How do I remove duplicate characters and keep the unique one only. For example, my input is:
EFUAHUU
UUUEUUUUH
UJUJHHACDEFUCU
Expected ou开发者_如何转开发tput is:
EFUAH
UEH
UJHACDEF
I came across perl -pe's/$1//g while/(.).*\/'
which is wonderful but it is removing even the single occurrence of the character in output.
This can be done using positive lookahead :
perl -pe 's/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g' FILE_NAME
The regex used is: (.)(?=.*?\1)
.
: to match any char.- first
()
: remember the matched single char. (?=...)
: +ve lookahead.*?
: to match anything in between\1
: the remembered match.(.)(?=.*?\1)
: match and remember any char only if it appears again later in the string.s///
: Perl way of doing the substitution.g
: to do the substitution globally...that is don't stop after first substitution.s/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g
: this will delete a char from the input string only if that char appears again later in the string.
This will not maintain the order of the char in the input because for every unique char in the input string, we retain its last occurrence and not the first.
To keep the relative order intact we can do what KennyTM
tells in one of the comments:
- reverse the input line
- do the substitution as before
- reverse the result before printing
The Perl one line for this is:
perl -ne '$_=reverse;s/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g;print scalar reverse;' FILE_NAME
Since we are doing print
manually after reversal, we don't use the -p
flag but use the -n
flag.
I'm not sure if this is the best one-liner to do this. I welcome others to edit this answer if they have a better alternative.
if Perl is not a must, you can also use awk. here's a fun benchmark on the Perl one liners posted against awk. awk is 10+ seconds faster for a file with 3million++ lines
$ wc -l <file2
3210220
$ time awk 'BEGIN{FS=""}{delete _;for(i=1;i<=NF;i++){if(!_[$i]++) printf $i};print""}' file2 >/dev/null
real 1m1.761s
user 0m58.565s
sys 0m1.568s
$ time perl -n -e '%seen=();' -e 'for (split //) {print unless $seen{$_}++;}' file2 > /dev/null
real 1m32.123s
user 1m23.623s
sys 0m3.450s
$ time perl -ne '$_=reverse;s/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g;print scalar reverse;' file2 >/dev/null
real 1m17.818s
user 1m10.611s
sys 0m2.557s
$ time perl -ne'my%s;print grep!$s{$_}++,split//' file2 >/dev/null
real 1m20.347s
user 1m13.069s
sys 0m2.896s
perl -ne'my%s;print grep!$s{$_}++,split//'
Here is a solution, that I think should work faster than the lookahead one, but is not regexp-based and uses hashtable.
perl -n -e '%seen=();' -e 'for (split //) {print unless $seen{$_}++;}'
It splits every line into characters and prints only the first appearance by counting appearances inside %seen hashtable
Tie::IxHash is a good module to store hash order (but may be slow, you will need to benchmark if speed is important). Example with tests:
use Test::More 0.88;
use Tie::IxHash;
sub dedupe {
my $str=shift;
my $hash=Tie::IxHash->new(map { $_ => 1} split //,$str);
return join('',$hash->Keys);
}
{
my $str='EFUAHUU';
is(dedupe($str),'EFUAH');
}
{
my $str='EFUAHHUU';
is(dedupe($str),'EFUAH');
}
{
my $str='UJUJHHACDEFUCU';
is(dedupe($str),'UJHACDEF');
}
done_testing();
Use uniq from List::MoreUtils:
perl -MList::MoreUtils=uniq -ne 'print uniq split ""'
If the set of characters that can be encountered is restricted, e.g. only letters, then the easiest solution will be with tr
perl -p -e 'tr/a-zA-Z/a-zA-Z/s'
It will replace all the letters by themselves, leaving other characters unaffected and /s modifier will squeeze repeated occurrences of the same character (after replacement), thus removing duplicates
Me bad - it removes only adjoining appearances. Disregard
This looks like a classic application of positive lookbehind, but unfortunately perl doesn't support that. In fact, doing this (matching the preceding text of a character in a string with a full regex whose length is indeterminable) can only be done with .NET regex classes, I think.
However, positive lookahead supports full regexes, so all you need to do is reverse the string, apply positive lookahead (like unicornaddict said):
perl -pe 's/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g'
And reverse it back, because without the reverse that'll only keep the duplicate character at the last place in a line.
MASSIVE EDIT
I've been spending the last half an hour on this, and this looks like this works, without the reversing.
perl -pe 's/\G$1//g while (/(.).*(?=\1)/g)' FILE_NAME
I don't know whether to be proud or horrified. I'm basically doing the positive looakahead, then substituting on the string with \G specified - which makes the regex engine start its matching from the last place matched (internally represented by the pos() variable).
With test input like this:
aabbbcbbccbabb
EFAUUUUH
ABCBBBBD
DEEEFEGGH
AABBCC
The output is like this:
abc
EFAUH
ABCD
DEFGH
ABC
I think it's working...
Explanation - Okay, in case my explanation last time wasn't clear enough - the lookahead will go and stop at the last match of a duplicate variable [in the code you can do a print pos(); inside the loop to check] and the s/\G//g will remove it [you don't need the /g really]. So within the loop, the substitution will continue removing until all such duplicates are zapped. Of course, this might be a little too processor intensive for your tastes... but so are most of the regex-based solutions you'll see. The reversing/lookahead method will probably be more efficient than this, though.
From the shell, this works:
sed -e 's/$/<EOL>/ ; s/./&\n/g' test.txt | uniq | sed -e :a -e '$!N; s/\n//; ta ; s/<EOL>/\n/g'
In words: mark every linebreak with a <EOL>
string, then put every character on a line of its own, then use uniq
to remove duplicate lines, then strip out all the linebreaks, then put back linebreaks instead of the <EOL>
markers.
I found the -e :a -e '$!N; s/\n//; ta
part in a forum post and I don't understand the seperate -e :a
part, or the $!N
part, so if anyone can explain those, I'd be grateful.
Hmm, that one does only consecutive duplicates; to eliminate all duplicates you could do this:
cat test.txt | while read line ; do echo $line | sed -e 's/./&\n/g' | sort | uniq | sed -e :a -e '$!N; s/\n//; ta' ; done
That puts the characters in each line in alphabetical order though.
use strict;
use warnings;
my ($uniq, $seq, @result);
$uniq ='';
sub uniq {
$seq = shift;
for (split'',$seq) {
$uniq .=$_ unless $uniq =~ /$_/;
}
push @result,$uniq;
$uniq='';
}
while(<DATA>){
uniq($_);
}
print @result;
__DATA__
EFUAHUU
UUUEUUUUH
UJUJHHACDEFUCU
The output:
EFUAH
UEH
UJHACDEF
for a file containing the data you list named foo.txt
python -c "print set(open('foo.txt').read())"
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