Jay:
Here's what's currently available:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/solr/Phonetic+Matching
Not sure what version of Solr some of them were added in
Best,
Erick
On Sat, May 7, 2016 at 9:30 PM, Jay Potharaju wrote:
> Thanks will check it out.
>
>
> On Sat, May 7, 2016 at 7:0
Thanks will check it out.
On Sat, May 7, 2016 at 7:05 PM, Susheel Kumar wrote:
> Jay,
>
> There are mainly three phonetics algorithms available in Solr i.e.
> RefinedSoundex, DoubleMetaphone & BeiderMorse. We did extensive comparison
> considering various tests cases and found BeiderMorse to b
Jay,
There are mainly three phonetics algorithms available in Solr i.e.
RefinedSoundex, DoubleMetaphone & BeiderMorse. We did extensive comparison
considering various tests cases and found BeiderMorse to be the best among
those for finding sound like matches and it also supports multiple
language
Thanks for the feedback, I was getting correct results when searching for
jon & john. But when I tried other names like 'khloe' it matched on
'collier' because the phonetic filter generated KL as the token.
Is phonetic filter the best way to find similar sounding names?
On Wed, Mar 23, 2016 at 12
The "phonetic_en" analyzer definition available in solr-schema does return
documents having "Jon", "JN", "John" when search term is "John". Checkout
screen shot here : http://imgur.com/0R6SvX2
This wiki page explains how phonetic matching works :
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/solr/Ph
I'd start by putting LowerCaseFF before the PhoneticFilter.
But then, you say you were using Analysis screen and what? Do you get
the matches when you put your sample text and the query text in the
two boxes in the UI? I am not sure what "look at my solr data" means
in this particular context.
Re