I use the shingle filter to help with the “one word or two” problem. Is it “baby sitter” or “babysitter”? With the shingle filter, searches for “babysitter” will work for content with “baby sitter”, but not the other way around.
If you can identify a list of the one/two-word compounds that are in your content, synonyms are a better solution. wunder Walter Underwood wun...@wunderwood.org http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog) > On Mar 4, 2017, at 8:57 PM, Ryan Yacyshyn <ryan.yacys...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi everyone, > > I was thinking of using the Shingle Filter to help solve an issue I'm > facing. I can see this working in the analysis panel in the Solr admin, but > not when I make my queries. > > I find out it's because of the query parser splitting up the tokens on > white space before passing them along. > > This made me wonder what a practical use case can be, for using the shingle > filter? > > Any enlightenment on this would be much appreciated! > > Thanks, > Ryan