Module: DidYouMean::Levenshtein
Do not use. This module is for internal use only.
Relationships & Source Files | |
Defined in: | lib/did_you_mean/levenshtein.rb |
Class Method Summary
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.distance(str1, str2)
mod_func
This code is based directly on the Text gem implementation Copyright © 2006-2013 Paul Battley, Michael Neumann, Tim Fletcher.
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.min3(a, b, c)
mod_func
detects the minimum value out of three arguments.
Class Method Details
.distance(str1, str2) (mod_func)
This code is based directly on the Text gem implementation Copyright © 2006-2013 Paul Battley, Michael Neumann, Tim Fletcher.
Returns a value representing the “cost” of transforming str1 into str2
# File 'lib/did_you_mean/levenshtein.rb', line 7
def distance(str1, str2) n = str1.length m = str2.length return m if n.zero? return n if m.zero? d = (0..m).to_a x = nil # to avoid duplicating an enumerable object, create it outside of the loop str2_codepoints = str2.codepoints str1.each_codepoint.with_index(1) do |char1, i| j = 0 while j < m cost = (char1 == str2_codepoints[j]) ? 0 : 1 x = min3( d[j+1] + 1, # insertion i + 1, # deletion d[j] + cost # substitution ) d[j] = i i = x j += 1 end d[m] = x end x end
.min3(a, b, c) (mod_func)
detects the minimum value out of three arguments. This method is faster than [a, b, c].min
and puts less GC pressure. See github.com/ruby/did_you_mean/pull/1 for a performance benchmark.
# File 'lib/did_you_mean/levenshtein.rb', line 46
def min3(a, b, c) if a < b && a < c a elsif b < c b else c end end