Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
122 lines (88 loc) · 5.34 KB

File metadata and controls

122 lines (88 loc) · 5.34 KB
title SOUNDEX (Transact-SQL) | Microsoft Docs
ms.custom
ms.date 03/14/2017
ms.prod sql
ms.prod_service database-engine, sql-database, sql-data-warehouse, pdw
ms.reviewer
ms.technology t-sql
ms.topic language-reference
f1_keywords
SOUNDEX
SOUNDEX_TSQL
dev_langs
TSQL
helpviewer_keywords
SOUNDEX function
comparing string data
strings [SQL Server], similarity
strings [SQL Server], comparing
SOUNDEX values
ms.assetid 8f1ed34e-8467-4512-a211-e0f43dee6584
author MashaMSFT
ms.author mathoma
manager craigg
monikerRange >=aps-pdw-2016||=azuresqldb-current||=azure-sqldw-latest||>=sql-server-2016||=sqlallproducts-allversions||>=sql-server-linux-2017||=azuresqldb-mi-current

SOUNDEX (Transact-SQL)

[!INCLUDEtsql-appliesto-ss2008-all-md]

Returns a four-character (SOUNDEX) code to evaluate the similarity of two strings.

Topic link icon Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions

Syntax

SOUNDEX ( character_expression )  

Arguments

character_expression
Is an alphanumeric expression of character data. character_expression can be a constant, variable, or column.

Return Types

varchar

Remarks

SOUNDEX converts an alphanumeric string to a four-character code that is based on how the string sounds when spoken. The first character of the code is the first character of character_expression, converted to upper case. The second through fourth characters of the code are numbers that represent the letters in the expression. The letters A, E, I, O, U, H, W, and Y are ignored unless they are the first letter of the string. Zeroes are added at the end if necessary to produce a four-character code. For more information about the SOUNDEX code, see The Soundex Indexing System.

SOUNDEX codes from different strings can be compared to see how similar the strings sound when spoken. The DIFFERENCE function performs a SOUNDEX on two strings, and returns an integer that represents how similar the SOUNDEX codes are for those strings.

SOUNDEX is collation sensitive. String functions can be nested.

SOUNDEX Compatibility

In previous versions of [!INCLUDEssNoVersion], the SOUNDEX function applied a subset of the SOUNDEX rules. Under database compatibility level 110 or higher, [!INCLUDEssNoVersion] applies a more complete set of the rules.

After upgrading to compatibility level 110 or higher, you may need to rebuild the indexes, heaps, or CHECK constraints that use the SOUNDEX function.

  • A heap that contains a persisted computed column defined with SOUNDEX cannot be queried until the heap is rebuilt by running the statement ALTER TABLE <table> REBUILD.

  • CHECK constraints defined with SOUNDEX are disabled upon upgrade. To enable the constraint, run the statement ALTER TABLE <table> WITH CHECK CHECK CONSTRAINT ALL.

  • Indexes (including indexed views) that contain a persisted computed column defined with SOUNDEX cannot be queried until the index is rebuilt by running the statement ALTER INDEX ALL ON <object> REBUILD.

Examples

The following example shows the SOUNDEX function and the related DIFFERENCE function. In the first example, the standard SOUNDEX values are returned for all consonants. Returning the SOUNDEX for Smith and Smythe returns the same SOUNDEX result because all vowels, the letter y, doubled letters, and the letter h, are not included.

-- Using SOUNDEX  
SELECT SOUNDEX ('Smith'), SOUNDEX ('Smythe');  

[!INCLUDEssResult] Valid for a Latin1_General collation.

  
----- -----   
S530  S530    
  
(1 row(s) affected)  

The DIFFERENCE function compares the difference of the SOUNDEX pattern results. The following example shows two strings that differ only in vowels. The difference returned is 4, the lowest possible difference.

-- Using DIFFERENCE  
SELECT DIFFERENCE('Smithers', 'Smythers');  
GO  

[!INCLUDEssResult] Valid for a Latin1_General collation.

-----------   
4             
  
(1 row(s) affected)  

In the following example, the strings differ in consonants; therefore, the difference returned is 2, the greater difference.

SELECT DIFFERENCE('Anothers', 'Brothers');  
GO  

[!INCLUDEssResult] Valid for a Latin1_General collation.

-----------   
2             
  
(1 row(s) affected)  

See Also

DIFFERENCE (Transact-SQL)
String Functions (Transact-SQL)
ALTER DATABASE Compatibility Level (Transact-SQL)