Solr is related to searching. its a open source from apache.
Solr is an open source search server which uses the Lucene search library. Both are written in Java and under the Apache Software License.More information about Solr can be found at solr-1
Solr
Of course, that depends on what is meant by "user friendly". SOLR provides an HTTP interface. This means that if you are comfortable with working with URLs and manipulating the URL parameters it is friendly. SOLR can return results in a number of standard formats (e.g., XML, JSON) so if you are comfortable with these formats it is friendly. Depending on your familiarity with setting up server software you could argue that this may be one of the "user unfriendly" areas of SOLR. Apache has done a nice job in packaging SOLR but you would still need some knowledge of server software to get it set up (server software e.g., Apache web server, Tomcat/Jetty servlet containers). They provide a nice tutorial for getting started quickly. Perhaps reading it would give you an idea of how your level of computer knowledge matches its friendliness: http://lucene.apache.org/solr/tutorial.html
Martin Gisti was born on December 9, 1889, in Solr, Norway.
No. Solaris is a computer operating system created 1992 by Sun Microsystems as a follow up to their SunOS. Solaris is now owned by Oracle. Solr is an open source search platform created by Yonik Seeley in 2004 and is written in Java.
Apache Solr is an open source search platform. It was created in 2004 by Yonik Seeley using the Apache Lucene library. It provides a way to easily search large amounts of data returning results in a very short time (often < 1 second). Hadoop is a framework used for distributed processing of large data sets.
If I can answer why I am searching for it If I can answer why I am searching for it
he was searching for north america.
He is searching for the elder wand.
No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.No, not yet, but they are supposed to be still searching for it.
The complete verb is 'are searching'; are is the auxiliary verb and searching is the main verb.
In Natick (the Wampanoag language) it is natinneham.In Arapaho it is notiih (if searching for someone); notiitii (if searching for something).In Ojibwe it is andawaabam (if searching for someone); nanaandawaabandan (if searching for something).