package mula
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=1f0ee42aca73e33459796baa26063bf82d290cb6f4c723d3e7c9a0e58f1e0d72
sha512=2158fb0cfd32b819141fca66ab29dbe480303191e744e617661aa39d772d03e2e158b4ca1ff4a8e18e9c1ea71cda10fe07b62df72beba04e29b289975f19f66e
Description
ML's radishal Universal Levenshtein Automata library.
Published: 10 Dec 2021
README
mula
ML's radishal library for matching with Universal Levenshtein Automata.
This library not only computes if strings are within a certain edit distance, but also computes what the edit distance is.
You can find documentation for the library here.
We support both the standard Levenshtein distance as well as the Demarau-Levenshtein distance which includes transpositions of two adjacent characters as a primitive edit operation.
We can also lazily feed characters into automata and get the current edit distance.
For OCaml strings, we offer the Mula.Strings
module which contains submodules Lev
for the standard Levenshtein distance and Dem
for the (restricted) Demarau-Levenshtein distance.
Examples of use:
# #require "mula";;
# Mula.Strings.Lev.get_distance ~k:2 "abcd" "abdc";;
- : int option = Some 2
# Mula.Strings.Dem.get_distance ~k:2 "abcd" "abdc";;
- : int option = Some 1
# Mula.Strings.Lev.get_distance ~k:2 "abcd" "efgh";;
- : int option = None
We can also lazily feed characters and strings into an nfa
and get live error counts:
# let lev_nfa = Mula.Strings.Lev.start ~k:2 ~str:"abcd";;
val lev_nfa : Mula.Strings.Lev.nfa_state = <abstr>
# Mula.Strings.Lev.(feed_str lev_nfa ~str:"ab" |> current_error);;
- : int option = Some 0
# Mula.Strings.Lev.(feed lev_nfa ~ch:'a' |> feed ~ch:'b' |> feed ~ch:'c' |> current_error);;
- : int option = Some 0
# Mula.Strings.Lev.(feed_str lev_nfa ~str:"abd" |> current_error);;
- : int option = Some 1
# Mula.Strings.Lev.(feed_str lev_nfa ~str:"ab" |> feed_str ~str:"dc" |> current_error);; (* counts 'd' as an insert edit *)
- : int option = Some 1
# Mula.Strings.Lev.(feed_str lev_nfa ~str:"ab" |> feed_str ~str:"dc" |> end_input);;
- : int option = Some 2
Mula
also offers a functor if you want to use your own representations of strings:
# #require "mula";;
# module St = struct
type ch = int
type t = int array
let length = Array.length
let get = Array.get
let equal = Int.equal
end;;
module St :
sig
...
end
# module M = Mula.Match.Make(St);;
module M :
sig
module Lev :
sig
type nfa_state = Mula.Match.Make(St).Lev.nfa_state
val start : k:int -> str:St.t -> nfa_state
val feed : nfa_state -> ch:int -> nfa_state
val current_error : nfa_state -> int option
val end_input : nfa_state -> int option
val feed_str : nfa_state -> str:St.t -> nfa_state
val get_distance : k:int -> St.t -> St.t -> int option
end
module Dem :
sig
...
end
end
About the Name
মুলা (mula/moola) means radish in the author's first language.