Essentially, we want to be able to uniquely assign IDs to all the N grams contained in a large set of documents. So, if I have 10 million documents to process, I would read the text from each one of the document and get N grams (mostly trigrams) and should be able to assign unique IDs to these N-grams. Somehow, I would need to store these unique IDs so that I can fetch them fast.
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Assuming your N is reasonably small, why not just use each N-gram to identify itself?– Jukka ZittingOct 13, 2011 at 21:34
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For most cases, N=3 (trigram) but still I would need to persist them somewhere so that they are be later fetched. Essentially, there is a scan phase (wherein trigram as assigned unique IDs from all documents) and processing phase (where doc is read and a signature of document is created with uniqueIds from all its trigrams)– user965692Oct 14, 2011 at 20:26
1 Answer
Based on comments above, I would suggest that you simply use the N-gram as it's own identifier. That way there's no need to maintain a separate mapping from IDs to N-grams.
For example, say you have a document containing the text "hello", which contains the trigrams "hel", "ell", and "llo" (assuming you're not including word boundaries). Instead of first setting up an ID mapping like 1="hel", 2="ell", 3="llo" and having the document signature be the set { 1, 2, 3 }, you could use the N-grams directly as the document signature { "hel", "ell", "llo" }. This way you can even combine the scan and processing phases to just a single pass over a document.