search criteria difference between Like vs Contains() in oracle
I created a table with two columns.I inserted two rows.
id name
1 narsi reddy
2 narei sia
one is simply number type and another one is CLOB type.So i decided to use indexing on that. I queried on that by using contains. query:
select * from emp where contains(name,'%a%e%')>0
2 narei sia
I expected 2 would come,but not. But if i give same with like it's given what i wanted. query:
select * from emp where name like '%a%e%'
ID NAME
1 (CLOB) narsi reddy 开发者_如何转开发
2 (CLOB) narei sia
2 rows selected
finally i understood that like is searching whole document or paragraph but contains is looking in words.
so how can i get required output?
LIKE and CONTAINS are fundamentally different methods for searching.
LIKE is a very simple string pattern matcher - it recognises two wildcards (%) and (_) which match zero-or-more, or exactly-one, character respectively. In your case, %a%e% matches two records in your table - it looks for zero or more characters followed by a
, followed by zero or more characters followed by e
, followed by zero or more characters. It is also very simplistic in its return value: it either returns "matched" or "not matched" - no shades of grey.
CONTAINS is a powerful search tool that uses a context index, which builds a kind of word tree which can be searched using the CONTAINS search syntax. It can be used to search for a single word, a combination of words, and has a rich syntax of its own, such as boolean operators (AND, NEAR, ACCUM). It is also more powerful in that instead of returning a simple "matched" or "not matched", it returns a "score", which can be used to rank results in order of relevance; e.g. CONTAINS(col, 'dog NEAR cat') will return a higher score for a document where those two words are both found close together.
I believe that your CONTAINS
query is matching 'narei sia' because the pattern '%a%e%' matches the word 'narei'. It does not match against 'narsi reddy' because neither word, taken individually, matches the pattern.
I assume you want to use CONTAINS
instead of LIKE
for performance reasons. I am not by any means an expert on CONTAINS
query expressions, but I don't see a simple way to do the exact search you want, since you are looking for letters that can be in the same word or different words, but must occur in a given order. I think it may be best to do a combination of the two techniques:
WHERE CONTAINS(name,'%a% AND %e%') > 0
AND name LIKE '%a%e%'
I think this would allow the text index to be used to find candidate matches (anything which has at least one word containing 'a' and at least one word containing 'e'). These would would then be filtered by the LIKE
condition, enforcing the requirement that 'a' precede 'e' in the string.
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