
        result.append([next])
    }
}
print("reducedInto: \(reducedInto)")

Output:

$>reducedInto: [[1, 2, 3, 4], [10, 11], [15], [20, 21, 22, 23]]
3
  • 1
    You can use reduce(into:) if you are coding in Swift 4
    – Leo Dabus
    Aug 25, 2018 at 17:49
  • 1
    @larme great answer! By tweaking the solution a bit, your answer can be applied to an array of custom objects / models, to filter out based on a specific property of the object. Thanks for sharing this Nov 28, 2018 at 20:53
  • @NitinAlabur it can be applied to a lot of thing. It’s just that I made it more explicit than Leo Dabius’s answer.
    – Larme
    Nov 28, 2018 at 21:33
0

For those who are not familiar with map and indexset check this:

var arr = [0,1,2,4,6,7,9]
var previousIndex = 0
var count = 0
var arrayDict : [Int:[Int]] = [:]
for (index,data) in arr.enumerated() {
  if index == (arr.count - 1) {
     arrayDict[count] = Array(arr[previousIndex ..< index + 1])
     break
  }
  if arr[index + 1] - data != 1 {
    arrayDict[count] = Array(arr[previousIndex ..< index + 1])
    previousIndex = index + 1
    count += 1
  }
}
print(arrayDict)

The logic is that i'm iterating over the elements of the given array and each time checking whether the value at that index is not less than value at index + 1 by 1, if it is then I am splitting the array using Array slice and adding it in a dictionary having a key which is given by the variable 'count'. the variable previous Index holds the end index of previous split so that next split starts from previousIndex to the current index

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