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php - Percentage of OR conditions matched in mongodb

I have got my data in following format..

{
  "_id" : ObjectId("534fd4662d22a05415000000"),
  "product_id" : "50862224",
  "ean" : "8808992479390",
  "brand" : "LG",
  "model" : "37LH3000",
  "features" : [{
      {
      "key" : "Screen Format",
      "value" : "16:9",
    }, {
      "key" : "DVD Player / Recorder",
      "value" : "No",
    }, 
      "key" : "Weight in kg",
      "value" : "12.6",
    }
    ... so on
    ]
}

I need to compare features of one product with others and divide the result into separate categories ( 100% match, 50-99 % match) based on % of feature matches..

My initial thought was to prepare a dynamic query with or condition for each feature and do the percentage thing in php but then that means mongodb will return me even those product which only have 1 feature matching. And I I think nearly all products of a category might have some feature in common, so I fear I might be working on lot of products in php.

I have two questions basically.

  1. is there any alternate ways?
  2. And is the data structure I am using is good enough to support the functionality I am looking for, Or should I consider changing it
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Well your solution really should be MongoDB specific otherwise you will end up doing your calculations and possible matching on the client side, and that is not going to be good for performance.

So of course what you really want is a way for that to have that processing on the server side:

db.products.aggregate([

    // Match the documents that meet your conditions
    { "$match": {
        "$or": [
            { 
                "features": { 
                    "$elemMatch": {
                       "key": "Screen Format",
                       "value": "16:9"
                    }
                }
            },
            { 
                "features": { 
                    "$elemMatch": {
                       "key" : "Weight in kg",
                       "value" : { "$gt": "5", "$lt": "8" }
                    }
                }
            },
        ]
    }},

    // Keep the document and a copy of the features array
    { "$project": {
        "_id": {
            "_id": "$_id",
            "product_id": "$product_id",
            "ean": "$ean",
            "brand": "$brand",
            "model": "$model",
            "features": "$features"
        },
        "features": 1
    }},

    // Unwind the array
    { "$unwind": "$features" },

    // Find the actual elements that match the conditions
    { "$match": {
        "$or": [
            { 
               "features.key": "Screen Format",
               "features.value": "16:9"
            },
            { 
               "features.key" : "Weight in kg",
               "features.value" : { "$gt": "5", "$lt": "8" }
            },
        ]
    }},

    // Count those matched elements
    { "$group": {
        "_id": "$_id",
        "count": { "$sum": 1 }
    }},

    // Restore the document and divide the mated elements by the
    // number of elements in the "or" condition
    { "$project": {
        "_id": "$_id._id",
        "product_id": "$_id.product_id",
        "ean": "$_id.ean",
        "brand": "$_id.brand",
        "model": "$_id.model",
        "features": "$_id.features",
        "matched": { "$divide": [ "$count", 2 ] }
    }},

    // Sort by the matched percentage
    { "$sort": { "matched": -1 } }

])

So as you know the "length" of the $or condition being applied, then you simply need to find out how many of the elements in the "features" array match those conditions. So that is what the second $match in the pipeline is all about.

Once you have that count, you simply divide by the number of conditions what were passed in as your $or. The beauty here is that now you can do something useful with this like sort by that relevance and then even "page" the results server side.

Of course if you want some additional "categorization" of this, all you would need to do is add another $project stage to the end of the pipeline:

    { "$project": {
        "product_id": 1
        "ean": 1
        "brand": 1
        "model": 1,
        "features": 1,
        "matched": 1,
        "category": { "$cond": [
            { "$eq": [ "$matched", 1 ] },
            "100",
            { "$cond": [ 
                { "$gte": [ "$matched", .7 ] },
                "70-99",
                { "$cond": [
                   "$gte": [ "$matched", .4 ] },
                   "40-69",
                   "under 40"
                ]} 
            ]}
        ]}
    }}

Or as something similar. But the $cond operator can help you here.

The architecture should be fine as you have it as you can have a compound index on the "key" and "value" for the entries in your features array and this should scale well for queries.

Of course if you actually need something more than that, such as faceted searching and results, you can look at solutions like Solr or elastic search. But the full implementation of that would be a bit lengthy for here.


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