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python - How to use full-text search in sqlite3 database in django?

I am working on a django application with sqlite3 database, that has a fixed database content. By fixed I mean the content of the db won't change over time. The model is something like this:

class QScript(models.Model):
    ch_no = models.IntegerField()
    v_no = models.IntegerField()
    v = models.TextField()

There are around 6500 records in the table. Given a text that may have some words missing, or some words misspelled, I need to determine its ch_no and v_no. For example, if there is a v field in db with text "This is an example verse", a given text like "This an egsample verse" should give me the ch_no and v_no from db. This can be done using Full text search I believe.

My queries are:

  1. can full-text search do this? My guess from what I have studied, it can, as said in sqlite3 page: full-text searches is "what Google, Yahoo, and Bing do with documents placed on the World Wide Web". Cited in SO, I read this article too, along with many others, but didn't find anything that closely matches my requirements.

  2. How to use FTS in django models? I read this but it didn't help. It seems too outdated. Read here that: "...requires direct manipulation of the database to add the full-text index". Searching gives mostly MySQL related info, but I need to do it in sqlite3. So how to do that direct manipulation in sqlite3?


Edit:

Is my choice of sticking to sqlite3 correct? Or should I use something different (like haystack+elasticsearch as said by Alex Morozov)? My db will not grow any larger, and I have studied that for small sized db, sqlite is almost always better (my situation matches the fourth in sqlite's when to use checklist).

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SQLite's FTS engine is based on tokens - keywords that the search engine tries to match.

A variety of tokenizers are available, but they are relatively simple. The "simple" tokenizer simply splits up each word and lowercases it: for example, in the string "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog", the word "jumps" would match, but not "jump". The "porter" tokenizer is a bit more advanced, stripping the conjugations of words, so that "jumps" and "jumping" would match, but a typo like "jmups" would not.

In short, the SQLite FTS extension is fairly basic, and isn't meant to compete with, say, Google.

As for Django integration, I don't believe there is any. You will likely need to use Django's interface for raw SQL queries, for both creating and querying the FTS table.


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