I have two arrays:
fruitsArray = ["apple", "mango", "blueberry", "orange"] vegArray = ["tomato", "potato", "mango", "blueberry"] How can I get the list of common items in those two array which gives
ouptput = ["mango", "blueberry"] I can't use if contains(array, string) as I want to compare 2 arrays.
first(where:) Returns the first element of the sequence that satisfies the given predicate.
To check if two arrays are equal in Swift, use Equal To == operator. Equal To operator returns a Boolean value indicating whether two arrays contain the same elements in the same order. If two arrays are equal, then the operator returns true , or else it returns false .
In Swift, we are allowed to join the elements of an array in a string using joined() function. This function creates a new string by concatenating all the elements of an array using a specified separator. We can also join all the elements of an array without any separator.
You can also use filter and contains in conjunction:
let fruitsArray = ["apple", "mango", "blueberry", "orange"] let vegArray = ["tomato", "potato", "mango", "blueberry"] // only Swift 1 let output = fruitsArray.filter{ contains(vegArray, $0) } // in Swift 2 and above let output = fruitsArray.filter{ vegArray.contains($0) } // or let output = fruitsArray.filter(vegArray.contains) Set vs Array for a single computation of common elementsWe consider the following code snippet:
let array1: Array = ... let array2: Array = ... // `Array` let commonElements = array1.filter(array2.contains) // vs `Set` let commonElements = Array(Set(array1).intersection(Set(array2))) // or (performance wise equivalent) let commonElements: Array = Set(array1).filter(Set(array2).contains) I have made some (artificial) benchmarks with Int and short/long Strings (10 to 100 Characters) (all randomly generated). I always use array1.count == array2.count
I get the following results:
If you have more than critical #(number of) elements converting to a Set is preferable
data | critical #elements -------------|-------------------- Int | ~50 short String | ~100 long String | ~200 Using the Array approach uses "Brute force"-search which has time complexity O(N^2) where N = array1.count = array2.count which is in contrast to the Set approach O(N). However the conversion from Array to Set and back is very expensive for large data which explains the increase of critical #elements for bigger data types.
For small Arrays with about 100 elements the Array approach is fine but for larger ones you should use the Set approach.
If you want to use this "common elements"-operation multiple times it is advisable to use Sets only if possible (the type of the elements has to be Hashable).
A conversion from Array to Set is kind of expensive while the conversion from Set to Array is in contrast very inexpensive.
Using filter with .filter(array1.contains) is performance wise faster than .filter{ array1.contains($0) } since:
O(N))Convert them to Set and use intersect() function:
let fruitsArray = ["apple", "mango", "blueberry", "orange"] let vegArray = ["tomato", "potato", "mango", "blueberry"] let fruitsSet = Set(fruitsArray) let vegSet = Set(vegArray) let output = Array(fruitsSet.intersection(vegSet))
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