[
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-2458?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12870317#action_12870317
]
Mark Miller commented on LUCENE-2458:
-------------------------------------
I still don't think this falls under bug territory myself - which leads me to
thinking that Version is not the correct way to handle it.
The icecream example showing that this is not a 'perfect' solution even for
english does not show its a bug in my opinion either.
I still vote to make this an option. Or make another QueryParser that works
with more languages, and I guess with less 'biased' english language operators.
The whole idea of the new QP was to make that type of thing easy if I remember
right.
bq. So users who want to emulate the English-optimized "forced PhraseQuery even
when user didn't say so explicitly" can create QP
This should be an option, not an emulation.
> queryparser shouldn't generate phrasequeries based on term count
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: LUCENE-2458
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-2458
> Project: Lucene - Java
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: QueryParser
> Reporter: Robert Muir
> Assignee: Robert Muir
> Priority: Critical
> Fix For: 3.1, 4.0
>
> Attachments: LUCENE-2458.patch, LUCENE-2458.patch
>
>
> The current method in the queryparser to generate phrasequeries is wrong:
> The Query Syntax documentation
> (http://lucene.apache.org/java/3_0_1/queryparsersyntax.html) states:
> {noformat}
> A Phrase is a group of words surrounded by double quotes such as "hello
> dolly".
> {noformat}
> But as we know, this isn't actually true.
> Instead the terms are first divided on whitespace, then the analyzer term
> count is used as some sort of "heuristic" to determine if its a phrase query
> or not.
> This assumption is a disaster for languages that don't use whitespace
> separation: CJK, compounding European languages like German, Finnish, etc. It
> also
> makes it difficult for people to use n-gram analysis techniques. In these
> cases you get bad relevance (MAP improves nearly *10x* if you use a
> PositionFilter at query-time to "turn this off" for chinese).
> For even english, this undocumented behavior is bad. Perhaps in some cases
> its being abused as some heuristic to "second guess" the tokenizer and piece
> back things it shouldn't have split, but for large collections, doing things
> like generating phrasequeries because StandardTokenizer split a compound on a
> dash can cause serious performance problems. Instead people should analyze
> their text with the appropriate methods, and QueryParser should only generate
> phrase queries when the syntax asks for one.
> The PositionFilter in contrib can be seen as a workaround, but its pretty
> obscure and people are not familiar with it. The result is we have bad
> out-of-box behavior for many languages, and bad performance for others on
> some inputs.
> I propose instead that we change the grammar to actually look for double
> quotes to determine when to generate a phrase query, consistent with the
> documentation.
--
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
-
You can reply to this email to add a comment to the issue online.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]