String Generation/Combination

Jim Kohli kohli at gemed
Fri Oct 26 04:04:59 AEST 1990


In article <2836 at loria.crin.fr>, anigbogu at loria.crin.fr (Julian Anigbogu)
asks:
>Dear Netters, I have a little problem and was wnadering if any of you has 
>already solved an identical one. Here goes:
>	Given two 2 equal length strings, say L, I would like to generate all
>possible strings of length L. (2^L strings). String uniqueness is not 
>necessary but if the function eliminates duplicates as it generates, that'll
>be a bonus.
>
>	ex. "worb" and "ward" should  generate
>		worb
>		word
>		ward
>		warb
>		...
>If you have a solution, I'd love to hear from you and in this newsgroup or by
>email. Thanks in advance.
>
>Julian
>e-mail:	anigbogu at loria.crin.fr 	| All opinions expressed here are      |

yes, I have done something very similar to what you want.  you
may want to substitute something more meaningful for the word
"anigbogu" which describes this process.

#include <stdio.h>
/*
	this program will present all possible alternatives for the
	two alternatives of letters in two words.  it assumes the
	words will have less than 32 characters different.

	jim kohli
	GE Medical Systems
*/
#define NBITS 32

static int indices[NBITS];

#define ZOR1(n) ( n ? 1 : 0 )

main( argc, argv )
int argc;
char **argv;
{
int i;
int n,ndiff=0;
unsigned long index;
char alternatives[2][NBITS];
char *final_product;

if( argc != 3 ) {
	fprintf( stderr, "Usage: %s word1 word2, to anigbogu words\n", argv[0]);
	exit( 1 );
	}

if( (n = strlen( argv[1] )) != strlen(argv[2]) ) {
	fprintf( stderr, "The arguments to %s must be of the same length\n",
		argv[0] );
	exit( 2 );
	}

for( i=0 ; (i<n)&&(ndiff<NBITS) ; i++ ) if( argv[1][i] != argv[2][i] ) {
	alternatives[0][ndiff] = argv[1][i];
	alternatives[1][ndiff] = argv[2][i];
	indices[ndiff] = i;
	ndiff++;
	}

if( ndiff > NBITS ) {
	fprintf( stderr, "The arguments to %s must be < 32 chars long\n",
		argv[0] );
	exit( 3 );
	}

if( !strcmp( argv[1], argv[2] ) ) {
	fprintf( stderr, "%s and %s can't be anigbogued because they're the
same\n",
		argv[1], argv[2] );
	exit( 4 );
	}

final_product = (char *)malloc( n+1 );

for( index=0 ; index < (1<<ndiff) ; index++ ) {
	strcpy( final_product, argv[1] );
	for( i=0 ; i<ndiff ; i++ )
		final_product[indices[i]] = alternatives[ZOR1(index & (1<<i))][i];
	printf("%s\n", final_product);
	}

}



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