Is it ok to check for SQL returning 开发者_Go百科a Soundex of 0000 based on the assumption that it isn\'t a valid word, e.g. has digits, spaces, special characters or is there a better way to do this?
Is there any way to have MySQL order results by how close they \'sound\' to a search term? I\'m trying to order fields that contain user input of city names. Variations and misspellings exist, and I\
i want select similar rows accourding to row\'s title columun. Title columun has mostly have 5 or 6 six keywo开发者_高级运维rds. Which algorithm do you recommend ? Soundex Maybe ?
I have done a little bit of research on this and looked through a few articles both here on StackOverflow as well as some blog posts, but haven\'t found an exact answer. I also read that it is possibl
Trying to figure out what went wrong, must be a silly syntax. $objDatabase = QApplication::$Database[1];
Here is my problem. For example I have开发者_运维问答 a table Products that contains a field, Name:
Quick MYSQL/PHP question. I\'m using a \"not-so-strict\" search query as a fallback if no results are found with a normal search query, to the tune of:
I know about the Soundex an开发者_高级运维d Double-Methaphone algorithms for \"sounds-like\" stringmatching in English. Where can I find a similar algorithm, or a port of one of the algorithms for the
The US census bureau uses a special encoding called “soundex” to locate information about a person. The soundex is an encoding of surnames (last names) based on the way a surname sounds rather than
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