Select the first letter of the word from the list above to jump to appropriate section of the glossary.
Abstract
A summary of a document or HTML page. Microsoft Index Server can automatically generate a document abstract using information contained within the document, such as Heading information in HTML pages and property information on documents. Also called a characterization.Access Control List (ACL)
A level of Windows NT permission that you can set on a file or a folder allowing some users to access it while other users cannot access it. For details, see the Windows NT documentation.
Boolean
A type of variable that can have only two values, typically 1 or 0. Boolean variables are often used to express conditions that are either TRUE or FALSE. Queries with Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT, and NEAR) are referred to as Boolean queries.Breaker, word
An Index Server language utility that is responsible for identifying words in a document. As the document contents are emitted by the content filter, the word breaker identifies where the words are located in the sentence. There is one word breaking module for each of the languages supported by Index Server.
The Fulton County Grand Jury said Friday an investigation of Atlanta’s recent primary election produced no evidence that any irregularities took place.
The system would identify the following words and noun phrases:
Words: Fulton, county, grand, jury, Friday, investigation, Atlanta, recent, primary, election, produce, evidence, irregularities.
Phrases: Fulton county grand jury, primary election, grand jury, Atlanta’s recent primary election
The words and phrases are combined into a restriction, weighted for proper ranking, and posted as a query against the corpus.
Note You must preface all free-text queries with $contents.
Fuzzy Query
Fuzzy queries search for words that are similar to the words or text entered in the query restriction. Rather than looking
for only exact matches, the system will modify the words in the query and look for these modified forms.
The system supports simple wildcards (such as those in MS-DOS®) and regular expression matching (as used in UNIX) against textual properties. Content queries support simple prefix matching (for example, “dog*” will return “dogmatic” and “doghouse”). The system also provides linguistic stemming support that matches inflected and base forms of query words. (For example, “swim” is expanded to “swimming”, “swam”, “swum”, and so on.)