th Sciences
Syngenta UK
Email: geraint.d...@syngenta.com
-Original Message-
From: Mark Fenbers [mailto:mark.fenb...@noaa.gov]
Sent: 16 October 2015 19:43
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: File-based Spelling
On 10/13/2015 9:30 AM, Dyer, James wrote:
Mark,
The older spellcheck implementatio
Geraint Duck
Data Scientist
Toxicology and Health Sciences
Syngenta UK
Email: geraint.d...@syngenta.com
-Original Message-
From: Mark Fenbers [mailto:mark.fenb...@noaa.gov]
Sent: 16 October 2015 19:43
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: File-based Spelling
On 10/13/2015 9:30 AM,
On 10/13/2015 9:30 AM, Dyer, James wrote:
Mark,
The older spellcheck implementations create an n-gram sidecar index, which is
why you're seeing your name split into 2-grams like this. See the IR Book by
Manning et al, section 3.3.4 for more information. Based on the results you're
getting,
he query string you are trying.
James Dyer
Ingram Content Group
-Original Message-
From: Mark Fenbers [mailto:mark.fenb...@noaa.gov]
Sent: Monday, October 12, 2015 2:38 PM
To: Solr User Group
Subject: File-based Spelling
Greetings!
I'm attempting to use a file-based spell checker.
Let's see your solrconfig entries? Doubtless something innocent
seeming isn't quite right.
This might provide some clues:
http://lucidworks.com/blog/2015/03/04/solr-suggester/
The reference guide is the first place to look, a lot of this
functionality has changed
in recent years so I always try t
Greetings!
I'm attempting to use a file-based spell checker. My sourceLocation is
/usr/share/dict/linux.words, and my spellcheckIndexDir is set to
./data/spFile. BuildOnStartup is set to true, and I see nothing to
suggest any sort of problem/error in solr.log. However, in my
./data/spFile/