jvanzyl 01/09/18 09:32:51 Added: . API.html datasheet.html Log: - a few stray pieces of documentation. ted you can put them where you like, i just wanted to make sure they were visible so they are put in the appropriate place. Revision Changes Path 1.1 jakarta-lucene/API.html Index: API.html =================================================================== <!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <meta name="Author" content="Doug Cutting"> <meta name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.72 [en] (Win98; U) [Netscape]"> <title>Lucene API Documentation</title> </head> <body> <h1> Lucene API Documentation</h1> The <a href="http://www.lucene.com">Lucene</a> API is divided into several packages: <ul> <li> <b><a href="api/com/lucene/util/package-summary.html">com.lucene.util</a></b> contains a few handy data structures, e.g., <a href="api/com/lucene/util/BitVector.html">BitVector</a> and <a href="api/com/lucene/util/PriorityQueue.html">PriorityQueue</a>.</li> <li> <b><a href="api/com/lucene/store/package-summary.html">com.lucene.store</a></b> defines an abstract class for storing persistent data, the <a href="api/com/lucene/store/Directory.html">Directory</a>, a collection of named files written by an <a href="api/com/lucene/store/OutputStream.html">OutputStream</a> and read by an <a href="api/com/lucene/store/InputStream.html">InputStream</a>. Two implementations are provided, <a href="api/com/lucene/store/FSDirectory.html">FSDirectory</a>, which uses a file system directory to store files, and <a href="api/com/lucene/store/RAMDirectory.html">RAMDirectory</a> which implements files as memory-resident data structures.</li> <li> <b><a href="api/com/lucene/document/package-summary.html">com.lucene.document</a></b> provides a simple <a href="api/com/lucene/document/Document.html">Document</a> class. A document is simply a set of named <a href="api/com/lucene/document/Field.html">Field</a>'s, whose values may be strings or instances of <a href="http://java.sun.com/products/jdk/1.2/docs/api/java/io/Reader.html">java.io.Reader</a>.</li> <li> <b><a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/package-summary.html">com.lucene.analysis</a></b> defines an abstract <a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/Analyzer.html">Analyzer</a> API for converting text from a <a href="http://java.sun.com/products/jdk/1.2/docs/api/java/io/Reader.html">java.io.Reader</a> into a <a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/TokenStream.html">TokenStream</a>, an enumeration of <a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/Token.html">Token</a>'s. A TokenStream is composed by applying <a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/TokenFilter.html">TokenFilter</a>'s to the output of a <a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/Tokenizer.html">Tokenizer</a>. A few simple implemenations are provided, including <a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/StopAnalyzer.html">StopAnalyzer</a> and the grammar-based <a href="api/com/lucene/analysis/standard/StandardAnalyzer.html">StandardAnalyzer</a>.</li> <li> <b><a href="api/com/lucene/index/package-summary.html">com.lucene.index</a></b> provides two primary classes: <a href="api/com/lucene/index/IndexWriter.html">IndexWriter</a>, which creates and adds documents to indices; and <a href="api/com/lucene/index/IndexReader.html">IndexReader</a>, which accesses the data in the index.</li> <li> <b><a href="api/com/lucene/search/package-summary.html">com.lucene.search</a></b> provides data structures to represent queries (<a href="api/com/lucene/search/TermQuery.html">TermQuery</a> for individual words, <a href="api/com/lucene/search/PhraseQuery.html">PhraseQuery</a> for phrases, and <a href="api/com/lucene/search/BooleanQuery.html">BooleanQuery</a> for boolean combinations of queries) and the abstract <a href="api/com/lucene/search/Searcher.html">Searcher</a> which turns queries into <a href="api/com/lucene/search/Hits.html">Hits</a>. <a href="api/com/lucene/search/IndexSearcher.html">IndexSearcher</a> implements search over a single IndexReader.</li> <li> <b><a href="api/com/lucene/queryParser/package-summary.html">com.lucene.queryParser</a></b> uses <a href="http://www.suntest.com/JavaCC/">JavaCC</a> to implement a <a href="api/com/lucene/queryParser/QueryParser.html">QueryParser</a>.</li> </ul> To use Lucene, an application should: <ol> <li> Create <a href="api/com/lucene/document/Document.html">Document</a>'s by adding <a href="api/com/lucene/document/Field.html">Field</a>'s.</li> <li> Create an <a href="api/com/lucene/index/IndexWriter.html">IndexWriter</a> and add documents to to it with <a href="api/com/lucene/index/IndexWriter.html#addDocument(com.lucene.document.Document)">addDocument()</a>;</li> <li> Call <a href="api/com/lucene/queryParser/QueryParser.html#parse(java.lang.String)">QueryParser.parse()</a> to build a query from a string; and</li> <li> Create an <a href="api/com/lucene/search/IndexSearcher.html">IndexSearcher</a> and pass the query to it's <a href="api/com/lucene/search/Searcher.html#search(com.lucene.search.Query)">search()</a> method.</li> </ol> Some simple examples of code which does this are: <ul> <li> <a href="../demo/FileDocument.java">FileDocument.java</a> contains code to create a Document for a file.</li> <li> <a href="../demo/IndexFiles.java">IndexFiles.java</a> creates an index for all the files contained in a directory.</li> <li> <a href="../demo/DeleteFiles.java">DeleteFiles.java</a> deletes some of these files from the index.</li> <li> <a href="../demo/SearchFiles.java">SearchFiles.java</a> prompts for queries and searches an index.</li> </ul> To demonstrate these, try: <blockquote><tt>F:\> <b>java demo.IndexFiles rec.food.recipes\soups</b></tt> <br><tt>adding rec.food.recipes\soups\abalone-chowder</tt> <br><tt> </tt>[ ... ] <p><tt>F:\> <b>java demo.SearchFiles</b></tt> <br><tt>Query: <b>chowder</b></tt> <br><tt>Searching for: chowder</tt> <br><tt>34 total matching documents</tt> <br><tt>0. rec.food.recipes\soups\spam-chowder</tt> <br><tt> </tt>[ ... thirty-four documents contain the word "chowder", "spam-chowder" with the greatest density.] <p><tt>Query: <b>path:chowder</b></tt> <br><tt>Searching for: path:chowder</tt> <br><tt>31 total matching documents</tt> <br><tt>0. rec.food.recipes\soups\abalone-chowder</tt> <br><tt> </tt>[ ... only thrity-one have "chowder" in the "path" field. ] <p><tt>Query: <b>path:"clam chowder"</b></tt> <br><tt>Searching for: path:"clam chowder"</tt> <br><tt>10 total matching documents</tt> <br><tt>0. rec.food.recipes\soups\clam-chowder</tt> <br><tt> </tt>[ ... only ten have "clam chowder" in the "path" field. ] <p><tt>Query: <b>path:"clam chowder" AND manhattan</b></tt> <br><tt>Searching for: +path:"clam chowder" +manhattan</tt> <br><tt>2 total matching documents</tt> <br><tt>0. rec.food.recipes\soups\clam-chowder</tt> <br><tt> </tt>[ ... only two also have "manhattan" in the contents. ] <br> [ Note: "+" and "-" are canonical, but "AND", "OR" and "NOT" may be used. ]</blockquote> The <a href="../demo/IndexHTML.java">IndexHtml</a> demo is more sophisticated. It incrementally maintains an index of HTML files, adding new files as they appear, deleting old files as they disappear and re-indexing files as they change. <blockquote><tt>F:\><b>java demo.IndexHTML -create java\jdk1.1.6\docs\relnotes</b></tt> <br><tt>adding java/jdk1.1.6/docs/relnotes/SMICopyright.html</tt> <br><tt> </tt>[ ... create an index containing all the relnotes ] <p><tt>F:\><b>del java\jdk1.1.6\docs\relnotes\smicopyright.html</b></tt> <p><tt>F:\><b>java demo.IndexHTML java\jdk1.1.6\docs\relnotes</b></tt> <br><tt>deleting java/jdk1.1.6/docs/relnotes/SMICopyright.html</tt></blockquote> HTML indexes are searched using SUN's <a href="http://jserv.javasoft.com/products/webserver/index.html">JavaWebServer</a> (JWS) and <a href="../demo/Search.jhtml">Search.jhtml</a>. To use this: <ul> <li> copy <tt>Search.html</tt> and <tt>Search.jhtml</tt> to JWS's <tt>public_html</tt> directory;</li> <li> copy lucene.jar to JWS's lib directory;</li> <li> create and maintain your indexes with demo.IndexHTML in JWS's top-level directory;</li> <li> launch JWS, with the <tt>demo</tt> directory on CLASSPATH (only one class is actually needed);</li> <li> visit <a href="../demo/Search.html">Search.html</a>.</li> </ul> Note that indexes can be updated while searches are going on. <tt>Search.jhtml</tt> will re-open the index when it is updated so that the latest version is immediately available. <br> </body> </html> 1.1 jakarta-lucene/datasheet.html Index: datasheet.html =================================================================== <HTML> <HEAD> <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <META NAME="Author" CONTENT="Doug Cutting"> <META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Mozilla/4.04 [en] (Win95; U) [Netscape]"> <TITLE>Lucene: a full-text search engine in Java</TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY> <H1> Lucene</H1> Lucene is a full-text search engine written in Java. It is efficient, providing high-performance indexing and searching using few system resources. State-of-the-art search algorithms produce highest-quality search results. The use of Java allows easy integration with cross-platform applications. <H2> Potential Applications</H2> <UL> <LI> <B>Searchable E-Mail</B></LI> <BR>Search large e-mail archives instantly; update index as new messages arrive. <LI> <B>CD-ROM-based Online Documentation Search</B></LI> <BR>Search large publications quickly with platform-independent system. <LI> <B>Search Previously-Visited Web Pages</B></LI> <BR>Relocate a page seen weeks or months ago. <LI> <B>Web Site Searching</B></LI> <BR>Let users search all the pages on your website.</UL> <H2> Features</H2> <UL> <LI> <B>Scalable, High-Performance Indexing</B></LI> <DL> <DL> <LI> over 200MB/hour on Pentium II/266</LI> <LI> incremental indexing as fast as batch indexing</LI> <LI> small RAM requirements -- only 1MB heap</LI> <LI> index size roughly 30% the size of text indexed</LI> </DL> </DL> <LI> <B>Powerful, Accurate and Efficient Search Algorithms</B></LI> <DL> <DL> <LI> ranked searching -- best results returned first</LI> <LI> boolean and phrase queries</LI> <LI> fielded searching (e.g., title, author, contents)</LI> <LI> date-range searching</LI> <LI> <B><I>coming soon:</I></B></LI> <DL> <DL> <LI> <I>multiple-index searching with merged results</I></LI> <LI> <I>distributed searching over a network</I></LI> </DL> </DL> </DL> </DL> <LI> <B>Simple API's allow developers to:</B></LI> <DL> <DL> <LI> incorporate new document types</LI> <LI> localize for new languages (already handles most European languages)</LI> <LI> develop new user interfaces</LI> </DL> </DL> <LI> <B>Cross-Platform Solution</B></LI> <DL> <DL> <LI> 100%-pure Java <I>(not yet certified)</I></LI> </DL> </DL> </UL> <H2> Contact</H2> <UL><B>Douglass R. Cutting</B> <BR>Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <BR>Phone: 1 (510) 595-0232</UL> </BODY> </HTML>