zet 0.2.6

zet finds the union, intersection, set difference, etc of files considered as sets of lines
Documentation

zet: Take the union, intersection, etc of files

This is a command-line utility for doing set operations on files considered as sets of lines. For instance, zet union x y z outputs the lines that occur in any of x, y, or z, and zet intersect x y z those that occur in all of them.

Build status Crates.io

Here are the subcommands of zet and what they do:

  • zet union x y z outputs the lines that occur in any of x, y, or z.
  • zet intersect x y z outputs the lines that occur in all of x, y, and z.
  • zet diff x y z outputs the lines that occur in x but not in y or z.
  • zet single x y z outputs the lines that occur in exactly one of x, y, or z.
  • zet multiple x y z outputs the lines that occur in two or more of x, y, and z.

Notes

  • Each output line occurs only once, because we're treating the files as sets and the lines as their elements.
  • We do take the file structure into account in one respect: the lines are output in the same order as they are encountered. So zet union x prints out the lines of x, in order, with duplicates removed.
  • Zet translates UTF-16LE and UTF-16BE files to UTF-8, and ignores Byte Order Marks (BOMs) when comparing lines. It prepends a BOM to its output if and only if its first file argument begins with a BOM.
  • Zet ignores all lines endings (\r\n or \n) when comparing lines, so two input lines compare the same if their only difference is that one ends in \r\n and the other in \r. Zet ends each output line with \r\n if the first line of its first file argument ends in \r\n, and \n otherwise (if the first line ends in \n or the first file has only one line and that line has no line terminator.)
  • Zet reads its entire first input file into memory. Its memory usage is closely proportional to the size of its first input (zet intersect and zet diff) or the larger of the size of its first input and the size of its output (zet union, zet single, and zet multiple).

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.