The struct::list package in Tcllib has tools for computing longest-common-subsequences, which is the key part of a diff tool. To use, you load your data into Tcl and split it into a list of lines:
proc getLines {filename} {
set f [open $filename]
set result [split [read $f] "\n"]
close $f
return $result
}
Then you can get the information about the common elements (== common lines):
set sharedLineInfo [struct::list longestCommonSubsequence $file1_lines $file2_lines]
This returns a pair of lists, where each list is the indices (counting from zero) of the common lines; the first list will be for the first file, and the second list for the second file. Any line number not listed will be one that has changed.
There's also a function to invert the information provided to get instructions on how to change one sequence into the other:
set changes [struct::list lcsInvert $sharedLineInfo \
[llength $file1_lines] [llength $file2_lines]]
This returns a list of triples, where the first is the operation performed (added, changed or deleted) and the second and third are the ranges of indices in each of the relevant lists (i.e., zero-based line numbers).
I'm not quite sure how to take this information and produce what you are looking for, but I guess we could put it together like this:
package require struct::list
proc getLines {filename} {
set f [open $filename]
set result [split [read $f] "\n"]
close $f
return $result
}
proc variedLines {filename1 filename2} {
set l1 [getLines $filename1]
set l2 [getLines $filename2]
lassign [struct::list longestCommonSubsequence $l1 $l2] common1
set result {}
for {set i 0} {$i < [llength $l1]} {incr i} {
if {$i ni $common1} {
lappend result [expr {$i + 1}]
}
}
return $result
}
If you want the results written to a file, puts $f [join $someList "\n"] is likely to feature, but I'll leave that as an exercise…