I'd like to calculate a hash of a set of strings in Java. Yes I can sort the strings and calculate the
MD5 hash iterative using digest.update
.
But I'd prefer to omit the sort and use something like combineUnordered
https://github.com/google/guava/wiki/HashingExplained
There is a lot of similar question asking the same such as Order-independant Hash Algorithm
but non of them provides a simple example showing how to calculate iterative an order independent hash in Java.
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Marmite Bomber
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Why do youneed to overwrite the hash algorithm of the set? – Szigyártó Mihály Nov 12 '17 at 21:07
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@SzigyártóMihály no need to overwrite, I'm looking for an simple example. I know MD5, which is order sensitive and MurmurHash which shouldn't, but I could not find an example of using it. – Marmite Bomber Nov 12 '17 at 21:14
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The set uses the sum of items' hashes, which is not depending on the order. – Szigyártó Mihály Nov 14 '17 at 06:55
2 Answers
6
Just XOR each hash and the order wont matter, plus the hash size will be fixed rather than grow with the size of the collection.
Hashcode using built in java string hashcode:
int hashcode = strings.stream()
.mapToInt(Object::hashCode)
.reduce(0, (left, right) -> left ^ right);
Hashcode using guava and MD5 like the question asked:
Optional<byte[]> hash = strings.stream()
.map(s -> Hashing.md5().hashString(s, Charset.defaultCharset()))
.map(HashCode::asBytes)
.reduce((left, right) -> xor(left, right));
static byte[] xor(byte[] left, byte[] right) {
if(left.length != right.length) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException();
}
byte[] result = new byte[left.length];
for(int i=0; i < result.length; i++) {
result[i] = (byte) (left[i] ^ right[i]);
}
return result;
}

Magnus
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This is the preferred method. XORing the hashes is better than adding them. – Luke Joshua Park Nov 12 '17 at 22:20
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1Yes, this is true for *sets*, but for *bags* that can contains duplicates `XOR` is not applicable as the duplicates will reset it to *zero* @LukeJoshuaPark, so some `SUM` (wrapped) must be used. – Marmite Bomber Dec 06 '21 at 13:23
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You can calculate the MD5 hash of each string individually, and then, add them all to get a single hash. That will be order independent. Because addition operation is commutative.
Here is an example (assuming we have a method md5Hex(String str) that calculates md5 hash for a given string and returns the results in hexadecimal format):
String[] strings = {"str1", "str2", "str3", ...};
BigInteger hashSum = BigInteger.ZERO;
for(String s : strings) {
String hexHash = md5Hex(s);
hashSum = hashSum.add(new BigInteger(hexHash, 16));
}
String finalHash = hashSum.toString(16);

elyor
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Yes, thank you; the background of the question (though downwoted) was if I should go this way or use some alternative hash algorithm that can combine unsorted and possible receive less collisions. – Marmite Bomber Nov 12 '17 at 21:18
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