Using reduce
:
const findIndex = (a, b) => {
if (b.length > a.length)
return a.length;
a = Array.from(a);
b = Array.from(b);
const result = a.reduce((acc, cur, ind) => {
if (cur != b[ind] && (typeof acc.ind == 'undefined')) {
acc.ind = ind;
}
return acc;
}, {});
return result.ind;
}
An example:
let a1 = "abcdef";
let b1 = "abcdefgh";
const findIndex = (a, b) => {
if (b.length > a.length)
return a.length;
a = Array.from(a);
b = Array.from(b);
const result = a.reduce((acc, cur, ind) => {
if (cur != b[ind] && (typeof acc.ind == 'undefined')) {
acc.ind = ind;
}
return acc;
}, {});
return result.ind;
}
console.log(findIndex(a1, b1));
console.log(findIndex('aaa', ''));
console.log(findIndex('hey:)', 'hey!'));
In addition, version with for
loop. Special thanks to @Andreas for the advice about how if
statements can be avoided:
const findIndex = (a, b) => {
for (let i = 0, l = Math.max(a.length, b.length); i < l; i++) {
if (a[i] != b[i])
return i;
}
return 'equal';
}
An example:
let a = "abcdef";
let b = "abcdefgh";
const findIndex = (a, b) => {
for (let i = 0, l = Math.max(a.length, b.length); i < l; i++) {
if (a[i] != b[i])
return i;
}
return 'equal';
}
console.log(findIndex(a, b));
console.log(findIndex('aaa', ''));
console.log(findIndex('hey:)', 'hey!'));
a
always be a substring ofb
?