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> I have a side project that needs to "intelligently" know if two strings
> are contextually similar.

The examples you gave seem heavy on word order and whitespace consideration,
before applying any algorithms. Here's a quick perl version that does the
job:

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION matchval(text,text)
RETURNS INT LANGUAGE plperlu AS
$$
  
use strict;
use String::Approx 'adist';
  
my $uno = join ' ', sort split /\s+/ => lc shift;
my $dos = join ' ', sort split /\s+/ => lc shift;
  
return adist(length $uno<length $dos ? ($uno,$dos) : ($dos,$uno));

$$;

Some sample runs:
  
SELECT matchval('pink floyd - dark side of the moon - money', 'dark side of the 
moon - pink floyd - money');
SELECT matchval('dark floyd of money moon pink side the', 'Money - dark side of 
the moon - Pink Floyd');
SELECT matchval('dark floyd of money moon pink side the', 'monee - drk sidez of 
da moon - pink floyd');
SELECT matchval('dark floyd of money moon pink side the', 'pink floyd - 
animals');
SELECT matchval('dark floyd of money moon pink side the', 'walking on the moon 
- the police');

The above returns 0, 0, 6, 10, and 17; a score of 0 is an exact match.

- --
Greg Sabino Mullane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP Key: 0x14964AC8 200605191835
http://biglumber.com/x/web?pk=2529DF6AB8F79407E94445B4BC9B906714964AC8
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