I'm writing a web app that needs many users to work on the same contents. So there's high probability that one user overwrites another user's changes du to a race condition.
Ruby on Rails provides an easy mechanism to prevent this, which is called optimistic locking. But it only prevents saving when an overwrite would happen, it doesn't help a lot merging those changes.
So whenever Rails fires a StaleObject
exception, I re-display the form with a warning:
(source: snag.gy)
I'm using the diffy gem to display the changes.
This works pretty nice, but the Difference isn't optimised yet: while one-liner (<input type="text">
) fields are diffed pretty nicely (diff by word), many-liner fields (<textarea>
) don't give very sophisticated clues about the changes (diff by sentence).
I know from GitHub much more sophisticated diffs (and as a versioning tool, I think git has a lot more possibilities to identify changes and compare them in a human readable way):
But also Stack Overflow has great diffs:
So: what mechanism does Stack Overflow use to provide these fine grained diffs? A normal diff
call on the command line? Some more sophisticated tool like git or something?
It seems that diffing a many-lines text includes at least these steps:
- Diff by line, so changed lines are detected
- Diff changed lines by word, to find the fine-grained changes
- Display only changed lines (with some context lines, if needed), diffed by word