Great, thank you!

On Jul 7, 4:47 pm, Pat Allan <[email protected]> wrote:
> You can get the weight/rank via each_with_weighting:
>
>   results = Model.search 'foo'
>   results.each_with_weighting do |result, weight|
>     # ...
>   end
>
> Keep in mind there's no upper limit on weight values - just that the higher 
> it is, the better the match, according to Sphinx. And your basic match modes 
> (all, any) don't do anything much in the way of weighting - in most cases, 
> you'll just see the default weight of 1. The extended or extended2 match 
> modes are your best bet.
>
> Cheers
>
> --
> Pat
>
> On 07/07/2011, at 9:22 PM, sergiu wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hi there,
>
> > I already use sphinx and thinking sphinx for searching. I need to add
> > a new feature, which is knowing that for example if I search for "ruby
> > on rails", I want to know the rank for each returned result. Can I
> > access the sphinx internal @rank attribute in any way? because I think
> > that's exactly what I'm looking for.
>
> > Again: I want to know for each of my search results, that they rank
> > for example 100 out of 1000. Any other suggestions are appreciated.
> > Thank you!
>
> > Sergiu
>
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