SYNOPSIS
my $analyzer = KinoSearch::Analysis::PolyAnalyzer->new(
language => 'es',
);
# or...
my $analyzer = KinoSearch::Analysis::PolyAnalyzer->new(
analyzers => [
$lc_normalizer,
$custom_tokenizer,
$snowball_stemmer,
],
);
DESCRIPTION
A PolyAnalyzer is a series of Analyzers --- objects which inherit from KinoSearch::Analysis::Analyzer --- each of which will be called upon to ``analyze'' text in turn. You can either provide the Analyzers yourself, or you can specify a supported language, in which case a PolyAnalyzer consisting of an LCNormalizer, a Tokenizer, and a Stemmer will be generated for you.Supported languages:
en => English,
da => Danish,
de => German,
es => Spanish,
fi => Finnish,
fr => French,
it => Italian,
nl => Dutch,
no => Norwegian,
pt => Portuguese,
ru => Russian,
sv => Swedish,
CONSTRUCTOR
new()
my $analyzer = KinoSearch::Analysis::PolyAnalyzer->new(
language => 'en',
);
Construct a PolyAnalyzer object. If the parameter "analyzers" is specified, it will override "language" and no attempt will be made to generate a default set of Analyzers.
- language - Must be an ISO code from the list of supported languages.
- analyzers - Must be an arrayref. Each element in the array must inherit from KinoSearch::Analysis::Analyzer. The order of the analyzers matters. Don't put a Stemmer before a Tokenizer (can't stem whole documents or paragraphs --- just individual words), or a Stopalizer after a Stemmer (stemmed words, e.g. ``themselv'', will not appear in a stoplist). In general, the sequence should be: normalize, tokenize, stopalize, stem.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2005-2009 Marvin HumphreyLICENSE, DISCLAIMER, BUGS, etc.
See KinoSearch version 0.165.

