Awesome
This project has moved here
Since I don't use Diff.swift
anymore Tony Arnold kindly offered to take over maintenance of this project in his own fork. Don't use Diff.swift
, this repo is only kept as an archive.
Diff.swift
This library generates differences between any two Collection
s (and Strings). It uses a fast algorithm (O((N+M)*D))
.
Documentation
Documentation is available here
Features
Diff.swift
supports three types of operations:- Insertions
- Deletions
- Moves (use
ExtendedDiff
)
- Arbitrary sorting of the
Patch
- Utilities for
UITableView
andUICollectionView
(if that's just what you want, skip to examples) - ⚡️ fast
- Diffing collections containing collections (use
NestedDiff
)
Why would I need it?
There's more to diffs than performing UITableView
animations easily.
Wherever you have code which propagates added
/removed
/moved
callbacks from your model to the UI it's good to consider using a diffing library instead. What you get is clear separation and more declarative approach. The model just performs state transition and the UI code performs appropriate UI actions based on the diff output.
Diff vs Patch (Sorting)
Let's consider a simple example of a patch to transform string "a"
into "b"
.
- Delete item at index 0 (we get
""
) - Insert
b
at index 0 (we get"b"
)
If we want to perform these operations in different order, simple reordering of the steps doesn't work.
- Insert
b
at index 0 (we get"ba"
) - Delete item at index 0 (we get
"a"
)
... ooooops
We need to shift insertions and deletions so that we get this:
- Insert
b
at index 1 (we get"ab"
- Delete item at index 0 (we get
"b"
)
Solution
In order to mitigate this issue there are two types of output:
- Diff
- A sequence of deletions, insertions, and moves (if using
ExtendedDiff
) where deletions point to locations of an item to be deleted in the source and insertions point to the items in the output.Diff.swift
produces just oneDiff
.
- A sequence of deletions, insertions, and moves (if using
- Patch
- An ordered sequence of steps to be applied to obtain the second sequence from the first one. It is based on a
Diff
but can be arbitrarly sorted.
- An ordered sequence of steps to be applied to obtain the second sequence from the first one. It is based on a
Sorting in practice
In practice it means that a diff to transform string "1234"
to "1"
is "D(1)D(2)D(3)"
the default patch is "D(1)D(1)D(1)"
. However, if we decide to sort it so that deletions and bigger indices happen first we get this patch: "D(3)D(2)D(1)"
.
How to use
UITableView
/UICollectionView
// It will automatically animate deletions, insertions, and moves
tableView.animateRowChanges(
oldData: old,
newData: new)
collectionView.animateItemChanges(
oldData: old,
newData: new,
completion: {_ in})
// Works with sections, too
tableView.animateRowAndSectionChanges(
oldData: old,
newData: new
)
collectionView.animateItemAndSectionChanges(
oldData: old,
newData: new
)
See examples for a working example.
Using Patch and Diff
When you want to get steps to transform one sequence into another (e.g. you want to animate UI according to the changes in the model)
let from: T
let to: T
// only insertions and deletions
// Returns [Patch<T.Iterator.Element>]
let patch = patch(
from: from,
to: to
)
// Patch + moves
// Returns [ExtendedPatch<T.Iterator.Element>]
let patch = extendedPatch(
from: from,
to: to
)
When you need additional control over ordering
let insertionsFirst = { element1, element2 -> Bool in
switch (element1, element2) {
case (.insert(let at1), .insert(let at2)):
return at1 < at2
case (.insert, .delete):
return true
case (.delete, .insert):
return false
case (.delete(let at1), .delete(let at2)):
return at1 < at2
default: fatalError() // unreachable
}
}
// Results in a [Patch] with insertions preceeding deletions
let patch = patch(
from: from,
to: to,
sort: insertionsFirst
)
More advanced - you want to calculate diff first and generate patch. In certain cases it's a good performance improvement. Generating a sorted patch takes O(D^2) time. The default order takes O(D)
to generate. D
is the length of a diff.
// Generate diff first
let diff = from.diff(to)
let patch = diff.patch(from: from, to: to)
Performance notes
This library is fast. Most other libraries use a simple O(n*m)
algorithm which allocates a 2 dimensional array and goes through all elements. It takes a lot of memory. In the benchmark it is an order of magnitude difference.
Source code is available here. The result of a measurement is mean diff time in seconds over 10 runs on an iPhone 6.
| Diff.swift | Dwifft
---------|------------|--------
same | 0.0213 | 52.3642
created | 0.0188 | 0.0033
deleted | 0.0184 | 0.0050
diff | 0.1320 | 63.4084
This algorithm works great for collections with small diffs. I mean, even for big diffs, it's still better than the simple algorithm. However, if you need good performance and you have big differences between the inputs consider another diffing algorithm. Look at Hunt & Szymanski's and/or Hirschberg's work.
Installation
Carthage (preferred)
// Cartfile
github "wokalski/Diff.swift"
Cocoapods
// podfile
pod 'Diff'
Swift 4.0
There's a swift-4.0
branch with the patches by @tonyarnold.
Get in touch
If you have any questions, you can find me on Twitter.
Misc
If you want to learn how it works Graph.playground
is a good place to start.