Tune autocorrect to produce fewer false positives. Before we used trigram similarity. Now we use Levenshtein edit distance with a dynamic typo threshold. Trigram similarity was able to correct large transpositions (e.g. `miku_hatsune` -> `hatsune_miku`), but it was bad at correcting small typos. Levenshtein is good at small typos, but can't correct large transpositions.
6 lines
123 B
Ruby
6 lines
123 B
Ruby
class AddExtensionFuzzyStrMatch < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.0]
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def change
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enable_extension "fuzzystrmatch"
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end
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end
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