I've simplified the example, sorry it misled you. Date sorting is now working for you as expected?
Sent from my iPad On 11 May 2010, at 23:56, Jochen Kempf <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Robert! > > I changed the name of my date field from "mydate" to "date" - so far there > are no problems. > > As concerincing the single quotes around the sort parameter - I followed the > example for type-specific sorting on > http://github.com/rnewson/couchdb-lucene where it says "Type-specific > sorting is also available by appending the type between angle brackets (e.g, > 'sort=amount')." > > Well, I am not a native english speaker and thought that "angle brackets" > are "single quotes" as I did misinterprete the example given in the docu. > > After using a dictionary I noticed it has to be: "?sort=date<date>..." > > > Thanks for your help anyway! > > 2010/5/11 Robert Newson <[email protected]> > >> Also, you have single quotes around the sort parameter? >> >> Try; >> ?sort=date&q=date<date>:[2010-02-10 TO 2010-05-10] >> >> not >> ?'sort=date'&q=date<date>:[2010-02-10 TO 2010-05-10] >> >> On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 11:41 PM, Robert Newson <[email protected]> >> wrote: >>> You called your date field 'mydate' not 'date'. >>> >>> B. >>> >>> On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 11:11 PM, Jochen Kempf <[email protected]> >> wrote: >>>> I just realized that I cannot sort the query result by a date type >> field. >>>> >>>> I tried it using the following queries: >>>> ?'sort=\date'&q=date<date>:[2010-02-10 TO 2010-05-10] >>>> ?'sort=date'&q=date<date>:[2010-02-10 TO 2010-05-10] >>>> >>>> and got always the same result: >>>> { >>>> "q": "date:[1265770800000 TO 1273464000000]", >>>> "plan": "NumericRangeQuery(1265770800000 TO 1273464000000 AS >>>> Long,boost=1.0)", >>>> "etag": "1a28be0d8443", >>>> "skip": 0, >>>> "limit": 25, >>>> "total_rows": 3, >>>> "search_duration": 2, >>>> "fetch_duration": 1, >>>> "rows": [ >>>> { >>>> "id": "488f231a58b84f745fca058c4b3dd03d", >>>> "score": 1, >>>> "fields": { >>>> "date": "1273464000000" >>>> } >>>> }, >>>> { >>>> "id": "488f231a58b84f745fca058c4b5ca2e1", >>>> "score": 1, >>>> "fields": { >>>> "date": "1267498800000" >>>> } >>>> }, >>>> { >>>> "id": "488f231a58b84f745fca058c4b5c99cf", >>>> "score": 1, >>>> "fields": { >>>> "date": "1268103600000" >>>> } >>>> } >>>> ] >>>> } >>>> >>>> Am I doing something wrong? >>>> >>>> 2010/5/10 Jochen Kempf <[email protected]> >>>> >>>>> Thanks - that indeed fixed the issue! >>>>> >>>>> 2010/5/10 Robert Newson <[email protected]> >>>>> >>>>> Please ensure you are using the 0.5.0 release, several date-related >>>>>> bugs were fixed a few days before the release. >>>>>> >>>>>> To be sure you have the right artifacts, consider using the official >>>>>> zip: >>>>>> >> http://github.com/downloads/rnewson/couchdb-lucene/couchdb-lucene-0.5.0-dist.zip >>>>>> >>>>>> B. >>>>>> >>>>>> On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 4:20 PM, Jochen Kempf <[email protected]> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>> I am trying to add a date field to a index view in CouchDB Lucene >> but >>>>>>> whatever I try I always get a "caused Unable to parse the date: >>>>>>> org.mozilla.javascript.natived...@19e11a1" error. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Here is the easiest code example I tried: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> "index":"function(doc) { >>>>>>> var result = new Document(); >>>>>>> var mydate = new Date(2010, 4, 10); >>>>>>> result.add(mydate, {'field':'mydate', 'type': 'date', >> 'store':'yes'}); >>>>>>> result.add(doc.year, {'field':'year', 'store':'yes'}); >>>>>>> result.add(doc.month, {'field':'month', 'store':'yes'}); >>>>>>> result.add(doc.day, {'field':'day', 'store':'yes'}); >>>>>>> return result; >>>>>>> }" >>>>>>> Any suggestions? >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>
