daff: data diff
This is a library for comparing tables, producing a summary of their
differences, and using such a summary as a patch file. It is
optimized for comparing tables that share a common origin, in other
words multiple versions of the "same" table.
For a live demo, see:
http://paulfitz.github.com/daff/
Get the core library for your preferred language here:
https://github.com/paulfitz/daff/releases
Or with node:
npm install daff
Or with pip:
pip3 install daff
Or use the library to view csv diffs on github via a chrome extension:
https://github.com/theodi/csvhub
The diff format used by daff
is specified here:
http://dataprotocols.org/tabular-diff-format/
This library is a stripped down version of the coopy toolbox (see
http://share.find.coop). To compare tables from different origins,
or with automatically generated IDs, or other complications, check out
the coopy toolbox.
The program
There is a commandline utility wrapping the core functions of the library:
$ daff
daff can produce and apply tabular diffs.
Call as:
daff [--output OUTPUT.csv] a.csv b.csv
daff [--output OUTPUT.csv] parent.csv a.csv b.csv
daff [--output OUTPUT.jsonbook] a.jsonbook b.jsonbook
daff patch [--output OUTPUT.csv] source.csv patch.csv
daff trim [--output OUTPUT.csv] source.csv
daff render [--output OUTPUT.html] diff.csv
If you need more control, here is the full list of flags:
daff diff [--output OUTPUT.csv] [--context NUM] [--all] [--act ACT] a.csv b.csv
--context NUM: show NUM rows of context
--all: do not prune unchanged rows
--act ACT: show only a certain kind of change (update, insert, delete)
daff render [--output OUTPUT.html] [--css CSS.css] [--fragment] [--plain] diff.csv
--css CSS.css: generate a suitable css file to go with the html
--fragment: generate just a html fragment rather than a page
--plain: do not use fancy utf8 characters to make arrows prettier
The library
To use this library from Javascript, first include daff.js
on a webpage:
<script src="daff.js"></script>
Or with nodejs:
var daff = require('daff');
For concreteness, assume we have two versions of a table,
data1
and data2
:
var data1 = [
['Country','Capital'],
['Ireland','Dublin'],
['France','Paris'],
['Spain','Barcelona']
];
var data2 = [
['Country','Code','Capital'],
['Ireland','ie','Dublin'],
['France','fr','Paris'],
['Spain','es','Madrid'],
['Germany','de','Berlin']
];
To make those tables accessible to the library, we wrap them
in daff.TableView
:
var table1 = new daff.TableView(data1);
var table2 = new daff.TableView(data2);
We can now compute the alignment between the rows and columns
in the two tables:
var alignment = daff.compareTables(table1,table2).align();
To produce a diff from the alignment, we first need a table
for the output:
var data_diff = [];
var table_diff = new daff.TableView(data_diff);
Using default options for the diff:
var flags = new daff.CompareFlags();
var highlighter = new daff.TableDiff(alignment,flags);
highlighter.hilite(table_diff);
The diff is now in data_diff
in highlighter format, see
specification here:
http://share.find.coop/doc/spec_hilite.html
[ [ '!', '', '+++', '' ],
[ '@@', 'Country', 'Code', 'Capital' ],
[ '+', 'Ireland', 'ie', 'Dublin' ],
[ '+', 'France', 'fr', 'Paris' ],
[ '->', 'Spain', 'es', 'Barcelona->Madrid' ],
[ '+++', 'Germany', 'de', 'Berlin' ] ]
For visualization, you may want to convert this to a HTML table
with appropriate classes on cells so you can color-code inserts,
deletes, updates, etc. You can do this with:
var diff2html = new daff.DiffRender();
diff2html.render(table_diff);
var table_diff_html = diff2html.html();
For 3-way differences (that is, comparing two tables given knowledge
of a common ancestor) use daff.compareTables3
(give ancestor
table as the first argument).
Here is how to apply that difference as a patch:
var patcher = new daff.HighlightPatch(table1,table_diff);
patcher.apply();
Other languages
The daff
library is written in Haxe, which
can be translated reasonably well into at least the following languages:
- Javascript
- PHP
- Python
- Java
- C#
- C++
The Javascript translation is available via npm.
PHP and C++ translations are posted on the
Releases page.
To make another translation,
follow the
Haxe getting started tutorial for the
language you care about, then do one of:
make js
make php
make py
make java
make cs
make cpp
@Floppy has made a lovingly-hand-written native Ruby port that covers core functionality. I've made a brutally-machine-converted Ruby port that is a full translation but may include utter gibberish.
For each language, the daff
library expects to be handed an interface to tables you create, rather than creating them
itself. This is to avoid inefficient copies from one format to another. You'll find a SimpleTable
class you can use if
you find this awkward.
Reading material
License
daff is distributed under the MIT License.