This package provides the stringdist
module, which includes functions for
calculating raw and normalized versions of the following string distance
measurements:
- Levenshtein distance
- Restricted Damerau-Levenshtein distance (a.k.a. optimal string alignment distance)
For optimal performance, the package compiles and uses a C extension module under the hood, but a Python implementation is included as well and will automatically be used if C extensions are not supported by the system (e.g. when the selected interpreter is PyPy).
To install this package, just use pip:
pip install StringDist
All Python versions >=3.3
should be supported.
To use the package, simply import the stringdist
module and call the
desired function, passing in two strings:
import stringdist stringdist.levenshtein('test', 'testing')
The available functions are as follows:
levenshtein
levenshtein_norm
rdlevenshtein
rdlevenshtein_norm
Raw distances assume that every allowed operation has a cost of 1
.
Normalized distances are floats in the range [0.0, 1.0]
, where 0.0
always corresponds to a raw value of 0
and 1.0
always corresponds to
the length of the longer string, i.e. the biggest possible raw value.
Note: The restricted Damerau-Levenshtein distance is not a true distance metric because it does not satisfy the triangle inequality. This makes it a poor choice for applications that involve evaluating the similarity of more than two strings, such as clustering.
Please use GitHub Issues for bugs and feature requests, checking first to make sure you're not creating a duplicate issue.
Pull requests are welcome. Please discuss your plans first by creating a GitHub issue and use good coding style. For Python, this means following the rules laid out in PEP 8 and other relevant PEPs. If in doubt, use a linter like Pylint.
To run unit tests:
git clone https://github.com/obulkin/string-dist.git {directory} cd {directory} python setup.py install python -m unittest -v test_stringdist
You can run tests without installing the package, but this will always cause
the Python implementation to be used as the C variant has to be compiled
first. By the same token, any changes to the C code will require recompilation
before showing up in the tests, which can be handled by running
python setup.py install
again.
- Oleg Bulkin <o.bulkin@gmail.com>