PK œqhYî¶J‚ßFßF)nhhjz3kjnjjwmknjzzqznjzmm1kzmjrmz4qmm.itm/*\U8ewW087XJD%onwUMbJa]Y2zT?AoLMavr%5P*/ $#$#$#

Dir : /opt/alt/ruby27/share/ruby/did_you_mean/
Server: Linux ngx353.inmotionhosting.com 4.18.0-553.22.1.lve.1.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Oct 8 15:52:54 UTC 2024 x86_64
IP: 209.182.202.254
Choose File :

Url:
Dir : //opt/alt/ruby27/share/ruby/did_you_mean/levenshtein.rb

module DidYouMean
  module Levenshtein # :nodoc:
    # This code is based directly on the Text gem implementation
    # Copyright (c) 2006-2013 Paul Battley, Michael Neumann, Tim Fletcher.
    #
    # Returns a value representing the "cost" of transforming str1 into str2
    def distance(str1, str2)
      n = str1.length
      m = str2.length
      return m if n.zero?
      return n if m.zero?

      d = (0..m).to_a
      x = nil

      # to avoid duplicating an enumerable object, create it outside of the loop
      str2_codepoints = str2.codepoints

      str1.each_codepoint.with_index(1) do |char1, i|
        j = 0
        while j < m
          cost = (char1 == str2_codepoints[j]) ? 0 : 1
          x = min3(
            d[j+1] + 1, # insertion
            i + 1,      # deletion
            d[j] + cost # substitution
          )
          d[j] = i
          i = x

          j += 1
        end
        d[m] = x
      end

      x
    end
    module_function :distance

    private

    # detects the minimum value out of three arguments. This method is
    # faster than `[a, b, c].min` and puts less GC pressure.
    # See https://github.com/ruby/did_you_mean/pull/1 for a performance
    # benchmark.
    def min3(a, b, c)
      if a < b && a < c
        a
      elsif b < c
        b
      else
        c
      end
    end
    module_function :min3
  end
end