On 11/5/2015 8:38 AM, Jack Krupansky wrote:
> It's unfortunate, but the official Solr reference guide does not have a
> table of contents:
> http://mirror.olnevhost.net/pub/apache/lucene/solr/ref-guide/apache-solr-ref-guide-5.3.pdf
> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/solr/Apache+Solr+Reference+Guide

While it's true that there is no table of contents included in the
reference guide text, Acrobat Reader will automatically generate a table
of contents from markers within the guide for navigation purposes.

See the left side of this window:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/6foaz7xeq11vyuy/solr-ref-guide-toc.png?dl=0

> My Solr 4.4 Deep Dive is now a little outdated (since 4.4) and even then
> was not complete (no SolrCloud or DIH), but its table of contents would
> probably give you a fair view of the sheer magnitude of the number of Solr
> features:
> http://www.lulu.com/shop/jack-krupansky/solr-4x-deep-dive-early-access-release-7/ebook/product-21203548.html
>
> It probably still has the most in-depth coverage and examples for token
> analysis and update processors, even though more recent Solr changes are
> not covered.

I have not seen your book.  I bet it's awesome, and for $10 I should
just go ahead and buy it.

The recent title "Solr In Action" covers Solr pretty well, though it is
somewhat pricy.  I have not read all of it.

https://www.manning.com/books/solr-in-action?a_bid=39472865&a_aid=1

As far as I know, there are no currently available books covering
version 5, but I believe there is at least one on the horizon.

Thanks,
Shawn

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