Hi Harsha, my blog can help : http://alexbenedetti.blogspot.co.uk/2015/07/solr-you-complete-me.html
Take a look to the related section. Cheers On Sun, Jun 26, 2016 at 5:27 PM, Erick Erickson <erickerick...@gmail.com> wrote: > 1> The difference is that the factory returns the original field > from a "sidecar" index. If you're content with just firing a standard > query at your main index and returning the associated fields > then you can do this from the main index. You won't be able > to do the sophisticated stuff with weights though. > > 2> https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-6336 > > 3> You can have multiple suggesters in the same component. > > Best, > Erick > > On Thu, Jun 23, 2016 at 10:21 PM, Harsha JSN <harsha....@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi, > > I have some doubts regarding usage of AnalyzingInfixLookupFactory as > > lookup implementation for suggestions. > > > > 1.) AnalyzingInfixLookupFactory constructs n-grams for the suggestion > field > > while building suggestions index. If the main index which is used for > > search is already having n-grams for this field, is it still preferred to > > choose AnalyzingInfixLookupFactory or can we directly build suggestions > > from the main index? > > > > 2.) Also, AnalyzingInfixLookupFactory returns duplicate records if the > > suggestion field has same value in multiple documents. Instead if i > search > > suggestions from main index (n-grams) i can eliminate the duplicates by > > grouping the results. But grouping can be a complex operation.Can you > guide > > the correct approach here? > > > > 3.) Choosing FuzzyLookupFactory looks beneficial, but we have to filter > the > > results over user context and also we need to provide infix search > > capabilities for suggestions which we can't. > > > > Can some one please help on this? Thanks in advance. > > > > Harsha. > -- -------------------------- Benedetti Alessandro Visiting card : http://about.me/alessandro_benedetti "Tyger, tyger burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry?" William Blake - Songs of Experience -1794 England