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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-8776?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16832384#comment-16832384
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Ram Venkat commented on LUCENE-8776:
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[Simon
Willnauer|https://mail.google.com/jira/secure/ViewProfile.jspa?name=simonw] - I
am frustrated with this change to Lucene, but not at any of you. I am actually
quite grateful to each of you for taking the time to respond to my comments.
Fact is that I am just a user complaining about a free library, without having
made any contribution. I hope to contribute the improvements I have made in the
future, if/when my clients approve.
To summarize this discussion:
# Disallowing negative offsets is a permanent, irrevocable change to Lucene.
Users will not be allowed to workaround this new restriction, although it
affects only those who use postings (Unified Highlighter), at this time.
# This change breaks the ability to split words at index time into multiple
tokens and correctly search and highlight them with span queries, especially in
conjunction with wildcards.There is no easy alternative and the solution
requires a significant enhancement to query parsers.
Can we at least either add these comments to the code or refer this jira issue
from the exception thrown? If you agree, I can submit a patch.
> Start offset going backwards has a legitimate purpose
> -----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: LUCENE-8776
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-8776
> Project: Lucene - Core
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: core/search
> Affects Versions: 7.6
> Reporter: Ram Venkat
> Priority: Major
>
> Here is the use case where startOffset can go backwards:
> Say there is a line "Organic light-emitting-diode glows", and I want to run
> span queries and highlight them properly.
> During index time, light-emitting-diode is split into three words, which
> allows me to search for 'light', 'emitting' and 'diode' individually. The
> three words occupy adjacent positions in the index, as 'light' adjacent to
> 'emitting' and 'light' at a distance of two words from 'diode' need to match
> this word. So, the order of words after splitting are: Organic, light,
> emitting, diode, glows.
> But, I also want to search for 'organic' being adjacent to
> 'light-emitting-diode' or 'light-emitting-diode' being adjacent to 'glows'.
> The way I solved this was to also generate 'light-emitting-diode' at two
> positions: (a) In the same position as 'light' and (b) in the same position
> as 'glows', like below:
> ||organic||light||emitting||diode||glows||
> | |light-emitting-diode| |light-emitting-diode| |
> |0|1|2|3|4|
> The positions of the two 'light-emitting-diode' are 1 and 3, but the offsets
> are obviously the same. This works beautifully in Lucene 5.x in both
> searching and highlighting with span queries.
> But when I try this in Lucene 7.6, it hits the condition "Offsets must not go
> backwards" at DefaultIndexingChain:818. This IllegalArgumentException is
> being thrown without any comments on why this check is needed. As I explained
> above, startOffset going backwards is perfectly valid, to deal with word
> splitting and span operations on these specialized use cases. On the other
> hand, it is not clear what value is added by this check and which highlighter
> code is affected by offsets going backwards. This same check is done at
> BaseTokenStreamTestCase:245.
> I see others talk about how this check found bugs in WordDelimiter etc. but
> it also prevents legitimate use cases. Can this check be removed?
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