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@lsauer
Created October 21, 2011 21:40
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Easiest way to find duplicate values in a JavaScript array - Native unique function implementation
//lo sauer, 2011; lsauer.com
/**
* I saw this thread: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/840781/easiest-way-to-find-duplicate-values-in-a-javascript-array
* The solutions above lacked the elegance that can be done a with map-reduce-like operations
* Since this implementation works with native functions, the speed is in most circumstances faster
* than any solution using scripted-logic
* Additionally, I needed to quickly filter duplicate url-entries for: http://lsauer.github.com/chrome-session-restore/
*/
//copy and paste: without error handling
Array.prototype.unique = function(){return this.sort().filter( function(v,i,o){if(i>=0 && v!==o[i-1]) return v;});}
//copy and paste: with error handling
Array.prototype.unique = function(){if(!(this instanceof Array))throw TypeError('Not an Array!'); return this.sort().filter( function(v,i,o){if(i>=0 && v!==o[i-1]) return v;});}
/**
* Numbers
*/
var arr = [324,3,32,5,52,2100,1,20,2,3,3,2,2,2,1,1,1];
//1. sorting / map
var a = arr.sort();
>>>[1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 20, 2100, 3, 3, 3, 32, 324, 5, 52]
//2. reduce
//Note: if you need to copy the array at any point use Array.slice()
a.filter( function(v,i,o){if(i>=0 && v!==o[i-1]) return v;});
[2, 20, 2100, 3, 32, 324, 5, 52]
/**
* Strings
*/
var a = 'Magic belongs to Jerry Harry Jerry Harry Potter and Banana Joe'.split(' ');
a = a.sort()
>>>["Banana", "Harry", "Harry", "Jerry", "Jerry", "Joe", "Magic", "Potter", "and", "belongs", "to"]
a.filter( function(v,i,o){if(i>=0 && v!==o[i-1]) return v;});
["Harry", "Jerry", "Joe", "Magic", "Potter", "and", "belongs", "to"]
/**
* Additional information
*/
//you can also use the compact implementation used in is-lib ( github.com/lsauer/is-library )
a.filter( function(v,i,o){ return 1+i&&v!==o[i-1]?v:0;});
//...or a case insensitive function
a.filter( function(v,i,o){ return !i||v&&!RegExp(o[i-1],'i').test(v)});
//example
var a = 'Magic belongs to Jerry Harry Jerry JERRY AND HARRY Harry Potter and Banana Joe'.split(' ');
a.sort()
>>>["AND", "Banana", "HARRY", "Harry", "Harry", "JERRY", "Jerry", "Jerry", "Joe", "Magic", "Potter", "and", "belongs", "to"]
a.filter( function(v,i,o){ return i&&v&&!RegExp(o[i-1],'i').test(v)?v:0});
>>>["Banana", "HARRY", "JERRY", "Joe", "Magic", "Potter", "and", "belongs", "to"]
@mflodin
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mflodin commented May 14, 2012

I'm using V8 3.8.9.19 at the moment. Not sure which version I was on last time, but your examples are still faulty. Even in your own gist: "Banana" is missing on line 35. "AND" is missing on line 51. There is an "and" on line 51, but the "AND" should take precedence. My guess is you haven't noticed this because you always had duplicates of the first item in the sorted array when using the filter live. Even though your examples don't.

To make it clearer, here are some examples with fewer elements.

// numbers
var a = [0, 1, 0];
a.sort();
>>>[0, 0, 1]
a.filter( function(v,i,o){if(i>0 && v!==o[i-1]) return v;}); // Your filter
>>>[1] // 0 is missing
a.filter( function(v,i,o){return v!==o[i-1];}); // My filter
>>>[0, 1]

// strings, case sensitive 
var a = "A B B".split(' ');
a.sort();
>>>["A", "B", "B"]
a.filter( function(v,i,o){if(i>0 && v!==o[i-1]) return v;}); // Your filter
>>>["B"] // A is missing
a.filter( function(v,i,o){return v!==o[i-1];}); // My filter
>>>["A", "B"]

// strings, case insensitive 
var a = "A B b".split(' ');
a.sort();
>>>["A", "B", "b"]
a.filter( function(v,i,o){ return i&&v&&!RegExp(o[i-1],'i').test(v)?v:0}); // Your filter
>>>["B"] // A is missing
a.filter( function(v,i,o){ return !i||v&&!RegExp(o[i-1],'i').test(v)}); // My filter
>>>["A", "B"]

But I must thank you for providing an excellent starting point. From your examples, I was able to make a version that worked correctly.

Cheers
/M

@bergus
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bergus commented May 14, 2012

@mflodin: Have you already seen my fork?

@mflodin
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mflodin commented May 14, 2012

@bergus Yeah, but I thought that was wrong too, remember? Turns out you had just forgotten to update the examples return lines (i.e. the >>> lines). But I actually ended up with basically the same functions as you anyway. I wish I had actually tried yours before discarding them based on the examples. =)

I just wanted to make @lsauer aware that his code might not work as expected.

@lsauer
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lsauer commented May 14, 2012

Ok. To regard the index position 0, I could either remove 1+i&&.. or remove i&& altogether. 1+ to mflodin. thanks & cheers

I just saw my original filter function correctly stated 1+i&& all along, but got lost during its evolution in the altered filters underneath... go figure :).

@gsuttie
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gsuttie commented Feb 22, 2013

What about strings with numbers such as Zone1, Zone 1 & 2, Zone 1, 2 & 3

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