Our database contains documents with a lot of metadata, including relationships between those documents. Fictional example:
<document>
<metadata>
<document-number>ID 12345 : 2012</document-number>
<publication-year>2012</publication-year>
<cross-reference>ID 67890 : 1995</cross-reference>
<cross-reference>ID 67890 : 1998</cross-reference>
<cross-reference>ID 67891 : 2000</cross-reference>
<cross-reference>ID 12345 : 2004</cross-reference>
<supersedes>ID 12345 : 2004</supersedes>
...
</metadata>
</document>
<document>
<metadata>
<document-number>ID 12345 : 2004</document-number>
<publication-year>2004</publication-year>
<cross-reference>ID 67890 : 1995</cross-reference>
<cross-reference>ID 67890 : 1998</cross-reference>
<cross-reference>ID 67891 : 2000</cross-reference>
<cross-reference>ID 12345 : 2012</cross-reference>
<cross-reference>ID 12345 : 2001</cross-reference>
<superseded-by>ID 12345 : 2012</superseded-by>
<supersedes>ID 12345 : 2001</supersedes>
...
</metadata>
</document>
We're using a 1-box search, based on the Marklogic search api to allow users to search these documents. The search grammar describes a variety of contraints and search options, but mostly (and by default) they search by a field defined to include most of the metadata elements, with (somewhat) carefully chosen weights (what really matters here is that document-number
has the highest weight.)
The problem is that the business wants quite specific ordering of results, and I can't think of a way to achieve it using the search api.
The requirement that's causing trouble is that if the user search matches a document number (say they search for "12345",) then all documents with that document number should be at the top of the result-set, ordered by descending date. It's easy enough to get them at the top of the result-set; document-number
has the highest weight, so sorting by score works fine. The problem is that the secondary sort by date doesn't work because even though all the document-number
matches have higher scores than other documents, they don't have the same score, so they end up ordered by how often the search term appears in the rest of the metadata; which isn't really meaningful at all.
What I think we really need is a way of having the search api score results simply by the highest weighted element that matches the search-term, without reference to any other matches in the document. I've had a look at the scoring algorithms and can't see one that does that; have I missed something or is this just not possible? Obviously, it doesn't have to be score
that we order by; if there's some other way to get at the score of the single best match in a document and use it for sorting, that would be fine.
Is there some other solution I haven't even thought of?
I thought of doing two searches (one on document-number
, and one on the whole metadata tree) and then combining the results, but that seems like it's going to cause a lot of pain with pagination and performance. Which sort-of defeats the purpose of using the search api in the first place.
I should add that it is correct to have those other matches in the result-set, so we can't just search only on document-number
.