zet 1.0.0

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

zet: Take the union, intersection, etc of files

zet 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, zet intersect x y z those that occur in all of them, and zet diff x y z those that occur in x but not in y or z. zet prints each output line only once, and prints lines in the order of their first appearance in its input.

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 exactly once in the entire input.
  • zet single --file x y z outputs the lines that occur in exactly one of x, y, or z. (Output would include, say, a line that occurs, say, twice in y but not in x or z)
  • zet multiple x y z outputs the lines that occur more than once in the entire input.
  • zet multiple --files x y z outputs the lines that occur in two or more of x, y, and z (but not a line that occurs twice in y but not in x or z).

The --count-lines flag makes zet show the number of times each line occurs in the input. The --count-files flag shows the number of files each line occurs in. The -c or --count flags act like --count-lines, unless --files is in effect, in which case they act like --count-files. The --count-none flag turns off counting, and can be used to override the other count flags. (In the usual POSIX convention, the last count flag given will override any previous count flag.)

Example

Suppose you maintain three mailing lists on a site that lets you download membership lists as CSV files, and add new members by uploading a CSV file in the same format. You have three lists, a, b, and c that people have joined, and you want to create two new lists: everyone, whose membership should be those who have joined any of a, b, and c; and big-fans, whose membership should those who have signed up for all three of a, b, and c.

You've downloaded the membership lists a, b, and c to a.csv, b.csv, and c.csv. To create the membership list for everyone and big-fans, you can use zet:

$ zet union a.csv b.csv c.csv > everyone.csv
$ zet intersect a.csv b.csv c.csv > big-fans.csv

Alas, by the time you create everyone and big-fans, new people have joined the a, b, and c lists. So you download the current membership of those lists to a-now.csv, b-now.csv, and c-now.csv. You create delta-everyone.csv and delta-big-fans.csv, containing the membership records of people who should be added to the everyone list and big-fan list respectively:

$ zet union a-now.csv b-now.csv c-now.csv | zet diff - everyone.csv > delta-everyone.csv
$ zet intersect a-now.csv b-now.csv c-now.csv | zet diff - big-fans.csv > delta-big-fans.csv

Comparisons to other commands

Some zet subcommands are similar to traditional Unix commands:

Zet Traditional
zet union uniq
zet intersect comm -12
zet diff comm -23
zet single uniq -u
zet multiple uniq -d

Differences:

  • zet's input need not be sorted, and it outputs lines in the order of their first appearance in the input. It can take multiple input files (rather than just one (like uniq) or two (like comm).
  • zet has no -i or -ignore-case option, unlike uniq and comm.For large files, zet is about 4.5 times faster than uniq and 10 times faster than comm (see benchmark details). But zet takes much more memory than uniq or comm: zet reads its first file argument into memory, and (for union, single, and multiple) allocates additional space for each line encountered that wasn't in the first file. In contrast uniq and comm take an essentially fixed amount of space, no matter how large the input, since they depend on the input(s) being sorted. So zet is faster until it runs into a memory limit, at which point it stops working.

The huniq command is slightly faster than zet union and takes less memory, because it keeps only a hash of each line in memory rather than the whole line. (In theory, huniq might fail to output a line whose hash is the same as another, different, line). But zet union --count is slightly faster than huniq -c, because huniq -c sorts its input in order to count lines.

Notes

  • As stated above, each output line occurs only once, and the lines are output in the same order as they are encountered.
  • When no file path is given on the command line, zet reads from standard input.
  • When a file argument is -, zet reads from standard input rather than the file named -. (That file can be passed to zet as ./-)
  • 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.