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Soundex was developed by Robert C. Russell and Margaret King[8] Odell and patented in 1918[9] and 1922.[10] A variation, American Soundex, was used in the 1930s for a retrospective analysis of the US censuses from 1890 through 1920. The Soundex code came to prominence in the 1960s when it was the subject of several articles in the Communications and Joual of the Association for Computing Machinery, and especially when described in Donald Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming.[11]
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) maintains the current rule set for the official implementation of Soundex used by the U.S. Govement.[1] These encoding rules are available from NARA, upon request, in the form of General Information Leaflet 55, "Using the Census Soundex".
American Soundex
The Soundex code for a name consists of a letter followed by three numerical digits: the letter is the first letter of the name, and the digits encode the remaining consonants. Consonants at a similar place of articulation share the same digit so, for example, the labial consonants B, F, P, and V are each encoded as the number 1.
The correct value can be found as follows:
Retain the first letter of the name and drop all other occurrences of a, e, i, o, u, y, h, w.
Replace consonants with digits as follows (after the first letter):
b, f, p, v → 1
c, g, j, k, q, s, x, z → 2
d, t → 3
l → 4
m, n → 5
r → 6
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برچسب : نویسنده : 5technology3000d بازدید : 26 تاريخ : يکشنبه 18 دی 1401 ساعت: 19:16