Determine prefix from a set of (similar) strings
Never rewrite what is provided to you: os.path.commonprefix
does exactly this:
Return the longest path prefix (taken character-by-character) that is a prefix of all paths in list. If list is empty, return the empty string (
''
). Note that this may return invalid paths because it works a character at a time.
For comparison to the other answers, here's the code:
# Return the longest prefix of all list elements.
def commonprefix(m):
"Given a list of pathnames, returns the longest common leading component"
if not m: return ''
s1 = min(m)
s2 = max(m)
for i, c in enumerate(s1):
if c != s2[i]:
return s1[:i]
return s1
Here's my solution:
a = ["my_prefix_what_ever", "my_prefix_what_so_ever", "my_prefix_doesnt_matter"]
prefix_len = len(a[0])
for x in a[1 : ]:
prefix_len = min(prefix_len, len(x))
while not x.startswith(a[0][ : prefix_len]):
prefix_len -= 1
prefix = a[0][ : prefix_len]
Ned Batchelder is probably right. But for the fun of it, here's a more efficient version of phimuemue's answer using itertools
.
import itertools
strings = ['my_prefix_what_ever',
'my_prefix_what_so_ever',
'my_prefix_doesnt_matter']
def all_same(x):
return all(x[0] == y for y in x)
char_tuples = itertools.izip(*strings)
prefix_tuples = itertools.takewhile(all_same, char_tuples)
''.join(x[0] for x in prefix_tuples)
As an affront to readability, here's a one-line version :)
>>> from itertools import takewhile, izip
>>> ''.join(c[0] for c in takewhile(lambda x: all(x[0] == y for y in x), izip(*strings)))
'my_prefix_'