Yes, Lux automatically indexes text in XML elements associated with
their element names so you can run efficient XPath/XQuery queries; in
your case I would write:
q=/MainData/Info/Info[@name="Bob"][city="Cincinnati"]
or
q=//Info[@name="Bob"][city="Cincinnati"]
It also let's you mix "regular" Solr queries with XPath, too
On 3/9/14 8:16 PM, Alexandre Rafalovitch wrote:
Are you using or have you looked at http://luxdb.org/ ? Might be relevant.
Regards,
Alex.
Personal website: http://www.outerthoughts.com/
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/alexandrerafalovitch
- Time is the quality of nature that keeps events from happening all
at once. Lately, it doesn't seem to be working. (Anonymous - via GTD
book)
On Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 6:23 AM, cju <ch...@utley.com> wrote:
I have some XML stored in Solr that looks like this:
<MainInfo>
<Info>
<Info name="Bob" city="Columbus" />
<Info name="Joe" city="Cincinnati" />
</Info>
</MainInfo>
What I’d like to do is get a hit for this document if there’s an element in
the XML where (@name=”Bob” AND @city=”Cincinnati”). If I write something
like this, I’ll get a hit – although I’m not actually matching what I’m
looking for:
q=MainData.Info.Info@name:Bob AND MainData.Info.Info@city:Cincinnati
I want to my criteria only to match attributes within the same element, for
example:
<MainData>
<Info>
<Info name="Bob" city="Columbus" />
<Info name="Joe" city="Cincinnati" />
<Info name="Bob" city="Cincinnati" /> (only match this)
</Info>
</MainData>
Is it possible to write a query to achieve this without changing my XML?
--
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