Reader small image

You're reading from  Scaling Big Data with Hadoop and Solr, Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inApr 2015
Publisher
ISBN-139781783553396
Edition1st Edition
Concepts
Right arrow
Author (1)
Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar
Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar
author image
Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar

Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar is an innovator and an enterprise architect with 16 years of software design and development experience, specifically in the areas of big data, enterprise search, data analytics, text mining, and databases. He is passionate about architecting new software implementations for the next generation of software solutions for various industries, including oil and gas, chemicals, manufacturing, utilities, healthcare, and government infrastructure. In the past, he has authored three books for Packt Publishing: two editions of Scaling Big Data with Hadoop and Solr and one of Scaling Apache Solr. He has also worked with graph databases, and some of his work has been published at international conferences such as VLDB and ICDE.
Read more about Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar

Right arrow

Querying for information in Solr


We have already seen how Apache Solr effectively uses different request handlers to provide consumers with extensive ways of getting search results. Each Request Handler uses its own query parser, which extracts the parameters and their values from the query string and forms Lucene Query Objects. The standard query parser allows greater precision over search data; DisMaxQueryParser and Extended DisMaxQueryParser provide a Google-like searching syntax while searching. Depending upon which request handler called, the query syntax is changed. Let's look at some of the important terms:

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Scaling Big Data with Hadoop and Solr, Second Edition
Published in: Apr 2015Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781783553396

Author (1)

author image
Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar

Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar is an innovator and an enterprise architect with 16 years of software design and development experience, specifically in the areas of big data, enterprise search, data analytics, text mining, and databases. He is passionate about architecting new software implementations for the next generation of software solutions for various industries, including oil and gas, chemicals, manufacturing, utilities, healthcare, and government infrastructure. In the past, he has authored three books for Packt Publishing: two editions of Scaling Big Data with Hadoop and Solr and one of Scaling Apache Solr. He has also worked with graph databases, and some of his work has been published at international conferences such as VLDB and ICDE.
Read more about Hrishikesh Vijay Karambelkar

Term

Meaning

q?<string>

The query string <String> can support wildcards (*:*); for example, title:Scaling*

fl=id,book-name

The field list that a search response will return

sort=author asc

Results/facets to be sorted by authors in an ascending order

price[* TO 100]&rows=10&start=5

Looks for price between 0 and 100; limits the result to 10 rows...