Java – Lucene highlighter
Lucene 4.3. How does a highlighter work? I want to print out the search results from the document (as the search word and the 8 words after the word) How do I use fluorescent pens to do this? I have added the complete TXT, HTML and XML documents to the file and added them to my index. Now I have a search formula from which I may add a highlighter function:
String index = "index"; String field = "contents"; String queries = null; int repeat = 1; boolean raw = true; //not sure what raw really does??? String queryString = null; //keep null,prompt user later for it int hitsPerPage = 10; //leave it at 10,go from there later //need to add all files to same directory index = "C:\\Users\\plib\\Documents\\index"; repeat = 4; IndexReader reader = DirectoryReader.open(FSDirectory.open(new File(index))); IndexSearcher searcher = new IndexSearcher(reader); Analyzer analyzer = new StandardAnalyzer(Version.LUCENE_43); BufferedReader in = null; if (queries != null) { in = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(new FileInputStream(queries),"UTF-8")); } else { in = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(system.in,"UTF-8")); } QueryParser parser = new QueryParser(Version.LUCENE_43,field,analyzer); while (true) { if (queries == null && queryString == null) { // prompt the user System.out.println("Enter query. 'quit' = quit: "); } String line = queryString != null ? queryString : in.readLine(); if (line == null || line.length() == -1) { break; } line = line.trim(); if (line.length() == 0 || line.equalsIgnoreCase("quit")) { break; } Query query = parser.parse(line); System.out.println("Searching for: " + query.toString(field)); if (repeat > 0) { // repeat & time as benchmark Date start = new Date(); for (int i = 0; i < repeat; i++) { searcher.search(query,null,100); } Date end = new Date(); System.out.println("Time: "+(end.getTime()-start.getTime())+"ms"); } doPagingSearch(in,searcher,query,hitsPerPage,raw,queries == null && queryString == null); if (queryString != null) { break; } } reader.close();
}
Solution
I had the same problem and finally came across this article
http://vnarcher.blogspot.ca/2012/04/highlighting-text-with-lucene.html
The key part is that when you iterate over the result, gethighlightedfield. Is called on the result value to highlight
private String getHighlightedField(Query query,Analyzer analyzer,String fieldName,String fieldValue) throws IOException,InvalidTokenOffsetsException { Formatter formatter = new SimpleHTMLFormatter("<span class="\"MatchedText\"">","</span>"); Queryscorer queryscorer = new Queryscorer(query); Highlighter Highlighter = new Highlighter(formatter,queryscorer); Highlighter.setTextFragmenter(new SimpleSpanFragmenter(queryscorer,Integer.MAX_VALUE)); Highlighter.setMaxDocCharsToAnalyze(Integer.MAX_VALUE); return Highlighter.getBestFragment(this.analyzer,fieldName,fieldValue); }
In this case, it assumes that the output will be HTML, which simply wraps the highlighted text with < span > Use the CSS class of matchedtext You can then define custom CSS rules to perform whatever you want to highlight