简体   繁体   中英

How To Filter Array Using Element in Another Array in Swift?

I have two arrays

let toBeFiltered = ["star0", "star2", "star1", "star0", "star3", "star4"]
let theFilter = ["star1", "star3"]

How to filter the first array using the second array? Actually the theFilter can be changed dynamically, eg,

let theFilter = ["star2"]
or maybe
let theFilter = ["star0", "star4", "star2"]

Thanks for your help :)

You can also filter Struct array as well

struct myStruct
        {
          var userid:String;
          var details:String;
          init() {
            userid = "default value";
            details = "default";
          }

    };
    var f1 = myStruct();
    f1.userid = "1";
    f1.details = "Good boy";

    var f2 = myStruct();
    f2.userid = "2";
    f2.details = "Bad boy";

    var f3 = myStruct();
    f3.userid = "3";
    f3.details = "Gentleman";

    var arrNames1:Array = [f1,f3];

    var arrNames2:Array = [f3,f1,f2];

    let filteredArrayStruct =  arrNames1.filter( { (user: myStruct) -> Bool in
      return arrNames2.contains({ (user1: myStruct) -> Bool in
        return user.userid == user1.userid;
      })
    })
print(filteredArrayStruct)

For Set you must conforms the Hashable protocol

class mytestclass: Hashable
{
  var userid:Int ;
  var details:String;

  var hashValue: Int {
    return self.userid
  }
  init(userid: Int, details:String)
 {
  self.userid = userid;
  self.details = details;
  }
}
func ==(lhs: mytestclass, rhs: mytestclass) -> Bool {
  return lhs.userid == rhs.userid
}

var t1 = mytestclass(userid: 1,details: "Good boy");


var t2 = mytestclass(userid: 2,details: "bad boy");

var t3 = mytestclass(userid: 3,details: "gentle man");


var classArrayNames:Set<mytestclass> = [t1,t2];

var classArrayNames2:Set<mytestclass> = [t3,t1,t2];


 let result =  Set(classArrayNames).intersect(classArrayNames2)
let toBeFiltered = ["star0", "star2", "star1", "star0", "star3", "star4"]
let theFilter = ["star1", "star3"]

let filtered = toBeFiltered.filter(theFilter.contains)

this seems to be a theme today :) building on another great answer, I would suggest using the intersect(_:) method on a Set :

let toBeFiltered = ["star0", "star2", "star1", "star0", "star3", "star4"]
let theFilter = ["star1", "star3"]
let filtered = Set(toBeFiltered).intersect(theFilter)

// => ["star1", "star3"] of type Set<String>

// ...if you actually need an array, you can get one using Array(filtered)

While using Sets as proposed by Arsen is definitly most elegant, sometimes you want to keep duplicates and order :

//: Playground - noun: a place where people can play

import Foundation

extension Collection where Element: Equatable {

    func intersection(with filter: [Element]) -> [Element] {
        return self.filter { element in filter.contains(element) }
    }

}

let toBeFiltered = ["star0", "star2", "star1", "star0", "star3", "star4", "star1"]
let theFilter = ["star1", "star3"]

let filtered = toBeFiltered.intersection(with: theFilter) // ["star1", "star3", "star1"]
let mainArray = ["one", "two", "three", "three", "three", "four", "five"]
let miniArray = ["two", "three"]
let leftOvers = mainArray.filter( {miniArray.contains($0) == false} )
print(leftOvers)

The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.

 
粤ICP备18138465号  © 2020-2024 STACKOOM.COM