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11:26
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Q: Extracting common prefixes from list of strings in java

Rahul BorkarI want to do something similar to this (extracting the common prefixes from a list of strings) in java. Where List of strings are file paths Eg: List filePaths1 = new ArrayList(); filePaths1.add("/root/test1/asass"); filePaths1.add("/root/test1"); filePaths1.add("/root/test"); filePaths1.add("/...

Its basically a longest common prefixes.
@RahulBorkar: in your example, why is "/etc/rahul" a common prefix? It's only there once.
@jlordo Because its there after all and this should be included.
@RahulBorkar: Using your argument, "/etc/rahul/te" should be in the result list also.
@jlordo "/etc/rahul/test" should be there as its a unique common path in input filepaths list...
11:26
@RahulBorkar: "/root/test/bbb/ccc" is also unique. Why's that not in the list?
@jlordo, because there is common prefix to it as "/root/test" in the list or in other string in the list. another example for this would be there are also 3 paths as "/root/rahul/e?ee/asasa/", "/root/rahul/asasa/" and "/root/rahul/no*tthis/asasa/**", which are having common sub path as "/root/rahul/"
Sorry, this makes no sense to me. Using your argument again, "/etc/rahul/test" and "/root/rahul/e?ee/asasa/" also have a common prefix: "/". Actually, "/" is the longest common prefix of all of your inputs.
@jlordo, I guess we are talking about longest common prefix here...
The main problem is: Nobody understands the rule, why this input leads to that output. As long as this is not clear nobody will try to answer the question.
So guys guide me, how it should be asked, I have given the input strings and output strings, I can post the code I have implemented till now if you guys want.
11:26
The code would be good (to show you made some effort). But you have to make clear (in words) what are the rules for the output.
Added more details to question
@RahulBorkar: Still very unclear. In your new example "/root/test" is a prefix of "/root/test1", so why should both be in the result list?
@jlordo, as its a file path and /root/test and /root/test1 are 2 different directories, there are 2 distinct paths.
@RahulBorkar: now we're getting closer... How do you distinguish between file and folder?
By "/" we can always distinguish between file names and directories
if a file path doesnt ends with "/" it is ending with a file name.
Basically I want to mount file system to these paths
we cannot mount it on a child if somebody already mounted it on parent path
So basically I just want to extract common parents where I can mount file system
We cannot mount file system on "/" or on "/root" its too much overhead
11:30
do the files in your example exist?
no there is no need for that case...
We cannot mount file system to file so I will investigate it further to identify how files will be handled, I just need a push start regarding how to do this...
What should the output be for /root/abc/foo, /root/abc/bar, /root/abc/foo/bar/
/root/abc/foo
/root/abc/bar
/root/abc/foo/bar/
/root/abc
thats it
and for
`/root/abc/foo`
`/root/abc/bar`
`/root/abc/foo/bar/`
`/root/abc/foo/baz/`
/root/abc
again
11:40
because child and parent can't be mounted at the same time?
and for
/root/abc/foo
/root/abc/bar
/root/abc/foo/bar/
/root/abc/foo/baz/
/root/def/animal/cat
/root/def/animal/dog
first 4 are the same as before
yes
/root/abc and /root/def
why not root/def/animal?
yes you are right it should be /root/def/animal
not /root/def
11:42
and if cat and dog were folders?
As we are mounting /root/def/animal, their subfolders and files will get automatically mounted anyway
I mean as we are mounting a parent /root/def/animal we do not have to care for their childs further
yeah, but how is /root/def/animal/cat/ different from /etc/rahul/test/? why does the unique /etc/rahul/test/ cause its own result, while /root/def/animal/cat/ does not?
@m.buettner becasue for /root/def/animal/cat/ has another matching sequence of /root/def/animal/dog/
so does /etc/rahul/test/ (/)
if there was single entry for that, we would have whole path directly in result list
yes
11:48
so you are saying:
(diverging at level 1)
/root/abc/foo
/etc/def/bar
would give two entries

(diverging at level 2)
/root/abc/foo
/root/def/foo
would give two entries

(diverging at level 3 and beyond)
but
/root/abc/def/ghi
/root/abc/klm/nop
would give only one entry? (/root/abc/)
yes you are absolutely right
including the reasoning I added in?
good
I dont know why 2 down votes for this question .... I think people find it too complex to understand
11:51
it just doesn't seem well-defined
(it's starting to be, in this chat... but not in the question)
Anyway
If you have any suggestions for this please help me out
@RahulBorkar I didn't downvote, but just look at this chat, you hardly explained anything in your question. Also your example was only easy to understand for you - not for anyone else...
Anyway, If I were you, I'd build a trie, where each node is step of your path. Then you can do with it what you want,
@jlordo, thnak you guys for throughly understanding my problem
if you give me a minute, I'm typing up some pseudocode
11:59
ah, the pseudocode is getting to complex.
the idea is this: you turn your inputs into lists of directories. then, at the current level. you analyze, which folders occur multiple times. if there is a directory, that appears only once, you can abort. otherwise, you sort the list into buckets according to those first directories, concatenate that first directory to the path you already have, and recursively call this procedure on each bucket
you can add some logic, that avoids aborting the process if the path you have so far contains less than 2 directories
@m.buettner thanks a lot for your efforts, please take your time if you have it and it would be really great if you consider adding an answer
I wouldn't without some real or pseudo code, and I don't have the time to type it up right now, sorry
lets end this chat here, I will also keep on doing my research until if somebody can post the steps in java code it would be really great
fair enough. good luck!

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