This is a great help, thank you!
Brett Moyer
-Original Message-
From: Erick Erickson
Sent: Monday, November 25, 2019 4:12 PM
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Odd Edge Case for SpellCheck
If you’re using direct spell checking, it looks for the _indexed_ term. So this
means
t;
> Brett Moyer
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Jörn Franke
> Sent: Friday, November 22, 2019 8:34 AM
> To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
> Subject: Re: Odd Edge Case for SpellCheck
>
> Stemming involved ?
>
>> Am 22.11.2019 um 14:23 schrieb Moyer, Brett :
>&
Yes we are stemming, ahh so we shouldn't stem our words to be spelled?
Brett Moyer
-Original Message-
From: Jörn Franke
Sent: Friday, November 22, 2019 8:34 AM
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Odd Edge Case for SpellCheck
Stemming involved ?
> Am 22.11.2019
Stemming involved ?
> Am 22.11.2019 um 14:23 schrieb Moyer, Brett :
>
> Hello, we have spellcheck running, using the index as the dictionary. An odd
> use case came up today wanted to get your thoughts and see if what we
> determined is correct. Use case: User sends a query for q=brokerage,
>
Hello, we have spellcheck running, using the index as the dictionary. An odd
use case came up today wanted to get your thoughts and see if what we
determined is correct. Use case: User sends a query for q=brokerage, spellcheck
fires and returns "brokerage". Looking at the output I see that solr