6

http://sqlfiddle.com/#!2/e6382

id   id_news  word
 1    6       superman
 2    6       movie
 3    6       review
 4    6       excellent
 5    7       review
 6    7       guardians of the galaxy
 7    7       great
 8    8       review
 9    8       superman
10    8       movie
11    8       great

I have a small problem, I'm trying to relate different news through words with a threshold setting, in the example provided id_news 6 should be related to 8 but not to 7 since 7 only has 2 words in common and I only want to detect those who have at least 3 words in common.

2 Answers 2

4

This will get you close to what you need:

  SELECT wa1.id_news id, wa2.id_news related
    FROM word_analysis wa1
    JOIN word_analysis wa2
      ON wa2.id_news != wa1.id_news
     AND wa2.word = wa1.word
GROUP BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news
  HAVING COUNT(*)>2
ORDER BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news

If you don't want the reverse relationships:

  SELECT wa1.id_news id, wa2.id_news related
    FROM word_analysis wa1
    JOIN word_analysis wa2
      ON wa2.id_news > wa1.id_news
     AND wa2.word = wa1.word
GROUP BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news
  HAVING COUNT(*)>2
ORDER BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news

If you want to investigate just one wa1.id_news (6):

  SELECT wa2.id_news related
    FROM word_analysis wa1
    JOIN word_analysis wa2
      ON wa2.id_news != wa1.id_news
     AND wa2.word = wa1.word
   WHERE wa1.id_news = 6
GROUP BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news
  HAVING COUNT(*)>2
ORDER BY wa2.id_news

If you want to investigate just one relationship (6->8), where a result means related and no result means unrelated:

  SELECT 1
    FROM word_analysis wa1
    JOIN word_analysis wa2
      ON wa2.id_news = 8
     AND wa2.word = wa1.word
   WHERE wa1.id_news = 6
GROUP BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news
  HAVING COUNT(*)>2
1
  • Thank you so much to everyone of you :)
    – ln -s
    Aug 13, 2014 at 13:40
3

Try this self-join:

SELECT
  wa1.id_news id_news_1,
  wa2.id_news id_news_2,
  count(wa2.word) cnt_words
FROM word_analysis wa1
INNER JOIN word_analysis wa2
ON wa1.id_news <> wa2.id_news AND wa1.word = wa2.word
GROUP BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news
HAVING count(wa2.word) >= 3
ORDER BY wa1.id_news, wa2.id_news;

SQL Fiddle demo

2
  • Wonder if there's a way to narrow down the results from [8,6] and [6,8] to just one or the other.
    – Matt
    Aug 13, 2014 at 13:17
  • 1
    @Matt yep, just use > or < instead of <> on the on clause. However, this works for this set of data... but I'm not sure how this actually relates ID 6 and 8 It returns 2 records, but shouldn't it be 1 if it's a relationship? Furthermore, if multiple news stories have the same count how do you differentiate? This is a good first start but I don't think it's the final answer.
    – xQbert
    Aug 13, 2014 at 13:19

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