Hi Chris,
sorry for letting you wait, I’ve been offline over the weekend.
Thank you again for all your help. Unfortunately, my documents are multi-language and multi-diacritics so my users expect it to match athgabáil, athgabail, and athgabāil as the same word. They also want wildcard searching to work in the same way.
This should be no problem, even with the full-text default settings. An example: the following query...
/descendant::*[text() contains text 'athgabāi.*' using diacritics insensitive using wildcards]
...will give you three results for the following document...
<xml> <term>athgabáil</term> <term>athgabail</term> <term>athgabāil</term> </xml>
...and the results will be retrieved by the full-text index, using the default settings:
- applying full-text index for "athgabāi.*" using wildcards using language 'English'
The solution that I mentioned in my last mail is required if you want to do both diacritics sensitive and insensitive search.
Does this help? Christian
At the moment the query looks like this and it does not use the full text index:
declare variable $term as xs:string external := 'athgab.*'; declare variable $col as xs:string external := 'edil'; <results>{subsequence(ft:mark(for $x in collection($col)//entry where $x//text() contains text {$term} using wildcards using diacritics insensitive order by fn:lower-case(fn:replace(($x//orth[1]/text())[1], '\p{P}|\d+','')) collation "?lang=ga" return $x), 1, 5000)}</results>
If anyone has any suggestions, I would be grateful.
All the best, Chris
On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 10:35 PM, Christian Grün christian.gruen@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Chris,
as you already noted, the full-text index will only be utilized with the options that you choose when creating an index. If you want to do more fine-grained searches, it’s usually recommendable to choose the most general options for creating the index (case insensitive, diacritics insensitive, etc). and then refine the results in a second step. This can e.g. look as follows :
declare function local:search($db, $terms) { for $result in db:open($db)//*[text() contains text { $terms }] return $result[text() contains text { $terms } using case sensitive] }; local:search('factbook', ('German', 'English'))
Hope this helps, Christian
On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 10:54 PM, Chris Yocum cyocum@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Christian,
Apologies for bringing this back up but if I use "using diacritics insensitive" in the full text search, it seems to turn full text searching off. I have diacritics true on the database. I am just suprised to see diacritics causing the full text searching to be turned off.
All the best, Chris
On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 01:18:26PM +0200, Christian Grün wrote:
Hi Chris,
there are various caches involved when evaluating queries, but I can't see for the given query where a cache may be utilized. However, your query may be evaluated faster if you simplify the nested where clause:
<results>{ subsequence( ft:mark( for $x in collection($col)//entry where $x//text() contains text { $term } using wildcards order by fn:lower-case( fn:replace(($x//orth[1]/text())[1], '\p{P}|\d+','') ) collation "?lang=ga" return $x ), 1, 5000 ) }</results>
You could as well use a predicate with position(), it may be evaluated faster than subsequence (I'm not sure, though, because most time will probably be spent for ordering all results):
<results>{ ft:mark( for $x in collection($col)//entry where $x//text() contains text { $term } using wildcards order by fn:lower-case( fn:replace(($x//orth[1]/text())[1], '\p{P}|\d+','') ) collation "?lang=ga" return $x )[position() = 1 to 5000] }</results>
Could you please open the InfoView in the GUI, execute the query again and check if the full-text index is applied?
Christian
On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 12:02 PM, Christopher Yocum cyocum@gmail.com wrote:
declare variable $term as xs:string external; declare variable $col as xs:string external; <results>{subsequence(ft:mark(for $x in collection($col)//entry where $x//text()[. contains text {$term} using wildcards] order by fn:lower-case(fn:replace(($x//orth[1]/text())[1], '\p{P}|\d+','')) collation "?lang=ga" return $x), 1, 5000)}</results>