I’m using a CONTAINSTABLE query with MS SQL Server’s full-text indexing engine to search within a textual column; e.g.:
SELECT *
FROM MyTable
INNER MERGE JOIN CONTAINSTABLE(MyTable, sDescription, 'FORMSOF(INFLECTIONAL, "brains")')
AS TBL1 ON TBL1.[key]=MyTable.ixKey
This does a great job of finding rows with a description including a word like “brains” (e.g. “brain”, “brained”). However, when I display these results to the user, I’d like to highlight the word that matched their query (just like Google). But I can’t just look for the search term in the results: if the result contains “brain”, I obviously can’t highlight “brains”.
Can SQL Server tell me where in the column (either the word or character) the full-text match occurs? Alternatively, can I manually run the stemmer to get all the forms of the search term? I could highlight each of those individually, then.
SQL Server 2008 includes a function to get the inflected forms of a word or phrase, using the full-text engine’s parser:
sys.dm_fts_parser.gets a table like:
(Working with query phrases is a bit more work, as it inflects each word separately, but it’s not too hard to put things back together.)
Now I can just highlight any occurrence of any of the inflected forms. It’s a bit more work than if SQL Server just told me where the FTS matches are, but it’ll do.