You are right, it does work. I'll look into my example to see where the difference is.
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 5:30 PM, Grant Ingersoll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote: > Here's a unit test: > import junit.framework.TestCase; > import org.apache.lucene.analysis.snowball.SnowballAnalyzer; > import org.apache.lucene.analysis.standard.StandardAnalyzer; > import org.apache.lucene.document.Document; > import org.apache.lucene.document.Field; > import org.apache.lucene.index.IndexWriter; > import org.apache.lucene.queryParser.QueryParser; > import org.apache.lucene.search.Hits; > import org.apache.lucene.search.IndexSearcher; > import org.apache.lucene.search.Query; > import org.apache.lucene.store.RAMDirectory; > > > public class SpanishTest extends TestCase { > > public void testSpanish() throws Exception { > RAMDirectory directory = new RAMDirectory(); > String content = "niños"; > IndexWriter writer = new IndexWriter(directory, new StandardAnalyzer(), > true); > Document document = new Document(); > document.add(new Field("name", content, Field.Store.YES, > Field.Index.TOKENIZED)); > SnowballAnalyzer snowballAnalyzer = new SnowballAnalyzer("Spanish"); > writer.addDocument(document, snowballAnalyzer); > writer.close(); > > IndexSearcher searcher = new IndexSearcher(directory); > QueryParser parser = new QueryParser("name", snowballAnalyzer); > Query query = parser.parse(content); > System.out.println("Query: " + query); > Hits hits = searcher.search(query); > assertTrue("hits Size: " + hits.length() + " is not: " + 1, > hits.length() == 1); > Document theDoc = hits.doc(0); > String nombre = theDoc.get("name"); > System.out.println("Nombre: " + nombre); > } > } > > > When I run this in IntelliJ, I get: > > Query: name:niñ > Nombre: niños > > Process finished with exit code 0 > > > Are you by chance indexing XML? Indirectly, yes > > -- Juan Pablo Morales Ingenian Software ltda