Hi,

Thats weird. As far as I know there is no such thing. There is classification 
stuff but I haven't heard of clustering.
http://soleami.com/blog/comparing-document-classification-functions-of-lucene-and-mahout.html

May be others (Dawid Weiss) can clarify?

Ahmet



On Monday, March 10, 2014 4:24 PM, Alessandro Benedetti 
<benedetti.ale...@gmail.com> wrote:
Thank you, Ahmet, i already know Mahout.
What i was curious is if already exists an integration in Solr for Offline
clustering ...
Reading the wiki we can find this phrase : " While Solr contains an
extension for for full-index clustering (*off-line* clustering) this
section will focus on discussing on-line clustering only."[1]
So I was wondering if any documentation stands there :)
[1] https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/solr/Result+Clustering


2014-03-10 14:15 GMT+00:00 Ahmet Arslan <iori...@yahoo.com>:

> Hi Alessandro,
>
> Generally Apache mahout http://mahout.apache.org is recommended for
> offline clustering.
>
> Ahmet
>
>
>
> On Monday, March 10, 2014 4:11 PM, Alessandro Benedetti <
> benedetti.ale...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi guys,
> I'm looking around to find out if it's possible to have a full-index
> /Offline cluster.
> My scope is to make a full index clustering ad for each document have the
> cluster field with the id/label of the cluster at indexing time.
> Anyone know more details regarding this kind of integration with Carrot2 ?
>
> I find only the classic query time clustering approach :
> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/solr/Result+Clustering
>
> Cheers
>
>
> --
> --------------------------
>
> Benedetti Alessandro
> Visiting card : http://about.me/alessandro_benedetti
>
> "Tyger, tyger burning bright
> In the forests of the night,
> What immortal hand or eye
> Could frame thy fearful symmetry?"
>
> William Blake - Songs of Experience -1794 England

>
>


-- 
--------------------------

Benedetti Alessandro
Visiting card : http://about.me/alessandro_benedetti

"Tyger, tyger burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?"

William Blake - Songs of Experience -1794 England

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