Start with something you are passionate about. Solr is big and complex
enough that doing something just because you want to contribute is
just going to make your head explode.
Pick an interesting topic you have experience with and do a vertical
understanding of it (from UI to source code to test).
I see. I will be sure to check the other lists too. Thank you.
What I am inclined to achieve this fall is may be to have a better
understanding of the source code and
if possible contribute some changes.
Could someone point me in the starting direction how I go about this ?
Should I start off by
You are right where you should be. Welcome.
The other (dev) list is for developers, so those who improve Solr and
Lucene itself.
If you use specific 3rd party software, they may have additional lists
of their own. Same, if you rely on something like Tika heavily (used
by Solr to extract data from
Hello,
Just checking if I am in the right mailing list. I am a new Solr user. I
have been using Apache Solr since May 2016. I wanted to collaborate with
other users of this software. Am i in the right mailing list ?
Regards,
Charan.
>...and I've just blogged about some of the issues one can run into with this
>sort of project, hope this is useful!
http://www.flax.co.uk/blog/2016/05/13/old-new-query-parser/
+1 completely non-trivial task to roll your own.
I'd add that incorporating multiterm analysis (analysis/normalization
On 13/05/2016 10:41, Charlie Hull wrote:
On 12/05/2016 23:50, Brandon Miller wrote:
Hello, all! I'm a BloombergBNA employee and need to obtain/write a
dtSearch parser for solr (and probably a bunch of other things a little
later).
I've looked at the available parsers and thought that the surrou
ample, go to this branch:
https://github.com/tballison/lucene-addons/tree/lucene5.5-0.1
-Original Message-
From: Charlie Hull [mailto:char...@flax.co.uk]
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2016 5:41 AM
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: dtSearch parser & Introduction
On 12/05/2
On 12/05/2016 23:50, Brandon Miller wrote:
Hello, all! I'm a BloombergBNA employee and need to obtain/write a
dtSearch parser for solr (and probably a bunch of other things a little
later).
I've looked at the available parsers and thought that the surround parser
may do the trick, but it apparen
Hello, all! I'm a BloombergBNA employee and need to obtain/write a
dtSearch parser for solr (and probably a bunch of other things a little
later).
I've looked at the available parsers and thought that the surround parser
may do the trick, but it apparently doesn't like nested N or W subqueries.
I
gt;>> outputs
>>> * Understanding the DISMAX parser
>>> * Using the Explain output to tune your results relevance
>>> * Using the Schema browser
>>>
>>> Wednesday, December 2, 2009
>>> 11:00am PST / 2:00pm EST
>>>
>>> Click he
gt;> Click here to sign up:
>> http://www.eventsvc.com/lucidimagination/120209?trk=WR-DEC2009-AP
>>
>
>
>
--
View this message in context:
http://old.nabble.com/Webinar%3A-An-Introduction-to-Basics-of-Search-and-Relevancy-with--Apache-Solr-hosted-by-Lucid-Imagination-tp26487883p26617451.html
Sent from the Solr - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Is there, or will there be, a screencast of this available?
I'm sorry to have missed it.
Tom Hill wrote:
In this introductory technical presentation, renowned search expert Mark
Bennett, CTO of Search Consultancy New Idea Engineering,
will present practical tips and examples to help you quickl
In this introductory technical presentation, renowned search expert Mark
Bennett, CTO of Search Consultancy New Idea Engineering,
will present practical tips and examples to help you quickly get productive
with Solr, including:
* Working with the "web command line" and controlling your inputs and
gt; value="/usr/local/solr"
> type="java.lang.String"
> override="true" />
>
>
>
> 4. I tried putting the same into my context.xml file but then it just
> overrode the context for the manager and r
override="true" />
>
>
>
> 4. I tried putting the same into my context.xml file but then it just
> overrode the context for the manager and ruined that whole thing for me.
>
> Honestly. Any help would be *much* appreciated but shouldn't Tomcat be
> the easiest way to run SOLR?
>
> Thank you,
> David
>
>
--
View this message in context:
http://www.nabble.com/introduction-and-help%21-tp16137526p16237615.html
Sent from the Solr - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 1:51 AM, David Geller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Honestly. Any help would be *much* appreciated but shouldn't Tomcat be
> the easiest way to run SOLR?
The easiest way to run Solr is:
cd example
java -jar start.jar
If you want to set it up with Tomcat yourself, see the
I normally wouldn't just signup to a list and post immediately but...
I hope there are some Tomcat experts here.
I'm trying to setup solr and tomcat. I get the following:
INFO: HTMLManager: start: Starting web application at '/solr'
Mar 19, 2008 12:57:26 AM org.apache.solr.servlet.SolrDispatchF
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