Hi Keith - here's my solution. Works OK so far...
$pg = current page (1 -> ...)
$pp = per page (defaults to 10)
$index = Zend_Search_Lucene::open($this->_index);
$query = Zend_Search_Lucene_Search_QueryParser::parse($query);
$hits = new ArrayObject($index->find($query));
$results = new stdCLass();
$results->total = count($hits);
$results->hits = array();
if (!count($hits)) {
// report no results...
}
$hits = new LimitIterator($hits->getIterator(), ($pg - 1) *
$pp, $pp);
foreach ($hits as $hit) {
$result = new stdClass();
$result->url = $hit->url;
$result->title = $hit->title;
$result->contents = $hit->contents;
$results->hits[] = $result;
}
// do stuff with $results...
Hi,I am prototyping a site search using Zend_Search, and was wondering if anyone had a good way of paginating the results?Keith Pope Web Developer -----Original Message----- From: Andi Gutmans [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 29 February 2008 05:55 To: Jordan Moore; Kevin McArthur Cc: Michael B Allen; fw-general General; Wil Sinclair Subject: RE: [fw-general] License Compatibility Hi,You can't change the license of ZF itself but you can license your code under any license which is compatible with the New BSD license and I believe you can also license the collective work itself under a different license. In general the New BSD license is very lax and I don't know of a license it's not compatible with.It is typical for software vendors to bundle and update all the pieces their application need so that their customers have an out-of- the-box experience (e.g. Zend Core, our Certified PHP distribution bundles a large amount of 3rd party libraries, PHP extensions, Zend Framework and of course PHP itself).As to releasing updates we will likely follow a similar policy as PHP has. This means releasing a new mini release with critical security issues for the latest version of each major version which has not been end of lifed. So currently we release updates for PHP 4.4.x and PHP 5.2.x. For other versions (5.0, 5.1, 4.3, 4.2) companies who don't want to upgrade need to deal with their own patching. In many cases, they can leverage the patches which were done for the last releases with little modification but no one can guarantee that.Hope that helps. As Bill pointed out, don't trust legal advice you get from anyone here including myself.Andi-----Original Message----- From: Jordan Moore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2008 11:15 AM To: Kevin McArthur Cc: Michael B Allen; fw-general General; Wil Sinclair Subject: Re: [fw-general] License Compatibility I see two problems with requiring my users to download ZF separately: 1. It's not user friendly. Users should be able to download a single archive, extract it, and install the application. 2. I can't guarantee compatibility with every version of ZF. Also, if I used the same logic with all included libraries for this application, users would need to download a total of 4 externallibraries, and I would need to account for the varying versions of all4 libraries. By including the external libraries in my application's distribution, users only need to maintain a single application, not an application and 4 libraries. On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 10:53 AM, Kevin McArthur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:I can't see any reason the BSD license would prevent this, however,theideal solution would be to maintain an external reference to theofficialframework repo, such that any fixes or changes could be contributedbackunder the CLA and therefore available to everyone. I'm not sure applications built upon the Zend Framework shoulddistributethe framework itself, as from time-to-time, there will likely besecurityupdates backported etc. Getting the latest version of a minor versionsay1.0.3a should probably be the preferred approach. Some leadership from Zend on the whole packaging, distribution,patchingand security issues would be nice to have though. K Jordan Moore wrote: Not sure why I said MIT, since I had the license right in front ofmeand it clearly says "New BSD License"... but thanks for the reply. If anyone has an opposing opinion, let me know... On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 10:35 AM, Michael B Allen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:On 2/28/08, Jordan Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:I'm developing a distributable application that will be >using/including the Zend Framework. I was planning on releasingtheapplication with a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License. Does anyone know if this is compatible with the MITlicensethat ZF is using?ZF isn't MIT. It's BSD with no advert. Although AFAIK they are logically identical. Since BSD is pretty much a "do whatever you want" license then it is basically compatible with everything. Go for it. In fact I think you could even take ZF and s/Zend/Jordan/g and callit"Jordan's Framework". For a while the Linux guys were taking FreeBSD drivers and just ripping out the BSD license header and putting intheGPL header. But I think they stopped doing that because the BSDpeoplebecame very annoyed. And rightly so since it was effectively a one-way-street because they could not bring any GPL'd patches back into FreeBSD. Mike -- Michael B Allen PHP Active Directory SPNEGO SSO http://www.ioplex.com/-- Jordan Moore - Creative Director Sanctus Studios LLC PO Box 2202 Tacoma, WA 98401 (253) 238-8676--allpay.net Limited, Fortis et Fides, Whitestone Business Park, Whitestone, Hereford, HR1 3SE.Registered in England No. 02933191. UK VAT Reg. No. 666 9148 88. Telephone: 0870 243 3434, Fax: 0870 243 6041. Website: www.allpay.net Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]This email, and any files transmitted with it, is confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom it is addressed. If you have received this email in error please notify the allpay.net Information Security Manager at the number above.
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