Take a look at the custom tokenizer API. I think tokens returned don't
necessarily have to be substrings of the text. So, maybe the text you
"tokenize" could be the file path, but the tokens could be things you
pull from the contents of the file.
Just a thought,
Cheers,
Sam
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On Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 11:13 PM, Dami Laurent (PJ)
wrote:
>>Is it possible to use FTS3 for search without storing the actual file
>>contents/search terms/keywords in a row. In other words, create a FTS3
>>tables with rows that only contains an ID and populate the B-Tree with
>>keywords for search
>Is it possible to use FTS3 for search without storing the actual file
>contents/search terms/keywords in a row. In other words, create a FTS3
>tables with rows that only contains an ID and populate the B-Tree with
>keywords for search.
>
Each FTS3 table t is stored internally within three regular
On Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 11:54 PM, pipilu wrote:
>
> My question is:
> Is it possible to use FTS3 for search without storing the actual file
> contents/search terms/keywords in a row. In other words, create a FTS3
> tables with rows that only contains an ID and populate the B-Tree with
> keywords
On Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 2:54 PM, pipilu wrote:
> Hi:
> I am trying to build a sqlite3 database to index files. What I want to do is
> to keep the files in the file system on the disk (not in the database) and
> index the files with keywords such that when a search is performed, the
> right file na
Hi:
I am trying to build a sqlite3 database to index files. What I want to do is
to keep the files in the file system on the disk (not in the database) and
index the files with keywords such that when a search is performed, the
right file names are returned.
My question is:
Is it possible to use F
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