How to compare two arrays in Kotlin?

ArraysEqualsKotlin

Arrays Problem Overview


Given some arrays in Kotlin

let a = arrayOf("first", "second")
val b = arrayOf("first", "second")
val c = arrayOf("1st", "2nd")

Are there built-in functions to the Kotlin std-lib that tests two arrays for (value) equality for each element?

Thus resulting in:

a.equals(b) // true
a.equals(c) // false

equals() is actually returning false in both cases, but maybe there are built-in functions to Kotlin that one could use?

There is the static function java.utils.Arrays.deepEquals(a.toTypedArray(), b.toTypedArray()) but I would rather prefer an instance method as it would work better with optionals.

Arrays Solutions


Solution 1 - Arrays

In Kotlin 1.1 you can use contentEquals and contentDeepEquals to compare two arrays for structural equality. e.g.:

a contentEquals b // true
b contentEquals c // false

In Kotlin 1.0 there are no "built-in functions to the Kotlin std-lib that tests two arrays for (value) equality for each element."

"Arrays are always compared using equals(), as all other objects" (Feedback Request: Limitations on Data Classes | Kotlin Blog).

So a.equals(b) will only return true if a and b reference the same array.

You can, however, create your own "optionals"-friendly methods using extension functions. e.g.:

fun Array<*>.equalsArray(other: Array<*>) = Arrays.equals(this, other)
fun Array<*>.deepEqualsArray(other: Array<*>) = Arrays.deepEquals(this, other)

P.S. The comments on Feedback Request: Limitations on Data Classes | Kotlin Blog are worth a read as well, specifically comment 39364.

Solution 2 - Arrays

Kotlin 1.1 introduced extensions for comparing arrays by content: contentEquals and contentDeepEquals.

These extensions are infix, so you can use them the following way:

val areEqual = arr1 contentEquals arr2

Solution 3 - Arrays

And if you want to compare contents of two Collections ignoring the order you can add this simple extension:

infix fun <T> Collection<T>.sameContentWith(collection: Collection<T>?)
    = collection?.let { this.size == it.size && this.containsAll(it) }

...and use it like this:

a = mutableListOf<String>()
b = mutableListOf<String>()

isListsHasSameContent = a sameContentWith b

Solution 4 - Arrays

For a simple equals (not deep equals!):

otherArray.size == array.size && otherArray.filter { !array.contains(it) }.isEmpty()

This code will compare the size and the items. The items are compared with .equals().

Solution 5 - Arrays

In koltin if your array or ArrayList is type of a data Class you can simply compare array :a and array :b

like this

if(a == b)

it will return simple boolean if it matched all the value of both arrays, but if you are matching other-than data data Class then you can use this extension to compare it with single value

fun <T> Array<T>.isEqual(comparable: Array<T>): Boolean {
    var isChanged = true

    if (this.size == comparable.size) {
        for (index in 0 until comparable.size) {
            if (this[index] != comparable[index]) {
                isChanged = false
                break
            }
        }
    } else {
        isChanged = false
    }

    return isChanged
}

then you can use your array

    val a = arrayOf("first", "second")
    val b = arrayOf("first", "second")

    println(a.isEqual(b)) //true

    a[0] = "third"

    println(a.isEqual(b)) //false

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionLars BlumbergView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Arraysmfulton26View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - ArraysIlyaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - ArraysAlexander KrolView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - ArraysKevin RobatelView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - ArraysArbaz PirwaniView Answer on Stackoverflow