Hi Hem,
are you expecting Solr to parse your natural language query out of the box ?
Are you using any custom query parser ?

If not, you need to follow the lucene Syntax to define engative queries.

And be careful to the edge cases [1] .

Cheers

[1] https://wiki.apache.org/solr/NegativeQueryProblems

On Wed, Nov 23, 2016 at 1:54 PM, Hem Naidu <
hem.na...@teschglobal.com.invalid> wrote:

> Alex
>
> Whenever the keywords or sentence followed by "no", "not", etc should be
> excluded from the search results. Does solr support this feature?
>
> Thanks
>
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>
> > On Nov 23, 2016, at 12:09 AM, Alexandre Rafalovitch <arafa...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >
> > How do you _know_ it is not 'apparent' ? Is it because it is preceded by
> > the keyword 'no'? Just that keyword? At what maximum distance?
> >
> > Regards,
> >   Alex
> >
> > On 23 Nov 2016 2:59 PM, "Hem Naidu" <hem.na...@teschglobal.com.invalid>
> > wrote:
> >
> >> Gurus,
> >>
> >> I am new to Solr, I have a requirement to index entire pdf/word
> documents
> >> using Solr Tika. Which was successful and able to get the search results
> >> displayed. Now I need to fine tune the results or adjust index so the
> >> negative statements should be filtered out the results like my input
> text
> >> for index from the documents would be
> >> -----------------------------------
> >> Fortunately no concurrent trauma was found
> >> In no apparent distress
> >> --------------------------------------
> >>
> >> If user searches for concurrent trauma or distress the search engine
> should
> >> filter out the results as it not apparent symptom.
> >>
> >> Any help on whether Solr can do this?
> >> If so, do I need to adjust the index or build custom queries?
> >>
> >> Any help on this would be greatly appreciated !
> >>
> >> Thanks
> >>
> >>
> >>
>



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