Mark, Paul, other folks, Peter Dietz wrote a great reply to a similar question from a while back, I saved a link to it in our internal ticket system, and thus I can easily copy/paste it:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg11934.html This thread has helped me with crafting SOLR queries of many sorts. It would make a great addition to the wiki. -- HARDY POTTINGER <[email protected]> University of Missouri Library Systems http://lso.umsystem.edu/~pottingerhj/ "No matter how far down the wrong road you've gone, turn back." --Turkish proverb On 6/16/11 1:00 PM, "Mark H. Wood" <[email protected]> wrote: >Yes, the documentation of this area of DSpace could do with some >expansion so that people can slice the data in the ways that they >need. Sadly I'm in the same boat with you: while it's fairly clear >how cases are generated by the rest of DSpace, what happens when they >go into Solr and the possibilities for getting data out again are >something of a mystery. Study of the code which develops the simple >stat.s on the stock pages, with a book on Solr in hand, should be a >good place to start. > >*sigh* I sometimes long for the power to ban the unqualified use of >the word "statistics", since nearly everyone agrees that "we should >provide statistics" and nearly everyone has a unique idea of what that >means. > >-- >Mark H. Wood, Lead System Programmer [email protected] >Asking whether markets are efficient is like asking whether people are >smart. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ EditLive Enterprise is the world's most technically advanced content authoring tool. Experience the power of Track Changes, Inline Image Editing and ensure content is compliant with Accessibility Checking. http://p.sf.net/sfu/ephox-dev2dev _______________________________________________ DSpace-tech mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/dspace-tech

