Thanks for your reply.
I tried *B*ing but its result is not comparable to Google.
I need to get result in google. but its is not free.
I don't know that by using Bing can I access to this result.


On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 6:33 PM, Mark Bennett <mark.benn...@lucidworks.com>
wrote:

> Answers below.
>
> --
> Mark Bennett / LucidWorks: Search & Big Data / mark.benn...@lucidworks.com
> Office: 408-898-4201 / Telecommute: 408-733-0387 / Cell: 408-829-6513
>
> On Jun 21, 2014, at 7:07 AM, Saeedeh Alimardani <sa1.alimard...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi
> > I am new to Solr and Lucene.
> > I have some simple and general question about Solr.
> > 1.dose Solr have database? or it only index document that we define for
> it?
> That's an interesting question.
>
> Some years back people would have said "no", Solr is not a database,
> because it is not a traditional database with SQL and transactional
> integrity.
>
> But, even back then, you could read and WRITE values to Solr, so it acted
> a bit like a database.
>
> In the Solr 4x days there's been more work done to insure transactions are
> handled consistently in Solr and there's a move to consider Solr a valid
> "NoSQL" database.
>
> So, Solr doesn't ship with a traditional embedded database.  However, Solr
> can be used as NoSQL database if you want.
>
> Solr can also index data that is stored in traditional databases like
> Oracle or PostgreSQL or MySQL.
>
> > 2.can we use Solr to search like other search engine?
> Yes, this is the main point of Solr.
>
> > 3.can we use Solr to search among all websites like Google?
> Yes, this was answered by Aman in his email.
>
> If you really want to do this, you might start by looking at Nutch.
>
> If you just need to do a few searches across the entire Internet, you
> might look at Bing, they allow you to run queries against their servers in
> OpenSearch standard. Google discourages you from using their service for
> that purpose.
>
> Best of luck and welcome to the community,
> Mark
>
>

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