Yes I missed that requirement (as Steven also pointed out in a private e-mail). I now agree that the combinatorics are required.

Another possibility to consider (if the queries are large, which actually seems unlikely) is to use the default behavior where all terms are optional, sort by relevance, and truncate the result list on the client side after some unwanted term is found. I *think* the scoring should find only docs with the searched-for terms first, although if there are a lot of repeated terms maybe not? Also result counts will be screwy.

-Mike

On 10/27/2010 09:34 AM, Toke Eskildsen wrote:
That does not work either as it requires that all the terms in the query
are present in the document. The original poster did not state this
requirement. On the contrary, his examples were mostly single-word
matches, implying an OR-search at the core.

The query-explosion still seems like the only working idea. Maybe Varun
could comment on the maximum numbers of terms that his queries will
contain?

Regards,
Toke Eskildsen

On Wed, 2010-10-27 at 15:02 +0200, Mike Sokolov wrote:
Right - my point was to combine this with the previous approaches to
form a query like:

samsung AND android AND GPS AND word_count:3

in order to exclude documents containing additional words. This would
avoid the combinatoric explosion problem otehrs had alluded to earlier.
Of course this would fail because android is "mis-" spelled :)

-Mike

On 10/27/2010 08:45 AM, Steven A Rowe wrote:
I'm pretty sure the word-count strategy won't work.


If I search with the text "samsung andriod GPS", search results
should only conain "samsung", "GPS", "andriod" and "samsung andriod".

Using the word-count strategy, a document containing "samsung andriod PDQ" 
would be a hit, but Varun doesn't want it, because it contains a word that is not in the 
query.

Steve


-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Sokolov [mailto:soko...@ifactory.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 27, 2010 7:44 AM
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: RE: How do I this in Solr?

You might try adding a field containing the word count and making sure
that
matches the query's word count?

This would require you to tokenize the query and document yourself,
perhaps.

-Mike


-----Original Message-----
From: Varun Gupta [mailto:varun.vgu...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2010 11:26 PM
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: How do I this in Solr?

Thanks everybody for the inputs.

Looks like Steven's solution is the closest one but will lead
to performance issues when the query string has many terms.

I will try to implement the two filters suggested by Steven
and see how the performance matches up.

--
Thanks
Varun Gupta


On Wed, Oct 27, 2010 at 8:04 AM, scott chu (???)
<scott....@udngroup.com>wrote:


I think you have to write a "yet exact match" handler

yourself (I mean

yet cause it's not quite exact match we normally know).

Steve's answer

is quite near your request. You can do further work based

on his solution.

At the last step, I'll suggest you eat up all blank within query
string and query result, respevtively&   only returns those results
that has equal string length as the query string's.

For example, giving:
*query string = "Samsung with GPS"
*query results:
resutl 1 = "Samsung has lots of mobile with GPS"
result 2 = "with GPS Samsng"
result 3 = "GPS mobile with vendors, such as Sony, Samsung"

they become:
*query result = "SamsungwithGPS" (length =14) *query results:
resutl 1 = "SamsunghaslotsofmobilewithGPS" (length =29) result 2 =
"withGPSSamsng" (length =14) result 3 =
"GPSmobilewithvendors,suchasSony,Samsung" (length =43)

so result 2 matches your request.

In this way, you can avoid case-sensitive,

word-order-rearrange load

of works. Furthermore, you can do refined work, such as

remove white

characters, etc.

Scott @ Taiwan


----- Original Message ----- From: "Varun Gupta"
<varun.vgu...@gmail.com>

To:<solr-user@lucene.apache.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2010 9:07 PM

Subject: How do I this in Solr?


   Hi,

I have lot of small documents (each containing 1 to 15

words) indexed

in Solr. For the search query, I want the search results

to contain

only those documents that satisfy this criteria "All of

the words of

the search result document are present in the search query"

For example:
If I have the following documents indexed: "nokia n95", "GPS",
"android", "samsung", "samsung andriod", "nokia andriod",

"mobile with GPS"

If I search with the text "samsung andriod GPS", search results
should only conain "samsung", "GPS", "andriod" and

"samsung andriod".

Is there a way to do this in Solr.

--
Thanks
Varun Gupta





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