Greatest common substring
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Create a program or function which takes a list of strings as input, and outputs the longest string that is a substring of all input strings. If there are several substrings of equal length, and no longer substring, output any one of them.
- This may mean outputting the empty string.
- If there are several valid outputs, you may output any one of them. You are not required to give consistent outpput for a given input so long as the output is always valid.
- There will always be at least one string in the input, but there might not be a non-empty string.
- All printable ASCII characters may appear in the input. You may assume those are the only characters that appear.
- You may take input or produce output by any of the default methods.
Standard loopholes aren't allowed.- This is code-golf - the fewer bytes of code, the better.
Test cases:
[Inputs] -> [Valid outputs (choose one)]
["hello", "'ello"] -> ["ello"]
["very", "much", "different"] -> [""]
["empty", "", "STRING"] -> [""]
["identical", "identical"] -> ["identical"]
["string", "stRIng"] -> ["st", "ng"]
["this one", "is a substring of this one"] -> ["this one"]
["just one"] -> ["just one"]
["", "", ""] -> [""]
["many outputs", "stuptuo ynam"] -> ["m", "a", "n", "y", " ", "o", "u", "t", "p", "s"]
["many inputs", "any inputs", "ny iii", "yanny"] -> ["ny"]
["%%not&", "ju&#st", "[&]alpha_numeric"] -> ["%"]
code-golf string subsequence
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
Create a program or function which takes a list of strings as input, and outputs the longest string that is a substring of all input strings. If there are several substrings of equal length, and no longer substring, output any one of them.
- This may mean outputting the empty string.
- If there are several valid outputs, you may output any one of them. You are not required to give consistent outpput for a given input so long as the output is always valid.
- There will always be at least one string in the input, but there might not be a non-empty string.
- All printable ASCII characters may appear in the input. You may assume those are the only characters that appear.
- You may take input or produce output by any of the default methods.
Standard loopholes aren't allowed.- This is code-golf - the fewer bytes of code, the better.
Test cases:
[Inputs] -> [Valid outputs (choose one)]
["hello", "'ello"] -> ["ello"]
["very", "much", "different"] -> [""]
["empty", "", "STRING"] -> [""]
["identical", "identical"] -> ["identical"]
["string", "stRIng"] -> ["st", "ng"]
["this one", "is a substring of this one"] -> ["this one"]
["just one"] -> ["just one"]
["", "", ""] -> [""]
["many outputs", "stuptuo ynam"] -> ["m", "a", "n", "y", " ", "o", "u", "t", "p", "s"]
["many inputs", "any inputs", "ny iii", "yanny"] -> ["ny"]
["%%not&", "ju&#st", "[&]alpha_numeric"] -> ["%"]
code-golf string subsequence
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Possible duplicate
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– Adám
1 hour ago
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@Adám That question asks for the longest common subsequence, not substring.
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– Doorknob♦
1 hour ago
1
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Will the strings be only alphanumeric, or alphabetic, or only printable-ascii?
$endgroup$
– Embodiment of Ignorance
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
@EmbodimentofIgnorance All printable ASCII characters can appear in the input.
$endgroup$
– Sara J
6 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Create a program or function which takes a list of strings as input, and outputs the longest string that is a substring of all input strings. If there are several substrings of equal length, and no longer substring, output any one of them.
- This may mean outputting the empty string.
- If there are several valid outputs, you may output any one of them. You are not required to give consistent outpput for a given input so long as the output is always valid.
- There will always be at least one string in the input, but there might not be a non-empty string.
- All printable ASCII characters may appear in the input. You may assume those are the only characters that appear.
- You may take input or produce output by any of the default methods.
Standard loopholes aren't allowed.- This is code-golf - the fewer bytes of code, the better.
Test cases:
[Inputs] -> [Valid outputs (choose one)]
["hello", "'ello"] -> ["ello"]
["very", "much", "different"] -> [""]
["empty", "", "STRING"] -> [""]
["identical", "identical"] -> ["identical"]
["string", "stRIng"] -> ["st", "ng"]
["this one", "is a substring of this one"] -> ["this one"]
["just one"] -> ["just one"]
["", "", ""] -> [""]
["many outputs", "stuptuo ynam"] -> ["m", "a", "n", "y", " ", "o", "u", "t", "p", "s"]
["many inputs", "any inputs", "ny iii", "yanny"] -> ["ny"]
["%%not&", "ju&#st", "[&]alpha_numeric"] -> ["%"]
code-golf string subsequence
$endgroup$
Create a program or function which takes a list of strings as input, and outputs the longest string that is a substring of all input strings. If there are several substrings of equal length, and no longer substring, output any one of them.
- This may mean outputting the empty string.
- If there are several valid outputs, you may output any one of them. You are not required to give consistent outpput for a given input so long as the output is always valid.
- There will always be at least one string in the input, but there might not be a non-empty string.
- All printable ASCII characters may appear in the input. You may assume those are the only characters that appear.
- You may take input or produce output by any of the default methods.
Standard loopholes aren't allowed.- This is code-golf - the fewer bytes of code, the better.
Test cases:
[Inputs] -> [Valid outputs (choose one)]
["hello", "'ello"] -> ["ello"]
["very", "much", "different"] -> [""]
["empty", "", "STRING"] -> [""]
["identical", "identical"] -> ["identical"]
["string", "stRIng"] -> ["st", "ng"]
["this one", "is a substring of this one"] -> ["this one"]
["just one"] -> ["just one"]
["", "", ""] -> [""]
["many outputs", "stuptuo ynam"] -> ["m", "a", "n", "y", " ", "o", "u", "t", "p", "s"]
["many inputs", "any inputs", "ny iii", "yanny"] -> ["ny"]
["%%not&", "ju&#st", "[&]alpha_numeric"] -> ["%"]
code-golf string subsequence
code-golf string subsequence
edited 1 min ago
Sara J
asked 1 hour ago
Sara JSara J
1715
1715
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate
$endgroup$
– Adám
1 hour ago
$begingroup$
@Adám That question asks for the longest common subsequence, not substring.
$endgroup$
– Doorknob♦
1 hour ago
1
$begingroup$
Will the strings be only alphanumeric, or alphabetic, or only printable-ascii?
$endgroup$
– Embodiment of Ignorance
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
@EmbodimentofIgnorance All printable ASCII characters can appear in the input.
$endgroup$
– Sara J
6 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate
$endgroup$
– Adám
1 hour ago
$begingroup$
@Adám That question asks for the longest common subsequence, not substring.
$endgroup$
– Doorknob♦
1 hour ago
1
$begingroup$
Will the strings be only alphanumeric, or alphabetic, or only printable-ascii?
$endgroup$
– Embodiment of Ignorance
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
@EmbodimentofIgnorance All printable ASCII characters can appear in the input.
$endgroup$
– Sara J
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate
$endgroup$
– Adám
1 hour ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate
$endgroup$
– Adám
1 hour ago
$begingroup$
@Adám That question asks for the longest common subsequence, not substring.
$endgroup$
– Doorknob♦
1 hour ago
$begingroup$
@Adám That question asks for the longest common subsequence, not substring.
$endgroup$
– Doorknob♦
1 hour ago
1
1
$begingroup$
Will the strings be only alphanumeric, or alphabetic, or only printable-ascii?
$endgroup$
– Embodiment of Ignorance
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
Will the strings be only alphanumeric, or alphabetic, or only printable-ascii?
$endgroup$
– Embodiment of Ignorance
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
@EmbodimentofIgnorance All printable ASCII characters can appear in the input.
$endgroup$
– Sara J
6 mins ago
$begingroup$
@EmbodimentofIgnorance All printable ASCII characters can appear in the input.
$endgroup$
– Sara J
6 mins ago
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Jelly, 12 bytes
Ẇ€œ&/LÐṀḢ¹L?
Try it online!
Last four bytes are there because of the requirement to only output one answer.
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not golfed it much yet but here's my Python 3 answer at 354 bytes:
EDIT: Now 238 bytes with one space indents and some one-line iterators:
EDIT: 193 bytes with max
function
EDIT: 189 bytes removed unnecessary list
def a(b):
a=();c=list(sum(list(list(d[f:e]for f in range(e))for e in range(len(d)+1)),)for d in b)
for i in c[0]:
if all(i in j for j in c):
a+=(i,)
return max(a,key=len)
New contributor
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
You may want to use single spaces as indentation instead of 4 that seems to shave more than 100 bytes.
$endgroup$
– Shieru Asakoto
56 mins ago
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@ShieruAsakoto Oops yeah.
$endgroup$
– Artemis Fowl
50 mins ago
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135 bytes by simplifying thec
declaration and condensing thefor
loop. I would recommend adding the title and bytecount to the header, or using TIO's formatter to create the body of your post
$endgroup$
– Jo King
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
102 bytes by using set operators instead
$endgroup$
– Jo King
16 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
JavaScript (Node.js), 114 105 bytes
a=>(F=(l,n,w=a[0].substr(n,l))=>l?n<0?F(--l,L-l):a.some(y=>y.search(w)<0)?F(l,n-1):w:"")(L=a[0].length,0)
Try it online!
Probably still golfable.
y.indexOf
must be used in place of y.search
if the strings may contain special regex characters, at the cost of 1 more byte.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Brachylog (v2), 3 bytes
sᵛw
Try it online!
Full program. Input from standard input (as a JSON-style list of strings), output to standard output.
Explanation
sᵛw
s Find a substring
ᵛ of every element {of the input}; the same one for each
w and output it.
Tiebreak order here is set by the s
, favouring the longest substring (the secondary tiebreak doesn't matter, but IIRC it's position within the first element of the input).
Brachylog's s
doesn't return empty substrings, so we need a bit of a trick to get around that: instead of making a function submission (which is what's normally done), we write a full program, outputting to standard output. That way, if there's a common substring, we just output it, and we're done. If there isn't a common substring, the program errors out – but it still prints nothing to standard output, thus it outputs the null string as intended.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Jelly, 12 bytes
Ẇ€œ&/LÐṀḢ¹L?
Try it online!
Last four bytes are there because of the requirement to only output one answer.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 12 bytes
Ẇ€œ&/LÐṀḢ¹L?
Try it online!
Last four bytes are there because of the requirement to only output one answer.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 12 bytes
Ẇ€œ&/LÐṀḢ¹L?
Try it online!
Last four bytes are there because of the requirement to only output one answer.
$endgroup$
Jelly, 12 bytes
Ẇ€œ&/LÐṀḢ¹L?
Try it online!
Last four bytes are there because of the requirement to only output one answer.
answered 1 hour ago
Nick KennedyNick Kennedy
92147
92147
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not golfed it much yet but here's my Python 3 answer at 354 bytes:
EDIT: Now 238 bytes with one space indents and some one-line iterators:
EDIT: 193 bytes with max
function
EDIT: 189 bytes removed unnecessary list
def a(b):
a=();c=list(sum(list(list(d[f:e]for f in range(e))for e in range(len(d)+1)),)for d in b)
for i in c[0]:
if all(i in j for j in c):
a+=(i,)
return max(a,key=len)
New contributor
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
You may want to use single spaces as indentation instead of 4 that seems to shave more than 100 bytes.
$endgroup$
– Shieru Asakoto
56 mins ago
$begingroup$
@ShieruAsakoto Oops yeah.
$endgroup$
– Artemis Fowl
50 mins ago
$begingroup$
135 bytes by simplifying thec
declaration and condensing thefor
loop. I would recommend adding the title and bytecount to the header, or using TIO's formatter to create the body of your post
$endgroup$
– Jo King
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
102 bytes by using set operators instead
$endgroup$
– Jo King
16 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not golfed it much yet but here's my Python 3 answer at 354 bytes:
EDIT: Now 238 bytes with one space indents and some one-line iterators:
EDIT: 193 bytes with max
function
EDIT: 189 bytes removed unnecessary list
def a(b):
a=();c=list(sum(list(list(d[f:e]for f in range(e))for e in range(len(d)+1)),)for d in b)
for i in c[0]:
if all(i in j for j in c):
a+=(i,)
return max(a,key=len)
New contributor
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
You may want to use single spaces as indentation instead of 4 that seems to shave more than 100 bytes.
$endgroup$
– Shieru Asakoto
56 mins ago
$begingroup$
@ShieruAsakoto Oops yeah.
$endgroup$
– Artemis Fowl
50 mins ago
$begingroup$
135 bytes by simplifying thec
declaration and condensing thefor
loop. I would recommend adding the title and bytecount to the header, or using TIO's formatter to create the body of your post
$endgroup$
– Jo King
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
102 bytes by using set operators instead
$endgroup$
– Jo King
16 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not golfed it much yet but here's my Python 3 answer at 354 bytes:
EDIT: Now 238 bytes with one space indents and some one-line iterators:
EDIT: 193 bytes with max
function
EDIT: 189 bytes removed unnecessary list
def a(b):
a=();c=list(sum(list(list(d[f:e]for f in range(e))for e in range(len(d)+1)),)for d in b)
for i in c[0]:
if all(i in j for j in c):
a+=(i,)
return max(a,key=len)
New contributor
$endgroup$
Not golfed it much yet but here's my Python 3 answer at 354 bytes:
EDIT: Now 238 bytes with one space indents and some one-line iterators:
EDIT: 193 bytes with max
function
EDIT: 189 bytes removed unnecessary list
def a(b):
a=();c=list(sum(list(list(d[f:e]for f in range(e))for e in range(len(d)+1)),)for d in b)
for i in c[0]:
if all(i in j for j in c):
a+=(i,)
return max(a,key=len)
New contributor
edited 24 mins ago
New contributor
answered 1 hour ago
Artemis FowlArtemis Fowl
1013
1013
New contributor
New contributor
$begingroup$
You may want to use single spaces as indentation instead of 4 that seems to shave more than 100 bytes.
$endgroup$
– Shieru Asakoto
56 mins ago
$begingroup$
@ShieruAsakoto Oops yeah.
$endgroup$
– Artemis Fowl
50 mins ago
$begingroup$
135 bytes by simplifying thec
declaration and condensing thefor
loop. I would recommend adding the title and bytecount to the header, or using TIO's formatter to create the body of your post
$endgroup$
– Jo King
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
102 bytes by using set operators instead
$endgroup$
– Jo King
16 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You may want to use single spaces as indentation instead of 4 that seems to shave more than 100 bytes.
$endgroup$
– Shieru Asakoto
56 mins ago
$begingroup$
@ShieruAsakoto Oops yeah.
$endgroup$
– Artemis Fowl
50 mins ago
$begingroup$
135 bytes by simplifying thec
declaration and condensing thefor
loop. I would recommend adding the title and bytecount to the header, or using TIO's formatter to create the body of your post
$endgroup$
– Jo King
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
102 bytes by using set operators instead
$endgroup$
– Jo King
16 mins ago
$begingroup$
You may want to use single spaces as indentation instead of 4 that seems to shave more than 100 bytes.
$endgroup$
– Shieru Asakoto
56 mins ago
$begingroup$
You may want to use single spaces as indentation instead of 4 that seems to shave more than 100 bytes.
$endgroup$
– Shieru Asakoto
56 mins ago
$begingroup$
@ShieruAsakoto Oops yeah.
$endgroup$
– Artemis Fowl
50 mins ago
$begingroup$
@ShieruAsakoto Oops yeah.
$endgroup$
– Artemis Fowl
50 mins ago
$begingroup$
135 bytes by simplifying the
c
declaration and condensing the for
loop. I would recommend adding the title and bytecount to the header, or using TIO's formatter to create the body of your post$endgroup$
– Jo King
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
135 bytes by simplifying the
c
declaration and condensing the for
loop. I would recommend adding the title and bytecount to the header, or using TIO's formatter to create the body of your post$endgroup$
– Jo King
20 mins ago
$begingroup$
102 bytes by using set operators instead
$endgroup$
– Jo King
16 mins ago
$begingroup$
102 bytes by using set operators instead
$endgroup$
– Jo King
16 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
JavaScript (Node.js), 114 105 bytes
a=>(F=(l,n,w=a[0].substr(n,l))=>l?n<0?F(--l,L-l):a.some(y=>y.search(w)<0)?F(l,n-1):w:"")(L=a[0].length,0)
Try it online!
Probably still golfable.
y.indexOf
must be used in place of y.search
if the strings may contain special regex characters, at the cost of 1 more byte.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
JavaScript (Node.js), 114 105 bytes
a=>(F=(l,n,w=a[0].substr(n,l))=>l?n<0?F(--l,L-l):a.some(y=>y.search(w)<0)?F(l,n-1):w:"")(L=a[0].length,0)
Try it online!
Probably still golfable.
y.indexOf
must be used in place of y.search
if the strings may contain special regex characters, at the cost of 1 more byte.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
JavaScript (Node.js), 114 105 bytes
a=>(F=(l,n,w=a[0].substr(n,l))=>l?n<0?F(--l,L-l):a.some(y=>y.search(w)<0)?F(l,n-1):w:"")(L=a[0].length,0)
Try it online!
Probably still golfable.
y.indexOf
must be used in place of y.search
if the strings may contain special regex characters, at the cost of 1 more byte.
$endgroup$
JavaScript (Node.js), 114 105 bytes
a=>(F=(l,n,w=a[0].substr(n,l))=>l?n<0?F(--l,L-l):a.some(y=>y.search(w)<0)?F(l,n-1):w:"")(L=a[0].length,0)
Try it online!
Probably still golfable.
y.indexOf
must be used in place of y.search
if the strings may contain special regex characters, at the cost of 1 more byte.
edited 19 mins ago
answered 29 mins ago
Shieru AsakotoShieru Asakoto
2,750317
2,750317
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Brachylog (v2), 3 bytes
sᵛw
Try it online!
Full program. Input from standard input (as a JSON-style list of strings), output to standard output.
Explanation
sᵛw
s Find a substring
ᵛ of every element {of the input}; the same one for each
w and output it.
Tiebreak order here is set by the s
, favouring the longest substring (the secondary tiebreak doesn't matter, but IIRC it's position within the first element of the input).
Brachylog's s
doesn't return empty substrings, so we need a bit of a trick to get around that: instead of making a function submission (which is what's normally done), we write a full program, outputting to standard output. That way, if there's a common substring, we just output it, and we're done. If there isn't a common substring, the program errors out – but it still prints nothing to standard output, thus it outputs the null string as intended.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Brachylog (v2), 3 bytes
sᵛw
Try it online!
Full program. Input from standard input (as a JSON-style list of strings), output to standard output.
Explanation
sᵛw
s Find a substring
ᵛ of every element {of the input}; the same one for each
w and output it.
Tiebreak order here is set by the s
, favouring the longest substring (the secondary tiebreak doesn't matter, but IIRC it's position within the first element of the input).
Brachylog's s
doesn't return empty substrings, so we need a bit of a trick to get around that: instead of making a function submission (which is what's normally done), we write a full program, outputting to standard output. That way, if there's a common substring, we just output it, and we're done. If there isn't a common substring, the program errors out – but it still prints nothing to standard output, thus it outputs the null string as intended.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Brachylog (v2), 3 bytes
sᵛw
Try it online!
Full program. Input from standard input (as a JSON-style list of strings), output to standard output.
Explanation
sᵛw
s Find a substring
ᵛ of every element {of the input}; the same one for each
w and output it.
Tiebreak order here is set by the s
, favouring the longest substring (the secondary tiebreak doesn't matter, but IIRC it's position within the first element of the input).
Brachylog's s
doesn't return empty substrings, so we need a bit of a trick to get around that: instead of making a function submission (which is what's normally done), we write a full program, outputting to standard output. That way, if there's a common substring, we just output it, and we're done. If there isn't a common substring, the program errors out – but it still prints nothing to standard output, thus it outputs the null string as intended.
$endgroup$
Brachylog (v2), 3 bytes
sᵛw
Try it online!
Full program. Input from standard input (as a JSON-style list of strings), output to standard output.
Explanation
sᵛw
s Find a substring
ᵛ of every element {of the input}; the same one for each
w and output it.
Tiebreak order here is set by the s
, favouring the longest substring (the secondary tiebreak doesn't matter, but IIRC it's position within the first element of the input).
Brachylog's s
doesn't return empty substrings, so we need a bit of a trick to get around that: instead of making a function submission (which is what's normally done), we write a full program, outputting to standard output. That way, if there's a common substring, we just output it, and we're done. If there isn't a common substring, the program errors out – but it still prints nothing to standard output, thus it outputs the null string as intended.
answered 16 mins ago
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$begingroup$
Possible duplicate
$endgroup$
– Adám
1 hour ago
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@Adám That question asks for the longest common subsequence, not substring.
$endgroup$
– Doorknob♦
1 hour ago
1
$begingroup$
Will the strings be only alphanumeric, or alphabetic, or only printable-ascii?
$endgroup$
– Embodiment of Ignorance
20 mins ago
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@EmbodimentofIgnorance All printable ASCII characters can appear in the input.
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– Sara J
6 mins ago