Thanks Yonik for the reply. I got just a couple more questions,
1) Why does the explanantion print so many times?
2) Since my query is made up of multiple terms how do I know what term "x"
is referring to?
On 3/3/06, Yonik Seeley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I think Lucene in Action does a
Hi All,
I'm currently using the Default Similarity with the Boolean Query add
function to append clauses. The problem I face is this, given a query
, where = a term
it returns me a document which that has just ONE term in it say and
nothing else. Surprisingly, the hits score for this
scores by calling Hits.score(). So you should search
at first to get Hits object.
regards,
Koji
-Original Message-
From: Eugene Ezekiel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 6:03 PM
To: java-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Similarity scores for all docs
Hi,
Is
Hi,
Is there any way to get the similarity scores for each document in the
index? I can iterate thru each doc in the index using the IndexReader
but not sure how to get the similarity score for that doc.
Thanks.
--
Regards,
Eugene
---
Oh...ok. Where is this method created then, I can't seem to find it in
QueryParser?
Thanks.
--
Regards,
Eugene
Erik Hatcher wrote:
:)
Query(field) in this case is a method call.
Erik
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I got this nagging problem that I can't figure out in the source code of
Lucene.
In the file org/apache/lucene/queryParser/QueryParser.java,
there's a method called parse that returns a Query (see below):
public Query parse(String query) throws ParseException {
ReInit(new FastCharStream(n