difflib
— Helpers for computing deltas¶
Source code: Lib/difflib.py
This module provides classes and functions for comparing sequences. It
can be used for example, for comparing files, and can produce information
about file differences in various formats, including HTML and context and unified
diffs. For comparing directories and files, see also, the filecmp
module.
- class difflib.SequenceMatcher
This is a flexible class for comparing pairs of sequences of any type, so long as the sequence elements are hashable. The basic algorithm predates, and is a little fancier than, an algorithm published in the late 1980’s by Ratcliff and Obershelp under the hyperbolic name “gestalt pattern matching.” The idea is to find the longest contiguous matching subsequence that contains no “junk” elements; these “junk” elements are ones that are uninteresting in some sense, such as blank lines or whitespace. (Handling junk is an extension to the Ratcliff and Obershelp algorithm.) The same idea is then applied recursively to the pieces of the sequences to the left and to the right of the matching subsequence. This does not yield minimal edit sequences, but does tend to yield matches that “look right” to people.
Timing: The basic Ratcliff-Obershelp algorithm is cubic time in the worst case and quadratic time in the expected case.
SequenceMatcher
is quadratic time for the worst case and has expected-case behavior dependent in a complicated way on how many elements the sequences have in common; best case time is linear.Automatic junk heuristic:
SequenceMatcher
supports a heuristic that automatically treats certain sequence items as junk. The heuristic counts how many times each individual item appears in the sequence. If an item’s duplicates (after the first one) account for more than 1% of the sequence and the sequence is at least 200 items long, this item is marked as “popular” and is treated as junk for the purpose of sequence matching. This heuristic can be turned off by setting theautojunk
argument toFalse
when creating theSequenceMatcher
.New in version 3.2: The autojunk parameter.
- class difflib.Differ¶
This is a class for comparing sequences of lines of text, and producing human-readable differences or deltas. Differ uses
SequenceMatcher
both to compare sequences of lines, and to compare sequences of characters within similar (near-matching) lines.Each line of a
Differ
delta begins with a two-letter code:Code
Meaning
'- '
line unique to sequence 1
'+ '
line unique to sequence 2
' '
line common to both sequences
'? '
line not present in either input sequence
Lines beginning with ‘
?
’ attempt to guide the eye to intraline differences, and were not present in either input sequence. These lines can be confusing if the sequences contain tab characters.
- class difflib.HtmlDiff¶
This class can be used to create an HTML table (or a complete HTML file containing the table) showing a side by side, line by line comparison of text with inter-line and intra-line change highlights. The table can be generated in either full or contextual difference mode.
The constructor for this class is:
- __init__(tabsize=8, wrapcolumn=None, linejunk=None, charjunk=IS_CHARACTER_JUNK)¶
Initializes instance of
HtmlDiff
.tabsize is an optional keyword argument to specify tab stop spacing and defaults to
8
.wrapcolumn is an optional keyword to specify column number where lines are broken and wrapped, defaults to
None
where lines are not wrapped.linejunk and charjunk are optional keyword arguments passed into
ndiff()
(used byHtmlDiff
to generate the side by side HTML differences). Seendiff()
documentation for argument default values and descriptions.
The following methods are public:
- make_file(fromlines, tolines, fromdesc='', todesc='', context=False, numlines=5, *, charset='utf-8')¶
Compares fromlines and tolines (lists of strings) and returns a string which is a complete HTML file containing a table showing line by line differences with inter-line and intra-line changes highlighted.
fromdesc and todesc are optional keyword arguments to specify from/to file column header strings (both default to an empty string).
context and numlines are both optional keyword arguments. Set context to
True
when contextual differences are to be shown, else the default isFalse
to show the full files. numlines defaults to5
. When context isTrue
numlines controls the number of context lines which surround the difference highlights. When context isFalse
numlines controls the number of lines which are shown before a difference highlight when using the “next” hyperlinks (setting to zero would cause the “next” hyperlinks to place the next difference highlight at the top of the browser without any leading context).Note
fromdesc and todesc are interpreted as unescaped HTML and should be properly escaped while receiving input from untrusted sources.
Changed in version 3.5: charset keyword-only argument was added. The default charset of HTML document changed from
'ISO-8859-1'
to'utf-8'
.
- make_table(fromlines, tolines, fromdesc='', todesc='', context=False, numlines=5)¶
Compares fromlines and tolines (lists of strings) and returns a string which is a complete HTML table showing line by line differences with inter-line and intra-line changes highlighted.
The arguments for this method are the same as those for the
make_file()
method.
Tools/scripts/diff.py
is a command-line front-end to this class and contains a good example of its use.
- difflib.context_diff(a, b, fromfile='', tofile='', fromfiledate='', tofiledate='', n=3, lineterm='\n')¶
Compare a and b (lists of strings); return a delta (a generator generating the delta lines) in context diff format.
Context diffs are a compact way of showing just the lines that have changed plus a few lines of context. The changes are shown in a before/after style. The number of context lines is set by n which defaults to three.
By default, the diff control lines (those with
***
or---
) are created with a trailing newline. This is helpful so that inputs created fromio.IOBase.readlines()
result in diffs that are suitable for use withio.IOBase.writelines()
since both the inputs and outputs have trailing newlines.For inputs that do not have trailing newlines, set the lineterm argument to
""
so that the output will be uniformly newline free.The context diff format normally has a header for filenames and modification times. Any or all of these may be specified using strings for fromfile, tofile, fromfiledate, and tofiledate. The modification times are normally expressed in the ISO 8601 format. If not specified, the strings default to blanks.
>>> s1 = ['bacon\n', 'eggs\n', 'ham\n', 'guido\n'] >>> s2 = ['python\n', 'eggy\n', 'hamster\n', 'guido\n'] >>> sys.stdout.writelines(context_diff(s1, s2, fromfile='before.py', tofile='after.py')) *** before.py --- after.py *************** *** 1,4 **** ! bacon ! eggs ! ham guido --- 1,4 ---- ! python ! eggy ! hamster guido
See A command-line interface to difflib for a more detailed example.
- difflib.get_close_matches(word, possibilities, n=3, cutoff=0.6)¶
Return a list of the best “good enough” matches. word is a sequence for which close matches are desired (typically a string), and possibilities is a list of sequences against which to match word (typically a list of strings).
Optional argument n (default
3
) is the maximum number of close matches to return; n must be greater than0
.Optional argument cutoff (default
0.6
) is a float in the range [0, 1]. Possibilities that don’t score at least that similar to word are ignored.The best (no more than n) matches among the possibilities are returned in a list, sorted by similarity score, most similar first.
>>> get_close_matches('appel', ['ape', 'apple', 'peach', 'puppy']) ['apple', 'ape'] >>> import keyword >>> get_close_matches('wheel', keyword.kwlist) ['while'] >>> get_close_matches('pineapple', keyword.kwlist) [] >>> get_close_matches('accept', keyword.kwlist) ['except']
- difflib.ndiff(a, b, linejunk=None, charjunk=IS_CHARACTER_JUNK)¶
Compare a and b (lists of strings); return a
Differ
-style delta (a generator generating the delta lines).Optional keyword parameters linejunk and charjunk are filtering functions (or
None
):linejunk: A function that accepts a single string argument, and returns true if the string is junk, or false if not. The default is
None
. There is also a module-level functionIS_LINE_JUNK()
, which filters out lines without visible characters, except for at most one pound character ('#'
) – however the underlyingSequenceMatcher
class does a dynamic analysis of which lines are so frequent as to constitute noise, and this usually works better than using this function.charjunk: A function that accepts a character (a string of length 1), and returns if the character is junk, or false if not. The default is module-level function
IS_CHARACTER_JUNK()
, which filters out whitespace characters (a blank or tab; it’s a bad idea to include newline in this!).Tools/scripts/ndiff.py
is a command-line front-end to this function.>>> diff = ndiff('one\ntwo\nthree\n'.splitlines(keepends=True), ... 'ore\ntree\nemu\n'.splitlines(keepends=True)) >>> print(''.join(diff), end="") - one ? ^ + ore ? ^ - two - three ? - + tree + emu
- difflib.restore(sequence, which)¶
Return one of the two sequences that generated a delta.
Given a sequence produced by
Differ.compare()
orndiff()
, extract lines originating from file 1 or 2 (parameter which), stripping off line prefixes.Example:
>>> diff = ndiff('one\ntwo\nthree\n'.splitlines(keepends=True), ... 'ore\ntree\nemu\n'.splitlines(keepends=True)) >>> diff = list(diff) # materialize the generated delta into a list >>> print(''.join(restore(diff, 1)), end="") one two three >>> print(''.join(restore(diff, 2)), end="") ore tree emu
- difflib.unified_diff(a, b, fromfile='', tofile='', fromfiledate='', tofiledate='', n=3, lineterm='\n')¶
Compare a and b (lists of strings); return a delta (a generator generating the delta lines) in unified diff format.
Unified diffs are a compact way of showing just the lines that have changed plus a few lines of context. The changes are shown in an inline style (instead of separate before/after blocks). The number of context lines is set by n which defaults to three.
By default, the diff control lines (those with
---
,+++
, or@@
) are created with a trailing newline. This is helpful so that inputs created fromio.IOBase.readlines()
result in diffs that are suitable for use withio.IOBase.writelines()
since both the inputs and outputs have trailing newlines.For inputs that do not have trailing newlines, set the lineterm argument to
""
so that the output will be uniformly newline free.The context diff format normally has a header for filenames and modification times. Any or all of these may be specified using strings for fromfile, tofile, fromfiledate, and tofiledate. The modification times are normally expressed in the ISO 8601 format. If not specified, the strings default to blanks.
>>> s1 = ['bacon\n', 'eggs\n', 'ham\n', 'guido\n'] >>> s2 = ['python\n', 'eggy\n', 'hamster\n', 'guido\n'] >>> sys.stdout.writelines(unified_diff(s1, s2, fromfile='before.py', tofile='after.py')) --- before.py +++ after.py @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -bacon -eggs -ham +python +eggy +hamster guido
See A command-line interface to difflib for a more detailed example.
- difflib.diff_bytes(dfunc, a, b, fromfile=b'', tofile=b'', fromfiledate=b'', tofiledate=b'', n=3, lineterm=b'\n')¶
Compare a and b (lists of bytes objects) using dfunc; yield a sequence of delta lines (also bytes) in the format returned by dfunc. dfunc must be a callable, typically either
unified_diff()
orcontext_diff()
.Allows you to compare data with unknown or inconsistent encoding. All inputs except n must be bytes objects, not str. Works by losslessly converting all inputs (except n) to str, and calling
dfunc(a, b, fromfile, tofile, fromfiledate, tofiledate, n, lineterm)
. The output of dfunc is then converted back to bytes, so the delta lines that you receive have the same unknown/inconsistent encodings as a and b.New in version 3.5.
- difflib.IS_LINE_JUNK(line)¶
Return
True
for ignorable lines. The line line is ignorable if line is blank or contains a single'#'
, otherwise it is not ignorable. Used as a default for parameter linejunk inndiff()
in older versions.
- difflib.IS_CHARACTER_JUNK(ch)¶
Return
True
for ignorable characters. The character ch is ignorable if ch is a space or tab, otherwise it is not ignorable. Used as a default for parameter charjunk inndiff()
.
See also
- Pattern Matching: The Gestalt Approach
Discussion of a similar algorithm by John W. Ratcliff and D. E. Metzener. This was published in Dr. Dobb’s Journal in July, 1988.
SequenceMatcher Objects¶
The SequenceMatcher
class has this constructor:
- class difflib.SequenceMatcher(isjunk=None, a='', b='', autojunk=True)¶
Optional argument isjunk must be
None
(the default) or a one-argument function that takes a sequence element and returns true if and only if the element is “junk” and should be ignored. PassingNone
for isjunk is equivalent to passinglambda x: False
; in other words, no elements are ignored. For example, pass:lambda x: x in " \t"
if you’re comparing lines as sequences of characters, and don’t want to synch up on blanks or hard tabs.
The optional arguments a and b are sequences to be compared; both default to empty strings. The elements of both sequences must be hashable.
The optional argument autojunk can be used to disable the automatic junk heuristic.
New in version 3.2: The autojunk parameter.
SequenceMatcher objects get three data attributes: bjunk is the set of elements of b for which isjunk is
True
; bpopular is the set of non-junk elements considered popular by the heuristic (if it is not disabled); b2j is a dict mapping the remaining elements of b to a list of positions where they occur. All three are reset whenever b is reset withset_seqs()
orset_seq2()
.New in version 3.2: The bjunk and bpopular attributes.
SequenceMatcher
objects have the following methods:- set_seqs(a, b)¶
Set the two sequences to be compared.
SequenceMatcher
computes and caches detailed information about the second sequence, so if you want to compare one sequence against many sequences, useset_seq2()
to set the commonly used sequence once and callset_seq1()
repeatedly, once for each of the other sequences.- set_seq1(a)¶
Set the first sequence to be compared. The second sequence to be compared is not changed.
- set_seq2(b)¶
Set the second sequence to be compared. The first sequence to be compared is not changed.
- find_longest_match(alo=0, ahi=None, blo=0, bhi=None)¶
Find longest matching block in
a[alo:ahi]
andb[blo:bhi]
.If isjunk was omitted or
None
,find_longest_match()
returns(i, j, k)
such thata[i:i+k]
is equal tob[j:j+k]
, wherealo <= i <= i+k <= ahi
andblo <= j <= j+k <= bhi
. For all(i', j', k')
meeting those conditions, the additional conditionsk >= k'
,i <= i'
, and ifi == i'
,j <= j'
are also met. In other words, of all maximal matching blocks, return one that starts earliest in a, and of all those maximal matching blocks that start earliest in a, return the one that starts earliest in b.>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, " abcd", "abcd abcd") >>> s.find_longest_match(0, 5, 0, 9) Match(a=0, b=4, size=5)
If isjunk was provided, first the longest matching block is determined as above, but with the additional restriction that no junk element appears in the block. Then that block is extended as far as possible by matching (only) junk elements on both sides. So the resulting block never matches on junk except as identical junk happens to be adjacent to an interesting match.
Here’s the same example as before, but considering blanks to be junk. That prevents
' abcd'
from matching the' abcd'
at the tail end of the second sequence directly. Instead only the'abcd'
can match, and matches the leftmost'abcd'
in the second sequence:>>> s = SequenceMatcher(lambda x: x==" ", " abcd", "abcd abcd") >>> s.find_longest_match(0, 5, 0, 9) Match(a=1, b=0, size=4)
If no blocks match, this returns
(alo, blo, 0)
.This method returns a named tuple
Match(a, b, size)
.Changed in version 3.9: Added default arguments.
- get_matching_blocks()¶
Return list of triples describing non-overlapping matching subsequences. Each triple is of the form
(i, j, n)
, and means thata[i:i+n] == b[j:j+n]
. The triples are monotonically increasing in i and j.The last triple is a dummy, and has the value
(len(a), len(b), 0)
. It is the only triple withn == 0
. If(i, j, n)
and(i', j', n')
are adjacent triples in the list, and the second is not the last triple in the list, theni+n < i'
orj+n < j'
; in other words, adjacent triples always describe non-adjacent equal blocks.>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, "abxcd", "abcd") >>> s.get_matching_blocks() [Match(a=0, b=0, size=2), Match(a=3, b=2, size=2), Match(a=5, b=4, size=0)]
- get_opcodes()¶
Return list of 5-tuples describing how to turn a into b. Each tuple is of the form
(tag, i1, i2, j1, j2)
. The first tuple hasi1 == j1 == 0
, and remaining tuples have i1 equal to the i2 from the preceding tuple, and, likewise, j1 equal to the previous j2.The tag values are strings, with these meanings:
Value
Meaning
'replace'
a[i1:i2]
should be replaced byb[j1:j2]
.'delete'
a[i1:i2]
should be deleted. Note thatj1 == j2
in this case.'insert'
b[j1:j2]
should be inserted ata[i1:i1]
. Note thati1 == i2
in this case.'equal'
a[i1:i2] == b[j1:j2]
(the sub-sequences are equal).For example:
>>> a = "qabxcd" >>> b = "abycdf" >>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, a, b) >>> for tag, i1, i2, j1, j2 in s.get_opcodes(): ... print('{:7} a[{}:{}] --> b[{}:{}] {!r:>8} --> {!r}'.format( ... tag, i1, i2, j1, j2, a[i1:i2], b[j1:j2])) delete a[0:1] --> b[0:0] 'q' --> '' equal a[1:3] --> b[0:2] 'ab' --> 'ab' replace a[3:4] --> b[2:3] 'x' --> 'y' equal a[4:6] --> b[3:5] 'cd' --> 'cd' insert a[6:6] --> b[5:6] '' --> 'f'
- get_grouped_opcodes(n=3)¶
Return a generator of groups with up to n lines of context.
Starting with the groups returned by
get_opcodes()
, this method splits out smaller change clusters and eliminates intervening ranges which have no changes.The groups are returned in the same format as
get_opcodes()
.
- ratio()¶
Return a measure of the sequences’ similarity as a float in the range [0, 1].
Where T is the total number of elements in both sequences, and M is the number of matches, this is 2.0*M / T. Note that this is
1.0
if the sequences are identical, and0.0
if they have nothing in common.This is expensive to compute if
get_matching_blocks()
orget_opcodes()
hasn’t already been called, in which case you may want to tryquick_ratio()
orreal_quick_ratio()
first to get an upper bound.Note
Caution: The result of a
ratio()
call may depend on the order of the arguments. For instance:>>> SequenceMatcher(None, 'tide', 'diet').ratio() 0.25 >>> SequenceMatcher(None, 'diet', 'tide').ratio() 0.5
The three methods that return the ratio of matching to total characters can give
different results due to differing levels of approximation, although
quick_ratio()
and real_quick_ratio()
are always at least as large as
ratio()
:
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, "abcd", "bcde")
>>> s.ratio()
0.75
>>> s.quick_ratio()
0.75
>>> s.real_quick_ratio()
1.0
SequenceMatcher Examples¶
This example compares two strings, considering blanks to be “junk”:
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(lambda x: x == " ",
... "private Thread currentThread;",
... "private volatile Thread currentThread;")
ratio()
returns a float in [0, 1], measuring the similarity of the
sequences. As a rule of thumb, a ratio()
value over 0.6 means the
sequences are close matches:
>>> print(round(s.ratio(), 3))
0.866
If you’re only interested in where the sequences match,
get_matching_blocks()
is handy:
>>> for block in s.get_matching_blocks():
... print("a[%d] and b[%d] match for %d elements" % block)
a[0] and b[0] match for 8 elements
a[8] and b[17] match for 21 elements
a[29] and b[38] match for 0 elements
Note that the last tuple returned by get_matching_blocks()
is always a
dummy, (len(a), len(b), 0)
, and this is the only case in which the last
tuple element (number of elements matched) is 0
.
If you want to know how to change the first sequence into the second, use
get_opcodes()
:
>>> for opcode in s.get_opcodes():
... print("%6s a[%d:%d] b[%d:%d]" % opcode)
equal a[0:8] b[0:8]
insert a[8:8] b[8:17]
equal a[8:29] b[17:38]
See also
The
get_close_matches()
function in this module which shows how simple code building onSequenceMatcher
can be used to do useful work.Simple version control recipe for a small application built with
SequenceMatcher
.
Differ Objects¶
Note that Differ
-generated deltas make no claim to be minimal
diffs. To the contrary, minimal diffs are often counter-intuitive, because they
synch up anywhere possible, sometimes accidental matches 100 pages apart.
Restricting synch points to contiguous matches preserves some notion of
locality, at the occasional cost of producing a longer diff.
The Differ
class has this constructor:
- class difflib.Differ(linejunk=None, charjunk=None)
Optional keyword parameters linejunk and charjunk are for filter functions (or
None
):linejunk: A function that accepts a single string argument, and returns true if the string is junk. The default is
None
, meaning that no line is considered junk.charjunk: A function that accepts a single character argument (a string of length 1), and returns true if the character is junk. The default is
None
, meaning that no character is considered junk.These junk-filtering functions speed up matching to find differences and do not cause any differing lines or characters to be ignored. Read the description of the
find_longest_match()
method’s isjunk parameter for an explanation.Differ
objects are used (deltas generated) via a single method:- compare(a, b)¶
Compare two sequences of lines, and generate the delta (a sequence of lines).
Each sequence must contain individual single-line strings ending with newlines. Such sequences can be obtained from the
readlines()
method of file-like objects. The delta generated also consists of newline-terminated strings, ready to be printed as-is via thewritelines()
method of a file-like object.
Differ Example¶
This example compares two texts. First we set up the texts, sequences of
individual single-line strings ending with newlines (such sequences can also be
obtained from the readlines()
method of file-like objects):
>>> text1 = ''' 1. Beautiful is better than ugly.
... 2. Explicit is better than implicit.
... 3. Simple is better than complex.
... 4. Complex is better than complicated.
... '''.splitlines(keepends=True)
>>> len(text1)
4
>>> text1[0][-1]
'\n'
>>> text2 = ''' 1. Beautiful is better than ugly.
... 3. Simple is better than complex.
... 4. Complicated is better than complex.
... 5. Flat is better than nested.
... '''.splitlines(keepends=True)
Next we instantiate a Differ object:
>>> d = Differ()
Note that when instantiating a Differ
object we may pass functions to
filter out line and character “junk.” See the Differ()
constructor for
details.
Finally, we compare the two:
>>> result = list(d.compare(text1, text2))
result
is a list of strings, so let’s pretty-print it:
>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> pprint(result)
[' 1. Beautiful is better than ugly.\n',
'- 2. Explicit is better than implicit.\n',
'- 3. Simple is better than complex.\n',
'+ 3. Simple is better than complex.\n',
'? ++\n',
'- 4. Complex is better than complicated.\n',
'? ^ ---- ^\n',
'+ 4. Complicated is better than complex.\n',
'? ++++ ^ ^\n',
'+ 5. Flat is better than nested.\n']
As a single multi-line string it looks like this:
>>> import sys
>>> sys.stdout.writelines(result)
1. Beautiful is better than ugly.
- 2. Explicit is better than implicit.
- 3. Simple is better than complex.
+ 3. Simple is better than complex.
? ++
- 4. Complex is better than complicated.
? ^ ---- ^
+ 4. Complicated is better than complex.
? ++++ ^ ^
+ 5. Flat is better than nested.
A command-line interface to difflib¶
This example shows how to use difflib to create a diff
-like utility.
It is also contained in the Python source distribution, as
Tools/scripts/diff.py
.
#!/usr/bin/env python3
""" Command line interface to difflib.py providing diffs in four formats:
* ndiff: lists every line and highlights interline changes.
* context: highlights clusters of changes in a before/after format.
* unified: highlights clusters of changes in an inline format.
* html: generates side by side comparison with change highlights.
"""
import sys, os, difflib, argparse
from datetime import datetime, timezone
def file_mtime(path):
t = datetime.fromtimestamp(os.stat(path).st_mtime,
timezone.utc)
return t.astimezone().isoformat()
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-c', action='store_true', default=False,
help='Produce a context format diff (default)')
parser.add_argument('-u', action='store_true', default=False,
help='Produce a unified format diff')
parser.add_argument('-m', action='store_true', default=False,
help='Produce HTML side by side diff '
'(can use -c and -l in conjunction)')
parser.add_argument('-n', action='store_true', default=False,
help='Produce a ndiff format diff')
parser.add_argument('-l', '--lines', type=int, default=3,
help='Set number of context lines (default 3)')
parser.add_argument('fromfile')
parser.add_argument('tofile')
options = parser.parse_args()
n = options.lines
fromfile = options.fromfile
tofile = options.tofile
fromdate = file_mtime(fromfile)
todate = file_mtime(tofile)
with open(fromfile) as ff:
fromlines = ff.readlines()
with open(tofile) as tf:
tolines = tf.readlines()
if options.u:
diff = difflib.unified_diff(fromlines, tolines, fromfile, tofile, fromdate, todate, n=n)
elif options.n:
diff = difflib.ndiff(fromlines, tolines)
elif options.m:
diff = difflib.HtmlDiff().make_file(fromlines,tolines,fromfile,tofile,context=options.c,numlines=n)
else:
diff = difflib.context_diff(fromlines, tolines, fromfile, tofile, fromdate, todate, n=n)
sys.stdout.writelines(diff)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()