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CommonLetters.js
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CommonLetters.js
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/**
* This program is mean to be used with node passing the strings as parameters
* to the program as Shown in the example. Any way, it can also be used in any
* other environment by passing two strings to the `intersect` Function
* as shown on its own example because the only part "node dependant" is the
* getStringsFromArgs and the way the arguments are passed to `intersect`.
* In node if you pass a quoted string instead of a single word you can make it
* work on entire phrases. See the example #2
* @example node ./CommonLetters.js Java Javascript // Between 'JavaScript' and 'Java' are 3 common characters: a, j, v
* @example node ./CommonLetters.js "Never more, said Allan Poe" "Never more, said Freddie Mercury" // Between 'Never more, said Allan Poe' and 'Never more, said Freddie Mercury' are 10 common characters: a, d, e, i, m, n, o, r, s, v
*/
const getStringsFromArgs = args => {
const str1 = args[2]
const str2 = args[3]
return [str1, str2]
}
const validChar = char => /[a-zA-Z]/.test(char)
/**
*
* @param {String} str1 The first string to compare
* @param {String} str2 The seccond string to compare
* @return {String[]} a set of chars that exist on both `str1` and `str2`
* @example intersect('Java', 'Javascript') // ['a', 'j', 'v']
*/
const intersect = (str1, str2) => {
const Set1 = str1.toLowerCase().split('')
const Set2 = str2.toLowerCase().split('')
return [...Set1, ...Set2]
.reduce((acc, char) => {
// Check if is a valid alphabetic char, no numbers, no symbols
if (!validChar(char)) return acc
// Check if exist in both strings but wasn't previously added
if (Set1.includes(char) && Set2.includes(char) && !acc.includes(char))
return [...acc, char]
else return acc
}, [])
.sort()
}
const [str1, str2] = getStringsFromArgs(process.argv)
const commonChars = intersect(str1, str2)
// You can use a fancy library, like 'Chalk' or the Browser Console styles interface
// to make a very pretty print outta this
console.log(
`Between '${str1}' and '${str2}' are ${
commonChars.length
} common characters: ${commonChars.join(', ')}`
)