pattern matching?

  • Hi all,

    I have a task to clean up data in one of the tables. The column name I need to clean up holds business names, but they can appear in there in many different ways.

    For instance:

    Costco

    COSTCO

    Costco Whls

    Costco Wholesale

    Costco Whls llc

    What is available to me in SQL Server 2008R2 that can help me to accomplish that? How would you approach it?

    Thanks,

  • If you're looking for every instance of a particular character string, you can use this:

    select *

    from mytable

    where bus_name like '%costco%'

  • Thanks for reply.

    The table that holds business names has 20M rows.

    I can't specify a business name because I don't know it or will have to do it for every business name in the table.

    In the following example, how would you use "like"?

    Costco

    Costco LLC

    Costco Whls

    Home Interiors Malaga

    Home Plumbing

    Home Property Management

    Home Realty

    Home Svc

  • eugene.pipko (12/12/2012)


    Thanks for reply.

    The table that holds business names has 20M rows.

    I can't specify a business name because I don't know it or will have to do it for every business name in the table.

    In the following example, how would you use "like"?

    Costco

    Costco LLC

    Costco Whls

    Home Interiors Malaga

    Home Plumbing

    Home Property Management

    Home Realty

    Home Svc

    I guess I'm not quite sure you are looking for in this example, are all those business names considered to be the same for this case?

  • I am looking for a way to say:

    Based on the list here:

    ---------------------

    Costco

    Costco LLC

    Costco Whls

    Home Interiors Malaga

    Home Plumbing

    Home Property Management

    Home Realty

    Home Svc

    These are unique business names:

    ---------------------

    Costco

    Home Interiors Malaga

    Home Plumbing

    Home Property Management

    Home Realty

    Home Svc

  • Do you have anything else in the row that might help to find duplicates? Address? Phone? DUNS number? federal tax id?

    What makes a business unique? Costco has a lot of stores. Is each one unique or should there only be one row for the parent company alone?

    If you have only the name to go on, I'd recommend you hire one of the services who do this for a living to help clean up your data. The rules for this are extremely complex and most folks who do this don't guarantee that they will ever get to a 100% cleanup. Dun and Bradstreet has a service for this (I don't work for them) and I'm sure there are others.


    And then again, I might be wrong ...
    David Webb

  • David,

    I don't have any other supporting data. What I have is inconsistent.

    In the costco example, it should be one parent company, not multiple stores.

    Thanks,

  • SELECT SOUNDEX('Costco'),

    SOUNDEX('COSTCO'),

    SOUNDEX('Costco Whls'),

    SOUNDEX('Costco Wholesale'),

    SOUNDEX('Costco Whls llc');

    There are no special teachers of virtue, because virtue is taught by the whole community.
    --Plato

  • wow, thats going to be tough;

    the only thing i could think of was a combination of opc.three's example, and joining it against a list of common suffixes to find potential duplicates, but that of course is going an ongoing thing as you dig deeper into the data.

    something like this is what i thought might be a starting point:

    With MySampleData(CompanyName)

    AS

    (

    SELECT 'Costco' UNION ALL

    SELECT 'Costco LLC' UNION ALL

    SELECT 'Costco Whls' UNION ALL

    SELECT 'Home Interiors Malaga' UNION ALL

    SELECT 'Home Plumbing' UNION ALL

    SELECT 'Home Property Management' UNION ALL

    SELECT 'Home Realty' UNION ALL

    SELECT 'Home Svc'

    ),

    CommonSuffixes (val)

    AS

    (

    SELECT ' Inc' UNION ALL

    SELECT ' LLC' UNION ALL

    SELECT ' Company' UNION ALL

    SELECT ' Co'

    )

    SELECT

    ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY SOUNDEX(CompanyName) ORDER BY CompanyName) AS RW,

    SOUNDEX(CompanyName) AS SoundX,

    *

    FROM MySampleData

    LEFT OUTER JOIN CommonSuffixes

    ON CHARINDEX(CommonSuffixes.val,MySampleData.CompanyName) > 0

    --WHERE CommonSuffixes.val IS NOT NULL --(turns the LEFT OUTER into an inner join, i know)

    ORDER BY CompanyName,RW

    Lowell


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  • Without artificial intelligence which is on pair with clear human knowledge which names refer to the same company and which one, even very similar ones, are not, it is simply impossible to do what you want in a plain coding (regardless of programming language).

    That is data cleansing exercise and it will always require some manual intervention.

    I can only suggest couple of ways:

    Use SSIS, there is a Fuzzy Grouping transformation which is designed primary for the data cleansing tasks.

    Create a database of company names variations.

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  • You may want to check this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaro%E2%80%93Winkler_distance

    There are various implementations of this algorithm in T-SQL and CLR but should be easy to Google for a readymade function.

    I've not tested this on many company names but it seems to return better matches as below:

    If you need any further help then let me know.

    Good luck!

    ---------------------------------------------------------

    It takes a minimal capacity for rational thought to see that the corporate 'free press' is a structurally irrational and biased, and extremely violent, system of elite propaganda.
    David Edwards - Media lens[/url]

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  • Thank you all for replies,

    It's an interesting problem and I thought it would be fun to try taking a crack at it, but I agree with you, Eugene that it will take manual work no matter what.

    And since a company table has 17M rows, not sure how long it may take and if it's worth it.

    Thanks again,

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