The only way I can imagine this would work would be to parse through all possible combinations of letters, and compare them against the dictionary. The fastest way to compare them against a dictionary is to turn that dictionary into a hash. That way, you can quickly look up whether the word was a valid word.
I key my dictionary by lower casing all letters in the dictionary word and then removing any non-alpha characters just to be on the safe side. For the value, I'll store the actual dictionary word. For example:
cant => "can't",
google => "Google",
That way, I can display the correctly spelled word.
I found Math::Combinatorics which looked pretty good, but wasn't quite working the way I hoped. You give it a list of letters, and it will return all combinations of those letters in the number of letters you specify. Thus, I thought all I had to do was convert the letters into a list of individual letters, and simply loop through all possible combinations!
No... That gives me all unordered combinations. What I then had to do was with each combination, list all possible permutations of those letters. Blah! Ptooy! Yech!
So, the infamous looping in a loop. Actually, three loops.
* The outer loop simply count down all numbers of combinations from 1 to the number of letters in the word.
* The next finds all unordered combinations of each of those letter groups.
* Finally, the last one takes all unordered combinations and returns a list of permutations from those combinations.
Now, I can finally take those permutations of letters and compare it against my dictionary of words. Surprisingly, the program ran much faster than I expected considering it had to turn a 235,886 word dictionary into a hash, then loop through a triple decker loop to find all permutations of all combinations of all possible number of letters. The whole program ran in less than two seconds.
#! /usr/bin/env perl
#
use strict;
use warnings;
use feature qw(say);
use autodie;
use Data::Dumper;
use Math::Combinatorics;
use constant {
LETTERS => "EBLAIDL",
DICTIONARY => "/usr/share/dict/words",
};
#
# Create Dictionary Hash
#
open my $dict_fh, "<", DICTIONARY;
my %dictionary;
foreach my $word (<$dict_fh>) {
chomp $word;
(my $key = $word) =~ s/[^[:alpha:]]//;
$dictionary{lc $key} = $word;
}
#
# Now take the letters and create a Perl list of them.
#
my @letter_list = split // => LETTERS;
my %valid_word_hash;
#
# Outer Loop: This is a range from one letter combinations to the
# maximum letters combination
#
foreach my $num_of_letters (1..scalar @letter_list) {
#
# Now we generate a reference to a list of lists of all letter
# combinations of $num_of_letters long. From there, we need to
# take the Permutations of all those letters.
#
foreach my $letter_list_ref (combine($num_of_letters, @letter_list)) {
my @letter_list = @{$letter_list_ref};
# For each combination of letters $num_of_letters long,
# we now generate a permeation of all of those letter
# combinations.
#
foreach my $word_letters_ref (permute(@letter_list)) {
my $word = join "" => @{$word_letters_ref};
#
# This $word is just a possible candidate for a word.
# We now have to compare it to the words in the dictionary
# to verify it's a word
#
$word = lc $word;
if (exists $dictionary{$word}) {
my $dictionary_word = $dictionary{$word};
$valid_word_hash{$word} = $dictionary_word;
}
}
}
}
#
# I got lazy here... Just dumping out the list of actual words.
# You need to go through this list to find your longest and
# shortest words. Number of syllables? That's trickier, you could
# see if you can divide on CVC and CVVC divides where C = consonant
# and V = vowel.
#
say join "\n", sort keys %valid_word_hash;
Running this program produced:
$ ./test.pl | column
a al balei bile del i lai
ab alb bali bill delia iba laid
abdiel albe ball billa dell ibad lea
abe albi balled billed della id lead
abed ale balli blad di ida leal
abel alible be blade dial ide led
abide all bea blae dib idea leda
abie alle bead d die ideal lei
able allie beal da dieb idle leila
ad allied bed dab dill ie lelia
ade b beid dae e ila li
adib ba bel dail ea ill liable
adiel bad bela dal ed l libel
ae bade beld dale el la lid
ai bae belial dali elb lab lida
aid bail bell dalle eld label lide
aide bal bella de eli labile lie
aiel bald bid deal elia lad lied
ail baldie bide deb ell lade lila
aile bale bield debi ella ladle lile
Lingua::ES::Syllabify
module for castellano, written by Al·ber·to Mon·te·ro A·sen·jo.ABL
returnBALL
? Or can each letter only be used once?