backslash*rhode
\*rhode may work.

On Mon, May 17, 2010 at 7:23 AM, Erick Erickson <erickerick...@gmail.com> wrote:
> A couple of things:
> 1> try searching with &debugQuery=on attached to your URL, that'll
> give you some clues.
> 2> It's really worthwhile exploring the admin pages for a while, it'll also
> give you a world of information. It takes a while to understand what the
> various pages are telling you, but you'll come to rely on them.
> 3> Are you really searching with leading and trailing wildcards or is that
> just the mail changing bolding? Because this is tricky, very tricky. Search
> the mail archives for "leading wildcard" to see lots of discussion of this
> topic.
>
> You might back off a bit and try building up to wildcards if that's what
> you're doing....
>
> HTH
> Erick
>
> On Mon, May 17, 2010 at 1:11 AM, Mint o_O! <mint....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm working on the index/search project recently and i found solr which is
>> very fascinating to me.
>>
>> I followed the test successful from the tutorial page. Starting up jetty
>> and
>> run adding new xml (user:~/solr/example/exampledocs$ *java -jar post.jar
>> *.xml*) so far so good at this stage.
>>
>> Now i have create my own testing westpac.xml file with real data I intend
>> to
>> implement, putting in exampledocs and again ran the command
>> (user:~/solr/example/exampledocs$ *java -jar post.jar westpac.xml*).
>> Everything went on very well however when i searched for "*rhode*" which is
>> in the content. And Index returned nothing.
>>
>> Could anyone guide me what I did wrong why i couldn't search for that word
>> even though that word is in my index content.
>>
>> thanks,
>>
>> Mint
>>
>



-- 
Lance Norskog
goks...@gmail.com

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