Oops ... ok, I've determined that LIMO won't work.  LIMO will allow me to 
browse through my 130000 documents in firefox one at a time, but I can't query 
them.  Not much help there.  I learned this by reading in Gospodnetic and 
Hatcher's "Lucene in Action" (I didn't find the information elsewhere).

----- Original Message ----
From: Kai_testing Middleton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2007 12:09:10 PM
Subject: Re: Luke/LIMO - how to "surf" query results

Nutch has a different query syntax than Lucene:
http://ref.syr.edu/search/en/help.html

I'm interested in using the full Lucene syntax.  

I've glanced at opensearch and extensions in my reading:  can you give me a bit 
more of an indication about how those would be used in this context?  It hadn't 
even occurred to me that those might be something to try.

--Kai M.

----- Original Message ----
From: Renaud Richardet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2007 11:39:57 AM
Subject: Re: Luke/LIMO - how to "surf" query results

hi Kai,

I don't understand why you can't use the web-interface of Nutch (or 
opensearch interface), can you explain why?

Alternatively, Luke has extensions -- maybe you can work it out this way...

- Renaud


Kai_testing Middleton wrote:
> I'm interested in playing with varying use-cases in my corpus: I want to 
> throw a lot of queries at it.  I have used nutch to gather about 132000 pages 
> (as reported by Luke) and want to throw queries against these documents using 
> Luke (or possibly LIMO - haven't tried that one yet).  Unfortunately for me, 
> Luke's UI is not optimized for quick browser viewing of document results.  
> For example, when I perform a query in Luke I can't just double click on a 
> resulting row to have it come up in the browser -- Luke is built as a general 
> Lucene index tool and doesn't assume the documents represent web pages.  I 
> have to double click the result row to get the detail view, click the URL 
> field, click the button to copy that to the clipboard, paste it into the URL 
> field of the browser, delete lots of extraneous characters from the URL line, 
> then press enter.  This makes it more cumbersome to try lots of URLs quickly, 
> the way one might do with a google search.  
>
> Does anyone know of a better way?  Would LIMO be quicker for this since it's 
> browser-based?
>
>   









       
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