Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 1 (11.1) Part Number B28286-01 |
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Syntax
Purpose
SOUNDEX
returns a character string containing the phonetic representation of char
. This function lets you compare words that are spelled differently, but sound alike in English.
The phonetic representation is defined in The Art of Computer Programming, Volume 3: Sorting and Searching, by Donald E. Knuth, as follows:
Retain the first letter of the string and remove all other occurrences of the following letters: a, e, h, i, o, u, w, y.
Assign numbers to the remaining letters (after the first) as follows:
b, f, p, v = 1 c, g, j, k, q, s, x, z = 2 d, t = 3 l = 4 m, n = 5 r = 6
If two or more letters with the same number were adjacent in the original name (before step 1), or adjacent except for any intervening h and w, then omit all but the first.
Return the first four bytes padded with 0.
char
can be of any of the datatypes CHAR
, VARCHAR2
, NCHAR
, or NVARCHAR2
. The return value is the same datatype as char
.
This function does not support CLOB
data directly. However, CLOB
s can be passed in as arguments through implicit data conversion.
See Also:
"Datatype Comparison Rules" for more information.Examples
The following example returns the employees whose last names are a phonetic representation of "Smyth":
SELECT last_name, first_name FROM hr.employees WHERE SOUNDEX(last_name) = SOUNDEX('SMYTHE') ORDER BY last_name, first_name; LAST_NAME FIRST_NAME ---------- ---------- Smith Lindsey Smith William