On Tue, Jan 25, 2022 at 11:10 AM Shaozhong SHI <shishaozh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> There is a short of a function in the standard Postgres to do the following:
>
> It is easy to count the number of occurrence of words, but it is rather 
> difficult to count the number of occurrence of phrases.
>
> For instance:
>
> A cell of value:  'Hello World' means 1 occurrence a phrase.
>
> A cell of value: 'Hello World World Hello' means no occurrence of any 
> repeated phrase.
>
> But, A cell of value: 'Hello World World Hello Hello World' means 2 
> occurrences of 'Hello World'.
>
> 'The City of London, London' also has no occurrences of any repeated phrase.
>
> Anyone has got such a function to check out the number of occurrence of any 
> repeated phrases?

Let's define phase as a sequence of two or more words, delimited by
space.  you could find it with something like:

with s as (select 'Hello World Hello World' as sentence)
select
  phrase,
  array_upper(string_to_array((select sentence from s), phrase), 1) -
1 as occurrances
from
(
  select array_to_string(x, ' ') as phrase
  from
  (
    select distinct v[a:b]  x
    from regexp_split_to_array((select sentence from s), ' ') v
    cross join lateral generate_series(1, array_upper(v, 1)) a
    cross join lateral generate_series(a + 1, array_upper(v, 1)) b
  ) q
) q;

this would be slow for large sentences obviously, and you'd probably
want to prepare the string stripping some characters and such.

merlin


Reply via email to