2011/8/19 Hardy Ferentschik <ha...@hibernate.org>: > Hi, > > I am not sure I understand the suggested path parameter. Taking the > example from the forum: > > > class A{ > @IndexEmbedded( > paths={"d.one", "d.two"} > ) > private C see; > } > > class B{ > @IndexEmbedded( > paths={"foo", "d.two"} > ) > private C see; > } > > class C{ > @IndexEmbedded > private Collection<D> d; > @Field > private int foo; > } > > class D{ > @Field > int one; > @Field > int two; > } > > what does it do? What fields get indexed for each entity? > > --Hardy
When indexing type A it would index only {"d.one", "d.two"} as read from it's related C instance, when indexing type B it would index only {"foo", "d.two"}, again read from it's C instance. C && D are indexed as usual, and I'm assuming all entities are marked as @Indexed Maybe "path" should be named differently, "subpaths" ? Otherwise I'm tempted to expect that the prefix should have been included, like in {"see.d.one", "see.d.two"} but I wouldn't include the prefix as it complicates it quite more. I like it because it makes the depth of recursion boundaries very explicit, and also it can be shorted/longer on some specific paths, forcing us to load only and nothing more than what is strictly required to perform the specified fulltext queries, especially when multiple entities are indexed both directly (as an @Indexed root) and as a component of other entities. Sanne _______________________________________________ hibernate-dev mailing list hibernate-dev@lists.jboss.org https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev