Hardy:
Since your use-case is so restricted, I'd recommend that you
just construct a filter. I think you'll find it's much faster than
you'd think at first glance. Of course, "Your mileage may
vary" Is there any equivalent phrase like "Your kilometerage
may vary" ?
Most of the discussion in the a
On Tue, 13 Nov 2007 16:12:26 +0100, Erick Erickson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks for your help.
I'm certainly not an expert on ranking and scoring, but I've got to
assume that this approach influences scoring.
No doubt. The question is if it matters for this particular use case. For
th
Hardy:
I'm certainly not an expert on ranking and scoring, but I've got to assume
that this approach influences scoring.
Another issue is how you indexed multiple values. If you took a hint from
the SynonymAnalyzer example in Lucene In Action, and indexed all the
substrings with an increment of 0
Hi,
I have a question regarding the way I got around the 'TooManyClauses'
exception when using wild card queries
(http://wiki.apache.org/lucene-java/LuceneFAQ#head-06fafb5d19e786a50fb3dfb8821a6af9f37aa831).
I am using Lucene in conjunction with Hibernate Search
(http://www.hibernate.org/