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I'm just getting started with solr but thought this is somewhat counterintuitive. Please help.

Two of my documents have author = "Rick Riordan". When I run these queries:

Rick

=> returns 2 docs, good!

author:Rick

=> returns nothing.... why?

author:"Rick Riordan"

=> returns 2 docs.... looks like it assumes exact match.

7
  • 2
    show us your schema.xml file
    – Pankaj
    Sep 16, 2015 at 6:06
  • 1
    could you share the schema.xml ? Sep 16, 2015 at 6:06
  • schema fragment: { "name":"author", "type":"strings"},
    – fatdragon
    Sep 16, 2015 at 6:08
  • it was created automatically. looks like "strings" type is defined as { "name":"strings", "class":"solr.StrField", "sortMissingLast":true, "multiValued":true},
    – fatdragon
    Sep 16, 2015 at 6:10
  • Type-->Strings. There is a fieldtype tag associated with strings. Paste that in here
    – Pankaj
    Sep 16, 2015 at 6:11

2 Answers 2

1

You can use this as a fieldType.

It'll do the following- 1. Generate tokens on white spaces. So that you can either search on individual words or whole word. 2. It will remove duplicate indexes reducing index size.

<fieldType name="strings" class="solr.TextField" sortMissingLast="true" omitNorms="true">
    <analyzer>
        <tokenizer class="solr.WhitespaceTokenizerFactory"/>
        <!--  <tokenizer class="solr.KeywordTokenizerFactory"/>-->
        <filter class="solr.RemoveDuplicatesTokenFilterFactory"/>
    </analyzer>
</fieldType>
1

Change the field Type for your Field author. Re-index the same and Try Searching the same.

<fieldType>
<analyzer type="index">
        <tokenizer class="solr.WhitespaceTokenizerFactory"/>
        <filter class="solr.LowerCaseFilterFactory"/>
    </analyzer>
    <analyzer type="query">
        <tokenizer class="solr.WhitespaceTokenizerFactory"/>
        <filter class="solr.LowerCaseFilterFactory"/>
    </analyzer>
    </fieldType>

fire your query on a field name like below

q=:author:Rick

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