Related
The specific problem I have is that I have to replace the numbers in chemical formulae with the equivalent Unicode subscripts, so H2SO4 => H₂SO₄. (Those subscripts are not font adjustments, they are special unicode characters.)
So my initial cut was:
return unit.Replace("2", "₂").
Replace("3", "₃").
Replace("4", "₄").
Replace("5", "₅").
Replace("6", "₆").
Replace("7", "₇");
Which works, but obviously isn't particularly efficient. Any suggestions for a more optimal algorithm?
There are only 10 possible subscript characters that need replacement and most chemical formulas are not too long. For this reason, I think your implementation is not horribly inefficient and I would suggest benchmarking your code before trying to optimize it.
But here's my attempt to create a method that does what you need:
public string ToSubscriptFormula(string input)
{
var characters = input.ToCharArray();
for (var i = 0; i < characters.Length; i++)
{
switch (characters[i])
{
case '2':
characters[i] = '₂';
break;
case '3':
characters[i] = '₃';
break;
// case statements omitted
}
}
return new string(characters);
}
I would recommend avoiding the use of StringBuilder unless you're appending a large amount of strings, as the overhead of creating an instance would actually make your code less efficient. See this post by Jon Skeet for a detailed explanation of when it should be used.
Also, given the limited number of case statements, I personally don't think using a Dictionary<char,char> would add any readability or performance benefit, but under different scenarios it might be useful to consider using one.
But if you really had to super-optimize your method, you could replace the case statement with the following code (thanks to andrew for the suggestion):
public string ToSubscriptFormula(string input)
{
var characters = input.ToCharArray();
const int distance = '₀' - '0'; // distance of subscript from digit
for (var i = 0; i < characters.Length; i++)
{
if(char.IsDigit(characters[i]))
{
characters[i] = (char) (characters[i] + distance);
}
}
return new string(characters);
}
The trick here is that all subscript characters are successive and that casting an int to char will give you the corresponding character.
Finally, as #nwellnhof has suggested in the comments, char.IsDigit() would return true for some non-latin digit characters in the Unicode Nd Category.
If your chemical formula contains such characters, the statement should be replaced with c >= '0' && c<='9'. This will probably be slightly faster than char.IsDigit but I'm not sure if it would make a difference in most practical scenarios.
I would be tempted to do something like this:
public string replace(string input)
{
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
Dictionary<char, char> map = new Dictionary<char, char>();
map.Add('2', '₂');
map.Add('3', '₃');
map.Add('4', '₄');
map.Add('5', '₅');
map.Add('6', '₆');
map.Add('7', '₇');
char tmp;
foreach(char c in input)
{
if (map.TryGetValue(c, out tmp))
sb.Append(tmp);
else
sb.Append(c);
}
return sb.ToString();
}
The Dictionary is defined inside the method here for simplicity, but should be defined somewhere else in scope.
So, very simply, iterate the input string only once. For every character, find the matching Dictionary entry if it exists, and append either that or the original character to a StringBuilder in order to avoid creating multiple string objects.
My first thought was what about formulae with balancing prefix numbers:
E.g. 2H₂(g) + O₂(g) → 2H₂O(g)
Presumably you don't want this to replace the leading numbers?
Also, I'm not sure why it is mentioned above that only 8 digits (or even only 6 digits) need replacement - aren't all digits required (0-9)? Sure, you don't have 0 and 1 by themselves, but you need them for, e.g., 10.
Anyway, notwithstanding the above (which I didn't attempt to implement since it wasn't the question), avoiding StringBuilder and operating on a char array seemed to make sense, and I preferred to avoid a large switch statement.
public class Program
{
public static void Main()
{
Console.WriteLine(SubscriptNums("C6H12O6"));
}
public static string SubscriptNums(string input)
{
char[] replacementChars = { '₀', '₁', '₂', '₃', '₄', '₅', '₆', '₇', '₈', '₉' };
int zeroCharIndex = (int)'0';
char[] inputCharArray = input.ToCharArray();
for(int i = 0; i < inputCharArray.Length; i++)
{
if (inputCharArray[i] >= '0' && inputCharArray[i] <= '9')
{
inputCharArray[i] = replacementChars[(int)inputCharArray[i] - zeroCharIndex];
}
}
return new string(inputCharArray);
}
}
Edit 1 - removed magic number for numeric value of '0'.
Edit 2 - removed use of IsDigit.
You could iterate over the string and check each char. If it is to replace, append the according character to the StringBuilder. If not, just add the original character. This way, you only have to iterate over the string once, and not once for each replacement. Furthermore, as strings are immutable, each call of String.Replace() will create a new copy of the string for the result, which will immediately be GC'ed again.
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
for (int i = 0; i < unit.Length; i++) {
switch(unit[i]) {
case '2': sb.Append('₂'); break;
case '3': sb.Append('₃'); break;
...
default: sb.Append(unit[i]); break;
}
}
output = sb.ToString();
You could also introduce some replacement dictionary, like Abdullah Nehir suggested
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
Dictionary<char, char> replacements = new Dictionary<char, char>();
//put in the pairs
for (int i = 0; i < unit.Length; i++) {
if (replacements.ContainsKey(unit[i]))
sb.Append(replacement[unit[i]];
else
sb.Append(unit[i]);
}
Instead of accessing the values via index, you can also iterate the string with a foreach loop
foreach (char c in unit) {
if (replacements.ContainsKey(c))
sb.Append(replacements[c]);
else
sb.Append(c);
}
If you were looking for some elegant code where you don't have to type string.Replace for each character, then this would help you:
public static string Replace(string input)
{
char[] inputCharArr = input.ToCharArray();
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
foreach (var c in inputCharArr)
{
int intC = (int)c;
//If the digit was a number ([0-9] are [48-57] in unicode),
//replace the old char with the new char
//(8272 when added to the unicode of [0-9] gives the desired result)
if (intC > 47 && intC < 58)
sb.Append((char)(intC + 8272));
else sb.Append(c);
}
return sb.ToString();
}
See the edit history if you wonder what the comments are talking about.
I need to expand the Control Characters (non-Printable) in a Bar Code Scan.
This is what I've got. At the moment I am hung up on how to get the integer index from the substring on my input string.
// A method for expanding ASCII Control Character into Human Readable format
string ExpandCtrlString(string inStr)
{
// String Builder Capacity may need to be lengthened...
StringBuilder outStr = new StringBuilder(128);
// 0 Based Array representing the expansion of ASCII Control Characters
string[] CtrlChars = new string[]
{
"<nul>",
"<soh>",
"<stx>",
"<etx>",
"<eot>",
"<enq>",
"<ack>",
"<bel>",
"<bs>",
"<tab>",
"<lf>",
"<vt>",
"<ff>",
"<cr>",
"<so>",
"<si>",
"<dle>",
"<dc1>",
"<dc2>",
"<dc3>",
"<dc4>",
"<nak>",
"<syn>",
"<etb>",
"<can>",
"<em>",
"<sub>",
"<esc>",
"<fs>",
"<gs>",
"<rs>",
"<us>"
};
for (int n = 0; n < inStr.Length; n++)
{
if (Char.IsControl(inStr, n))
{
//char q = inStr.Substring(n, 1);
int x = (int)inStr[n] ();
outStr.Append(CtrlChars[x]);
}
else
{
outStr.Append(inStr.Substring(n, 1));
}
}
return outStr.ToString();
}
Edited:
The thought came as I was musing...
I double cast the substring and it worked...
That is I casted the cast... :)
for (int n = 0; n < inStr.Length; n++)
{
if (Char.IsControl(inStr, n))
{
int x = (int)(char)inStr[n];
outStr.Append(CtrlChars[x]);
}
else
{
outStr.Append(inStr.Substring(n, 1));
}
}
return outStr.ToString();
And, it works in CF NET 2.0 in Windows Mobile 5
I had thought about using foreach, but, that presented other problems for an old VB6 guy. :)
I can see where you are are coming from in your approach, but I can see some flaws in what you are trying to do as well.
First of all .. I'm doing this without testing .. so buyer beware!
Secondly, from Microsoft's Char.IsControl Method (String, Int32), The Unicode standard assigns code points from \U0000 to \U001F, \U007F, and from \U0080 to \U009F to control characters. Your array doesn't cover all of these ranges, so potentially (depending on the source of your string) your code will actually blow up as you would be supplying an index that is outside the range of the array. This could be fixed by using a dictionary to map from a number to string, rather than the array.
dictionary<int, string> mapping = new dictionary<int, string>() {
{ 0, "<nul>" },
{ 1, "<soh>" },
.. etc filled with every possible control char
}
NOTE that this dictionary really should be defined/constructed in the class that holds your ExpandCtrlString method, and not in the method itself.
class expand
{
private dictionary<int, string> mapping …
public string ExpandCtrlString(string inStr)
{
...
}
}
And to get your char you can simply do:
for (int n = 0; n < inStr.Length; n++)
{
char ch = instr[n];
...
}
Or if you want to be more modern about it you can directly get the character from the string:
foreach(var ch in instr)
{
...
}
Then check if the char is a control char, and if so is it in the dictionary
if (Char.IsControl(ch))
{
// The value is not needed until you know its a control char
int val = (int)Char.GetNumericValue(ch);
if (mapping.ContainsKey(val))
{
// You know what the control char is, so output its name
outStr.Append(mapping[val]);
}
else
{
// You might have missed a control char in your dictionary of names
// So by default output its hex value instead
outStr.AppendFormat("<{0}>", val.ToString("X"));
}
}
else
{
// Char is not a control char
outStr.Append(ch);
}
Then finally return your outStr as you already do.
A char can be used like a number. Here's a simpler loop:
foreach (char c in inStr)
{
// Check to see if c (as a number here) is less than the CtrlChars array size
// If it is, then print the CtrlChars text
if (c < CtrlChars.Length)
{
outStr.Append(CtrlChars[c]);
}
else
{
outStr.Append(c);
}
}
I have a list of n words (let's say 26). Now I want to get a list of all possible combinations, but with a maximum of k words per row (let's say 5)
So when my word list is: aaa, bbb, ..., zzz
I want to get:
aaa
bbb
...
aaabbb
aaaccc
...
aaabbbcccdddeeefff
aaabbbcccdddeeeggg
...
I want to make it variable, so that it will work with any n or k value.
There should be no word be twice and every combinations needs to be taken (even if there are very much).
How could I achieve that?
EDIT:
Thank you for your answers. It is not an assignment. Is is just that I forgot the combinations of my password and I want to be sure that I have all combinations tested. Although I have not 26 password parts, but this made it easier to explain what I want.
If there are other people with the same problem, this link could be helpfull:
Generate word combination array in c#
i wrote simple a function to do this
private string allState(int index,string[] inStr)
{
string a = inStr[index].ToString();
int l = index+1;
int k = l;
var result = string.Empty;
var t = inStr.Length;
int i = index;
while (i < t)
{
string s = a;
for (int j = l; j < k; j++)
{
s += inStr[j].ToString();
}
result += s+",";
k++;
i++;
}
index++;
if(index<inStr.Length)
result += allState(index, inStr);
return result.TrimEnd(new char[] { ',' });
}
allState(0, new string[] { "a", "b", "c"})
You could take a look at this
However, if you need to get large numbers of combinations (in the tens of millions) you should use lazy evaluation for the generation of the combinations.
I have a string read from another source such as "\b\bfoo\bx". In this case, it would translate to the word "fox" as the first 2 \b's are ignored, and the last 'o' is erased, and then replaced with 'x'. Also another case would be "patt\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\bfoo" should be translated to "foo"
I have come up with something using String.Replace, but it is complex and I am worried it is not working correctly, also it is creating a lot of new string objects which I would like to avoid.
Any ideas?
Probably the easiest is to just iterate over the entire string. Given your inputs, the following code does the trick in 1-pass
public string ReplaceBackspace(string hasBackspace)
{
if( string.IsNullOrEmpty(hasBackspace) )
return hasBackspace;
StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder(hasBackspace.Length);
foreach (char c in hasBackspace)
{
if (c == '\b')
{
if (result.Length > 0)
result.Length--;
}
else
{
result.Append(c);
}
}
return result.ToString();
}
The way I would do it is low-tech, but easy to understand.
Create a stack of characters. Then iterate through the string from beginning to end. If the character is a normal character (non-slash), push it onto the stack. If it is a slash, and the next character is a 'b', pop the top of the stack. If the stack is empty, ignore it.
At the end, pop each character in turn, add it to a StringBuilder, and reverse the result.
Regular expressions version:
var data = #"patt\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\bfoo";
var regex = new Regex(#"(^|[^\\b])\\b");
while (regex.IsMatch(data))
{
data = regex.Replace(data, "");
}
Optimized version (and this one works with backspace '\b' and not with string "\b"):
var data = "patt\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\bfoo";
var regex = new Regex(#"[^\x08]\x08", RegexOptions.Compiled);
while (data.Contains('\b'))
{
data = regex.Replace(data.TrimStart('\b'), "");
}
public static string ProcessBackspaces(string source)
{
char[] buffer = new char[source.Length];
int idx = 0;
foreach (char c in source)
{
if (c != '\b')
{
buffer[idx] = c;
idx++;
}
else if (idx > 0)
{
idx--;
}
}
return new string(buffer, 0, idx);
}
EDIT
I've done a quick, rough benchmark of the code posted in answers so far (processing the two example strings from the question, one million times each):
ANSWER | TIME (ms)
------------------------|-----------
Luke (this one) | 318
Alexander Taran | 567
Robert Paulson | 683
Markus Nigbur | 2100
Kamarey (new version) | 7075
Kamarey (old version) | 30902
You could iterate through the string backward, making a character array as you go. Every time you hit a backspace, increment a counter, and every time you hit a normal character, skip it if your counter is non-zero and decrement the counter.
I'm not sure what the best C# data structure is to manage this and then be able to get the string in the right order afterward quickly. StringBuilder has an Insert method but I don't know if it will be performant to keep inserting characters at the start or not. You could put the characters in a stack and hit ToArray() at the end -- that might or might not be faster.
String myString = "patt\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\bfoo";
List<char> chars = myString.ToCharArray().ToList();
int delCount = 0;
for (int i = chars.Count -1; i >= 0; i--)
{
if (chars[i] == '\b')
{
delCount++;
chars.RemoveAt(i);
} else {
if (delCount > 0 && chars[i] != null) {
chars.RemoveAt(i);
delCount--;
}
}
}
i'd go like this:
code is not tested
char[] result = new char[input.Length()];
int r =0;
for (i=0; i<input.Length(); i++){
if (input[i] == '\b' && r>0) r--;
else result[r]=input[i];
}
string resultsring = result.take(r);
Create a StringBuilder and copy over everything but backspace chars.
I'm doing some work with strings, and I have a scenario where I need to determine if a string (usually a small one < 10 characters) contains repeated characters.
`ABCDE` // does not contain repeats
`AABCD` // does contain repeats, ie A is repeated
I can loop through the string.ToCharArray() and test each character against every other character in the char[], but I feel like I am missing something obvious.... maybe I just need coffee. Can anyone help?
EDIT:
The string will be sorted, so order is not important so ABCDA => AABCD
The frequency of repeats is also important, so I need to know if the repeat is pair or triplet etc.
If the string is sorted, you could just remember each character in turn and check to make sure the next character is never identical to the last character.
Other than that, for strings under ten characters, just testing each character against all the rest is probably as fast or faster than most other things. A bit vector, as suggested by another commenter, may be faster (helps if you have a small set of legal characters.)
Bonus: here's a slick LINQ solution to implement Jon's functionality:
int longestRun =
s.Select((c, i) => s.Substring(i).TakeWhile(x => x == c).Count()).Max();
So, OK, it's not very fast! You got a problem with that?!
:-)
If the string is short, then just looping and testing may well be the simplest and most efficient way. I mean you could create a hash set (in whatever platform you're using) and iterate through the characters, failing if the character is already in the set and adding it to the set otherwise - but that's only likely to provide any benefit when the strings are longer.
EDIT: Now that we know it's sorted, mquander's answer is the best one IMO. Here's an implementation:
public static bool IsSortedNoRepeats(string text)
{
if (text.Length == 0)
{
return true;
}
char current = text[0];
for (int i=1; i < text.Length; i++)
{
char next = text[i];
if (next <= current)
{
return false;
}
current = next;
}
return true;
}
A shorter alternative if you don't mind repeating the indexer use:
public static bool IsSortedNoRepeats(string text)
{
for (int i=1; i < text.Length; i++)
{
if (text[i] <= text[i-1])
{
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
EDIT: Okay, with the "frequency" side, I'll turn the problem round a bit. I'm still going to assume that the string is sorted, so what we want to know is the length of the longest run. When there are no repeats, the longest run length will be 0 (for an empty string) or 1 (for a non-empty string). Otherwise, it'll be 2 or more.
First a string-specific version:
public static int LongestRun(string text)
{
if (text.Length == 0)
{
return 0;
}
char current = text[0];
int currentRun = 1;
int bestRun = 0;
for (int i=1; i < text.Length; i++)
{
if (current != text[i])
{
bestRun = Math.Max(currentRun, bestRun);
currentRun = 0;
current = text[i];
}
currentRun++;
}
// It's possible that the final run is the best one
return Math.Max(currentRun, bestRun);
}
Now we can also do this as a general extension method on IEnumerable<T>:
public static int LongestRun(this IEnumerable<T> source)
{
bool first = true;
T current = default(T);
int currentRun = 0;
int bestRun = 0;
foreach (T element in source)
{
if (first || !EqualityComparer<T>.Default(element, current))
{
first = false;
bestRun = Math.Max(currentRun, bestRun);
currentRun = 0;
current = element;
}
}
// It's possible that the final run is the best one
return Math.Max(currentRun, bestRun);
}
Then you can call "AABCD".LongestRun() for example.
This will tell you very quickly if a string contains duplicates:
bool containsDups = "ABCDEA".Length != s.Distinct().Count();
It just checks the number of distinct characters against the original length. If they're different, you've got duplicates...
Edit: I guess this doesn't take care of the frequency of dups you noted in your edit though... but some other suggestions here already take care of that, so I won't post the code as I note a number of them already give you a reasonably elegant solution. I particularly like Joe's implementation using LINQ extensions.
Since you're using 3.5, you could do this in one LINQ query:
var results = stringInput
.ToCharArray() // not actually needed, I've left it here to show what's actually happening
.GroupBy(c=>c)
.Where(g=>g.Count()>1)
.Select(g=>new {Letter=g.First(),Count=g.Count()})
;
For each character that appears more than once in the input, this will give you the character and the count of occurances.
I think the easiest way to achieve that is to use this simple regex
bool foundMatch = false;
foundMatch = Regex.IsMatch(yourString, #"(\w)\1");
If you need more information about the match (start, length etc)
Match match = null;
string testString = "ABCDE AABCD";
match = Regex.Match(testString, #"(\w)\1+?");
if (match.Success)
{
string matchText = match.Value; // AA
int matchIndnex = match.Index; // 6
int matchLength = match.Length; // 2
}
How about something like:
string strString = "AA BRA KA DABRA";
var grp = from c in strString.ToCharArray()
group c by c into m
select new { Key = m.Key, Count = m.Count() };
foreach (var item in grp)
{
Console.WriteLine(
string.Format("Character:{0} Appears {1} times",
item.Key.ToString(), item.Count));
}
Update Now, you'd need an array of counters to maintain a count.
Keep a bit array, with one bit representing a unique character. Turn the bit on when you encounter a character, and run over the string once. A mapping of the bit array index and the character set is upto you to decide. Break if you see that a particular bit is on already.
/(.).*\1/
(or whatever the equivalent is in your regex library's syntax)
Not the most efficient, since it will probably backtrack to every character in the string and then scan forward again. And I don't usually advocate regular expressions. But if you want brevity...
I started looking for some info on the net and I got to the following solution.
string input = "aaaaabbcbbbcccddefgg";
char[] chars = input.ToCharArray();
Dictionary<char, int> dictionary = new Dictionary<char,int>();
foreach (char c in chars)
{
if (!dictionary.ContainsKey(c))
{
dictionary[c] = 1; //
}
else
{
dictionary[c]++;
}
}
foreach (KeyValuePair<char, int> combo in dictionary)
{
if (combo.Value > 1) //If the vale of the key is greater than 1 it means the letter is repeated
{
Console.WriteLine("Letter " + combo.Key + " " + "is repeated " + combo.Value.ToString() + " times");
}
}
I hope it helps, I had a job interview in which the interviewer asked me to solve this and I understand it is a common question.
When there is no order to work on you could use a dictionary to keep the counts:
String input = "AABCD";
var result = new Dictionary<Char, int>(26);
var chars = input.ToCharArray();
foreach (var c in chars)
{
if (!result.ContainsKey(c))
{
result[c] = 0; // initialize the counter in the result
}
result[c]++;
}
foreach (var charCombo in result)
{
Console.WriteLine("{0}: {1}",charCombo.Key, charCombo.Value);
}
The hash solution Jon was describing is probably the best. You could use a HybridDictionary since that works well with small and large data sets. Where the letter is the key and the value is the frequency. (Update the frequency every time the add fails or the HybridDictionary returns true for .Contains(key))