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@Badgerati
Created August 5, 2012 02:09
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An implementation of the Levenshtein distance algorithm in LUA.
-- Returns the Levenshtein distance between the two given strings
function string.levenshtein(str1, str2)
local len1 = string.len(str1)
local len2 = string.len(str2)
local matrix = {}
local cost = 0
-- quick cut-offs to save time
if (len1 == 0) then
return len2
elseif (len2 == 0) then
return len1
elseif (str1 == str2) then
return 0
end
-- initialise the base matrix values
for i = 0, len1, 1 do
matrix[i] = {}
matrix[i][0] = i
end
for j = 0, len2, 1 do
matrix[0][j] = j
end
-- actual Levenshtein algorithm
for i = 1, len1, 1 do
for j = 1, len2, 1 do
if (str1:byte(i) == str2:byte(j)) then
cost = 0
else
cost = 1
end
matrix[i][j] = math.min(matrix[i-1][j] + 1, matrix[i][j-1] + 1, matrix[i-1][j-1] + cost)
end
end
-- return the last value - this is the Levenshtein distance
return matrix[len1][len2]
end
@lost-RD
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lost-RD commented Nov 1, 2016

Thanks for this!

@DrkSoulk
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Oustanding!

@ThePC007
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ThePC007 commented Jul 6, 2021

This is great, thanks. :)

@SoapHeadedSoap
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who came here from that one devforum

@gram-signal
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quick note: because in line 35 you only ever refer to matrix[i] and matrix[i-1], you can get away with just storing the two most recent lines of the matrix, rather than computing the whole thing. This gets you down to O(2n) space (while still taking O(n^2) time)

@jarble
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jarble commented Apr 23, 2022

You can use a modified version of this algorithm to search for substrings that closely match another string.

@Chase-Nolan
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Thanks!

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