Hi AllI am trying to understand what gets stored when i configure a field 
indexed and stored for example i have this in my schema.xml<field 
name="articleBody" type="text_general" indexed="true" stored="true" />and    
<fieldType name="text_general" class="solr.TextField" 
positionIncrementGap="100">
      <analyzer type="index">
        <tokenizer class="solr.StandardTokenizerFactory"/>
                <charFilter class="solr.HTMLStripCharFilterFactory"/>
                <filter class="solr.StopFilterFactory" ignoreCase="true" 
words="stopwords.txt" enablePositionIncrements="true" />
            <filter class="solr.LowerCaseFilterFactory"/>
      </analyzer>
      <analyzer type="query">
        <tokenizer class="solr.StandardTokenizerFactory"/>
        <filter class="solr.StopFilterFactory" ignoreCase="true" 
words="stopwords.txt" enablePositionIncrements="true" />
        <filter class="solr.SynonymFilterFactory" synonyms="synonyms.txt" 
ignoreCase="true" expand="true"/>
        <filter class="solr.LowerCaseFilterFactory"/>
      </analyzer>
    </fieldType>

I was expecting that solr will index & store html strip content when i invoke 
query i get some thing like this <str 
name="articleBody"><xhtml:h1><xhtml:b>South African Miners Are Trapped by 
Debt</xhtml:b></xhtml:h1> <xhtml:p><xhtml:b>▸ A surge in high-interest lending 
contributes to mine violence</xhtml:b></xhtml:p> <xhtml:p><xhtml:b>▸ At least 
one bank “may have reckless lending problems”</xhtml:b></xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>In 
2008, platinum miner James Ntseane borrowed 8,000 rand ($886) from 
<xhtml:b>African Bank Investments</xhtml:b> to pay for his grandmother's 
funeral. Soon after, he took out two more loans, totaling 10,000 rand, for a 
sofa and house extension. Four years later he owes at least 30,515 rand, 
according to text messages he gets from African Bank, South Africa's biggest 
provider of unsecured loans. Under a court-ordered payment plan, his employer 
garnishes about 13 percent of his monthly 12,600-rand salary for the lender. He 
doesn't know how much interest he's paying. “They are taking too much money,” 
says Ntseane, 41.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>Ntseane is one of more than 9 million 
South Africans mired in debt. African Bank, <xhtml:b>Bayport Financial 
Services, Capitec Bank Holdings</xhtml:b>, and other firms have led a boom in 
unsecured lending, charging interest as high as 80 percent a year, as is 
allowed there. Last year a series of strikes led to at least 46 deaths, the 
country's worst mining violence since the end of apartheid. “One of the 
contributing factors to all of these strikes has been this surge in unsecured 
lending,” says Mike Schussler, chief economist at the research group <a 
href="http://economists.co.za/";>Economists.co.za</a>, echoing an October 
statement by Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>The 
value of consumer loans not backed by assets such as homes rose 39 percent in 
the year through September, to 140 billion rand, reports the National Credit 
Regulator. The loans made up 10 percent of consumer credit on Sept. 30, up from 
8 percent a year earlier. In November, South Africa's National Treasury and the 
Banking Association of South Africa agreed to review lending affordability 
rules, improve client education, and reduce wage garnishing after the number of 
people with bad credit rose to a record. Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan called 
the rise “worrying” a week earlier.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>George Roussos, an 
executive for central support services at African Bank, says miner Ntseane 
borrowed more than he claims and took out a credit card. (The bank received 
permission from Ntseane, who denies the bank's figures, to discuss his account 
with <xhtml:i>Bloomberg Businessweek</xhtml:i>.) The bank says it stopped 
charging interest in 2011 and has no record of Ntseane making contact after he 
was injured in a home robbery in 2010. “The bank attempts to communicate 
clearly and transparently, employing multilingual consultants,” says 
Roussos.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>South African lenders have re sorted to 
court-ordered wage garnishing in more than 3 million active cases, according to 
the National Debt Mediation Association, a credit industry group that provides 
consumer debt counseling. Kem Westdyk, chief executive of <xhtml:b>Summit 
Garnishee Solutions</xhtml:b>, which helps mining companies review bank 
requests, says at some companies up to 15 percent of workers have wages 
garnished; at one, more than a quarter of those cases involve African Bank. 
“They may have reckless lending problems,” says Westdyk, adding that some 
workers have five or six garnishee orders against them.</xhtml:p> 
<xhtml:p>Ntseane says his loan agent didn't mention garnishment when she agreed 
to delay his loan payments. Although Davies and the country's credit regulator 
have pledged to clamp down on unsecured lending, Ntseane doesn't have high 
hopes. “I don't know when I will stop paying,” he says.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p 
prism:class="byline"><xhtml:i>—Franz Wild, Mike Cohen, and Renee 
Bonorchis</xhtml:i></xhtml:p> <xhtml:p><xhtml:i><xhtml:b>The bottom 
line</xhtml:b> South Africa's unsecured loans jumped 39 percent in a year, and 
millions of workers are stuck in a vicious cycle of 
debt.</xhtml:i></xhtml:p></str>
Can somebody suggest me how to make the html tags that are appearing in the 
field articleBody disappear
Kalyan

                                          

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