Use SOUNDEX() word by word on SQL Server

前端 未结 5 1599
青春惊慌失措
青春惊慌失措 2020-12-31 23:59

Here is my problem. For example I have a table Products that contains a field, Name:

Products
ID | Name | ..
1  | \"USB Key 10Go\"
2  | \"I         


        
相关标签:
5条回答
  • 2021-01-01 00:06

    You could try storing the metaphone of each word concatenated with hyphens. EG stored_metaphone field could contain something like '-AKTRF-SPLS-'. Then build a query like this:

    $where = '(';
    $search_sql = array();
    $search_terms = explode(' ',$search);
    foreach ($search_terms as $term) {
        $search_sql[] = "`stored_metaphone` LIKE '%-".metaphone($term)."-%'";
    }
    $where .= implode(' OR ',$search_sql);
    $where .= ')';
    

    NB this is only the WHERE part of the query.

    As far as I know metaphone only works with English. The above sql is working rather well on a number of sites.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-01-01 00:10

    Have you looked into the Full-Text Search feature in SQL Server? I know this is not exactly what you asked for. Its just that the SOUNDEX() function is used to find similar SOUNDING names (EX: SMITH and SMYTHE sound the same). In a search engine, however, how a word sounds is less important than the search words themselves. Full-Text Search also lets you use synonyms (allowing you to specify certain words that mean the same thing within your application's context), and have them automatically considered during your search.

    Look at these pages for more information about Full Text Search in SQL Server:

    Introduction to Full-Text Search

    CONTAINS

    CONTAINSTABLE

    FREETEXT

    FREETEXTTABLE

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-01-01 00:11

    If you have to do it all in the RDBMS, a UDF would be the best if it's an option.

    Otherwise, you could use this technique to at least soundex the first four words individually using PARSENAME:

    From How do I split a string so I can access item x?:

    PARSENAME(REPLACE('12 inches laptop computer', ' ', '.'), 1)  --return computer
    PARSENAME(REPLACE('12 inches laptop computer', ' ', '.'), 2)  --return laptop
    ...
    

    However: using PARSENAME in this way is a hack and a serious limitation is it only works for a max of 4 parts. If there are 5 or more words PARSENAME will return NULL, so you have to check for that with a conditional and degrade gracefully.

    Here's a simplified example (again, without the NULL checks)

    SELECT *
    FROM Products 
    WHERE SOUNDEX(search_input) = SOUNDEX(PARSENAME(REPLACE(Name, ' ', '.'), 4))
      OR SOUNDEX(search_input) = SOUNDEX(PARSENAME(REPLACE(Name, ' ', '.'), 3))
      OR SOUNDEX(search_input) = SOUNDEX(PARSENAME(REPLACE(Name, ' ', '.'), 2))
      OR SOUNDEX(search_input) = SOUNDEX(PARSENAME(REPLACE(Name, ' ', '.'), 1))
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-01-01 00:31

    The SOUNDEX may be a perfect fit for your purpuse, but please remember that it may not provide good results for anything else than british or american english spoken words! It may even be used on german phonetical spoken words, but it will not work well with ANYTHING else.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-01-01 00:32

    Rather than use Soundex you might be better off computing the Levenshtein distance between the two strings. See the Wikipedia article on Levenshtein distance.

    There's a TSQL implementation of the Levenshtein distance algorithm here.

    Share and enjoy.


    EDIT 03-May-2012

    Since writing my original response I've learned that Oracle includes the Levenshtein distance and several other "string similarity" functions in the UTL_MATCH package, which I believe is a standard part of the database. Documentation here. Perhaps not directly related to the original post (which was for SQL Server) but perhaps useful as many shops use multiple databases.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题