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Oracle® Text Application Developer's Guide
11g Release 1 (11.1)

Part Number B28303-01
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8 Searching Document Sections in Oracle Text

This chapter describes how to use document sections in an Oracle Text query application.

The following topics are discussed in this chapter:

8.1 About Oracle Text Document Section Searching

Section searching enables you to narrow text queries down to blocks of text within documents. Section searching is useful when your documents have internal structure, such as HTML and XML documents.

You can also search for text at the sentence and paragraph level.

This section contains these topics:

8.1.1 Enabling Oracle Text Section Searching

The steps for enabling section searching for your document collection are:

  1. Create a section group

  2. Define your sections

  3. Index your documents

  4. Section search with WITHIN, INPATH, or HASPATH operators

8.1.1.1 Create a Section Group

Section searching is enabled by defining section groups. You use one of the system-defined section groups to create an instance of a section group. Choose a section group appropriate for your document collection.

You use section groups to specify the type of document set you have and implicitly indicate the tag structure. For instance, to index HTML tagged documents, you use the HTML_SECTION_GROUP. Likewise, to index XML tagged documents, you can use the XML_SECTION_GROUP.

Table 8-1 lists the different types of section groups you can use:

Table 8-1 Types of Section Groups

Section Group Preference Description

NULL_SECTION_GROUP

This is the default. Use this group type when you define no sections or when you define only SENTENCE or PARAGRAPH sections.

BASIC_SECTION_GROUP

Use this group type for defining sections where the start and end tags are of the form <A> and </A>.

Note: This group type dopes not support input such as unbalanced parentheses, comments tags, and attributes. Use HTML_SECTION_GROUP for this type of input.

HTML_SECTION_GROUP

Use this group type for indexing HTML documents and for defining sections in HTML documents.

XML_SECTION_GROUP

Use this group type for indexing XML documents and for defining sections in XML documents.

AUTO_SECTION_GROUP

Use this group type to automatically create a zone section for each start-tag/end-tag pair in an XML document. The section names derived from XML tags are case-sensitive as in XML.

Attribute sections are created automatically for XML tags that have attributes. Attribute sections are named in the form tag@attribute.

Stop sections, empty tags, processing instructions, and comments are not indexed.

The following limitations apply to automatic section groups:

  • You cannot add zone, field or special sections to an automatic section group.

  • Automatic sectioning does not index XML document types (root elements.) However, you can define stop-sections with document type.

  • The length of the indexed tags including prefix and namespace cannot exceed 64 bytes. Tags longer than this are not indexed.

PATH_SECTION_GROUP

Use this group type to index XML documents. Behaves like the AUTO_SECTION_GROUP.

The difference is that with this section group you can do path searching with the INPATH and HASPATH operators. Queries are also case-sensitive for tag and attribute names.

NEWS_SECTION_GROUP

Use this group for defining sections in newsgroup formatted documents according to RFC 1036.


Note:

Documents sent to the HTML, XML, AUTO and PATH sectioners must begin with \s*<, where \s* represents zero or more whitespace characters. Otherwise, the document is treated as a plaintext document, and no sections are recognized.

You use the CTX_DDL package to create section groups and define sections as part of section groups. For example, to index HTML documents, create a section group with HTML_SECTION_GROUP:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
end;

8.1.1.2 Define Your Sections

You define sections as part of the section group. The following example defines an zone section called heading for all text within the HTML < H1> tag:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'heading', 'H1');
end;

Note:

If you are using the AUTO_SECTION_GROUP or PATH_SECTION_GROUP to index an XML document collection, then you need not explicitly define sections. The system does this for you during indexing.

See Also:

8.1.1.3 Index Your Documents

When you index your documents, you specify your section group in the parameter clause of CREATE INDEX.

create index myindex on docs(htmlfile) indextype is ctxsys.context 
parameters('filter ctxsys.null_filter section group htmgroup');

8.1.1.4 Section Searching with the WITHIN Operator

When your documents are indexed, you can query within sections using the WITHIN operator. For example, to find all the documents that contain the word Oracle within their headings, enter the following query:

'Oracle WITHIN heading'

See Also:

Oracle Text Reference to learn more about using the WITHIN operator

8.1.1.5 Path Searching with INPATH and HASPATH Operators

When you use the PATH_SECTION_GROUP, the system automatically creates XML sections for you. In addition to using the WITHIN operator to enter queries, you can enter path queries with the INPATH and HASPATH operators.

See Also:

8.1.2 Oracle Text Section Types

All section types are blocks of text in a document. However, sections can differ in the way that they are delimited and the way that they are recorded in the index. Sections can be one of the following types:

Table 8-2 shows which section types may be used with each kind of section group.

Table 8-2 Section Types and Section Groups

Section Group ZONE FIELD STOP MDATA SDATA ATTRIBUTE SPECIAL

NULL

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

YES

BASIC

YES

YES

NO

YES

YES

NO

YES

HTML

YES

YES

NO

YES

YES

NO

YES

XML

YES

YES

NO

YES

YES

YES

YES

NEWS

YES

YES

NO

YES

YES

NO

YES

AUTO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

PATH

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO


8.1.2.1 Zone Section

A zone section is a body of text delimited by start and end tags in a document. The positions of the start and end tags are recorded in the index so that any words in between the tags are considered to be within the section. Any instance of a zone section must have a start and an end tag.

For example, the text between the <TITLE> and </TITLE> tags can be defined as a zone section as follows:

<TITLE>Tale of Two Cities</TITLE>
It was the best of times...

Zone sections can nest, overlap, and repeat within a document.

When querying zone sections, you use the WITHIN operator to search for a term across all sections. Oracle Text returns those documents that contain the term within the defined section.

Zone sections are well suited for defining sections in HTML and XML documents. To define a zone section, use CTX_DDL.ADD_ZONE_SECTION.

For example, assume you define the section booktitle as follows:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'booktitle', 'TITLE');
end;

After you index, you can search for all the documents that contain the term Cities within the section booktitle as follows:

'Cities WITHIN booktitle'

With multiple query terms such as (dog and cat) WITHIN booktitle, Oracle Text returns those documents that contain cat and dog within the same instance of a booktitle section.

8.1.2.1.1 Repeated Zone Sections

Zone sections can repeat. Each occurrence is treated as a separate section. For example, if <H1> denotes a heading section, they can repeat in the same documents as follows:

<H1> The Brown Fox </H1>
<H1> The Gray Wolf </H1>

Assuming that these zone sections are named Heading, the query Brown WITHIN Heading returns this document. However, a query of (Brown and Gray) WITHIN Heading does not.

8.1.2.1.2 Overlapping Zone Sections

Zone sections can overlap each other. For example, if <B> and <I> denote two different zone sections, they can overlap in a document as follows:

plain <B> bold <I> bold and italic </B> only italic </I>  plain
8.1.2.1.3 Nested Zone Sections

Zone sections can nest, including themselves as follows:

<TD> <TABLE><TD>nested cell</TD></TABLE></TD>

Using the WITHIN operator, you can write queries to search for text in sections within sections. For example, assume the BOOK1, BOOK2, and AUTHOR zone sections occur as follows in documents doc1 and doc2:

doc1:

<book1> <author>Scott Tiger</author> This is a cool book to read.</book1>

doc2:

<book2> <author>Scott Tiger</author> This is a great book to read.</book2>

Consider the nested query:

'(Scott within author) within book1'

This query returns only doc1.

8.1.2.2 Field Section

A field section is similar to a zone section in that it is a region of text delimited by start and end tags. A field section is different from a zone section in that the region is indexed separately from the rest of the document.

Since field sections are indexed differently, you can also get better query performance over zone sections for when you have a large number of documents indexed.

Field sections are more suited to when you have a single occurrence of a section in a a document such as a field in a news header. Field sections can also be made visible to the rest of the document.

Unlike zone sections, field sections have the following restrictions:

  • Field sections cannot overlap

  • Field sections cannot repeat

  • Field sections cannot nest

8.1.2.2.1 Visible and Invisible Field Sections

By default, field sections are indexed as a sub-document separate from the rest of the document. As such, field sections are invisible to the surrounding text and can only be queried by explicitly naming the section in the WITHIN clause.

You can make field sections visible if you want the text within the field section to be indexed as part of the enclosing document. Text within a visible field section can be queried with or without the WITHIN operator.

The following example shows the difference between using invisible and visible field sections.

The following code defines a section group basicgroup of the BASIC_SECTION_GROUP type. It then creates a field section in basicgroup called Author for the <A> tag. It also sets the visible flag to FALSE to create an invisible section:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('basicgroup', 'BASIC_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_field_section('basicgroup', 'Author', 'A', FALSE);
end;

Because the Author field section is not visible, to find text within the Author section, you must use the WITHIN operator as follows:

'(Martin Luther King) WITHIN Author'

A query of Martin Luther King without the WITHIN operator does not return instances of this term in field sections. If you want to query text within field sections without specifying WITHIN, you must set the visible flag to TRUE when you create the section as follows:

begin
ctx_ddl.add_field_section('basicgroup', 'Author', 'A', TRUE);
end;
8.1.2.2.2 Nested Field Sections

Field sections cannot be nested. For example, if you define a field section to start with <TITLE> and define another field section to start with <FOO>, the two sections cannot be nested as follows:

<TITLE> dog <FOO> cat </FOO> </TITLE>

To work with nested sections, define them as zone sections.

8.1.2.2.3 Repeated Field Sections

Repeated field sections are allowed, but WITHIN queries treat them as a single section. The following is an example of repeated field section in a document:

<TITLE> cat </TITLE>
<TITLE> dog </TITLE>

The query dog and cat within title returns the document, even though these words occur in different sections.

To have WITHIN queries distinguish repeated sections, define them as zone sections.

8.1.2.3 Stop Section

A stop section may be added to an automatic section group. Adding a stop section causes the automatic section indexing operation to ignore the specified section in XML documents.

Note:

Adding a stop section causes no section information to be created in the index. However, the text within a stop section is always searchable.

Adding a stop section is useful when your documents contain many low-information tags. Adding stop sections also improves indexing performance with the automatic section group.

The number of stop sections you can add is unlimited.

Stop sections do not have section names and hence are not recorded in the section views.

8.1.2.4 MDATA Section

An MDATA section is used to reference user-defined metadata for a document. Using MDATA sections can speed up mixed queries.

Consider the case in which you want to query both according to text content and document type (magazine or newspaper or novel). You could create an index with a column for text and a column for the document type, and then perform a mixed query of this form—in this case, searching for all novels with the phrase Adam Thorpe (author of the novel Ulverton):

SELECT id FROM documents
   WHERE doctype = 'novel'
      AND CONTAINS(text, 'Adam Thorpe')>0;

However, it is usually faster to incorporate the attribute (in this case, the document type) into a field section, rather than use a separate column, and then use a single CONTAINS query:

SELECT id FROM documents
  WHERE CONTAINS(text, 'Adam Thorpe AND novel WITHIN doctype')>0;

There are two drawbacks to this approach:

  • Each time the attribute is updated, the entire text document must be re-indexed, resulting in increased index fragmentation and slower rates of processing DML.

  • Field sections tokenize the section value. This has several effects. Special characters in metadata, such as decimal points or currency characters, are not easily searchable; value searching (searching for Thurston Howell but not Thurston Howell, Jr.) is difficult; multi-word values are queried by phrase, which is slower than single-token searching; and multi-word values do not show up in browse-words, making author browsing or subject browsing impossible.

For these reasons, using MDATA sections instead of field sections may be worthwhile. MDATA sections are indexed like field sections, but metadata values can be added to and removed from documents without the need to re-index the document text. Unlike field sections, MDATA values are not tokenized. Additionally, MDATA section indexing generally takes up less disk space than field section indexing.

Use CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA_SECTION to add an MDATA section to a section group. This example adds an MDATA section called AUTHOR and gives it the value Soseki Natsume (author of the novel Kokoro).

ctx_ddl.create.section.group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_mdata_section('htmgroup', 'author', 'Soseki Natsume');

MDATA values can be changed with CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA and removed with CTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA. Also, MDATA sections can have multiple values. Only the owner of the index is allowed to call CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA and CTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA.

Neither CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA nor CTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA are supported for CTXCAT, CTXXPTH and CTXRULE indexes.

MDATA values are not passed through a lexer. Instead, all values undergo a simplified normalization:

  • Leading and trailing whitespace on the value is removed.

  • The value is truncated to 64 bytes.

  • The value is converted to upper case.

  • The value is indexed as a single value; if the value consists of multiple words, it is not broken up.

  • Case is preserved. If the document is dynamically generated, you can implement case-insensitivity by uppercasing MDATA values and making sure to search only in uppercase.

Once a document has had MDATA metadata added to it, you can query for that metadata using the MDATA CONTAINS query operator:

SELECT id FROM documents
   WHERE CONTAINS(text, 'Tokyo and MDATA(author, Soseki Natsume)')>0;

This query will only be successful if an AUTHOR tag has the exact value Soseki Natsume (after simplified tokenization). Soseki or Natsume Soseki will not work.

Other things to note about MDATA:

  • MDATA values are not highlightable, will not appear in the output of CTX_DOC.TOKENS, and will not show up when FILTER PLAINTEXT is enabled.

  • MDATA sections must be unique within section groups. You cannot have an MDATA section named FOO and a zone or field section of the same name in the same section group.

  • Like field sections, MDATA sections cannot overlap or nest. An MDATA section is implicitly closed by the first tag encountered. For instance, in this example:

    <AUTHOR>Dickens <B>Shelley</B> Keats</AUTHOR>
    

    The <B> tag closes the AUTHOR MDATA section; as a result, this document has an AUTHOR of 'Dickens', but not of 'Shelley' or 'Keats'.

  • To prevent race conditions, each call to ADD_MDATA and REMOVE_MDATA locks out other calls on that rowid for that index for all values and sections. However, since ADD_MDATA and REMOVE_MDATA do not commit, it is possible for an application to deadlock when calling them both. It is the application's responsibility to prevent deadlocking.

See Also:

  • The CONTAINS query operators chapter of the Oracle Text Reference for information on the MDATA operator

  • The CTX_DDL package chapter of Oracle Text Reference for information on adding and removing MDATA sections

8.1.2.5 SDATA Section

The value of an SDATA section is extracted from the document text like other sections, but is indexed as structured data, also referred to as SDATA. Using SDATA sections supports operations such as projection, range searches, and ordering. It also enables SDATA indexing of section data such as embedded tags, and detail table or function invocations. This enables you to perform various combinations of text and structured searches in one single SQL statement.

SDATA operators are used only as descendants of AND operators that also have non-SDATA children. SDATA operators are meant to be used as secondary, checking or non-driving, criteria. For instance, "find documents with DOG that also have price > 5", rather than "find documents with rating > 4". Other uses will operate properly, but may not have optimal performance.

You use CTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_SECTION to add an SDATA section to a section group. When querying within an SDATA section, you use the CONTAINS operator. The following example creates a table called items, and adds an SDATA section called my_sec_group, and then queries SDATA in the section.

Create the table items:

CREATE TABLE items 
(id  NUMBER PRIMARY KEY, 
 doc VARCHAR2(4000));
 
INSERT INTO items VALUES (1, '<description> Honda Pilot </description>
                              <category> Cars & Trucks </category>
                              <price> 27000 </price>');
INSERT INTO items VALUES (2, '<description> Toyota Sequoia </description>
                              <category> Cars & Trucks </category>
                              <price> 35000 </price>');
INSERT INTO items VALUES (3, '<description> Toyota Land Cruiser </description>
                              <category> Cars & Trucks </category>
                              <price> 45000 </price>');
INSERT INTO items VALUES (4, '<description> Palm Pilot </description>
                              <category> Electronics </category>
                              <price> 5 </price>');
INSERT INTO items VALUES (5, '<description> Toyota Land Cruiser Grill </description>
                              <category> Parts & Accessories </category>
                              <price> 100 </price>');
COMMIT;

Add SDATA section my_sec_group:

BEGIN
  CTX_DDL.CREATE_SECTION_GROUP('my_sec_group', 'BASIC_SECTION_GROUP');
  CTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_SECTION('my_sec_group', 'category', 'category', 'VARCHAR2');
  CTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_SECTION('my_sec_group', 'price', 'price', 'NUMBER');
END;
 

Create the CONTEXT index:

CREATE INDEX items$doc 
  ON items(doc) 
  INDEXTYPE IS CTXSYS.CONTEXT
  PARAMETERS('SECTION GROUP my_sec_group');
 

Run a query:

SELECT id, doc
  FROM items
  WHERE contains(doc, 'Toyota 
                       AND SDATA(category = ''Cars & Trucks'') 
                       AND SDATA(price <= 40000 )') > 0;

Return the results:

ID DOC
---- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
   2 <description> Toyota Sequoia </description>
                                   <category> Cars & Trucks </category>
                                   <price> 35000 </price>

See Also:

8.1.2.6 Attribute Section

You can define attribute sections to query on XML attribute text. You can also have the system automatically define and index XML attributes for you.

8.1.2.7 Special Sections

Special sections are not recognized by tags. Currently the only special sections supported are sentence and paragraph. This enables you to search for combination of words within sentences or paragraphs.

The sentence and paragraph boundaries are determined by the lexer. For example, the BASIC_LEXER recognizes sentence and paragraph section boundaries as follows:

Table 8-3 Sentence and Paragraph Section Boundaries for BASIC_LEXER

Special Section Boundary

SENTENCE

WORD/PUNCT/WHITESPACE


WORD/PUNCT/NEWLINE

PARAGRAPH

WORD/PUNCT/NEWLINE/WHITESPACE


WORD/PUNCT/NEWLINE/NEWLINE


If the lexer cannot recognize the boundaries, no sentence or paragraph sections are indexed.

To add a special section, use the CTX_DDL.ADD_SPECIAL_SECTION procedure. For example, the following code enables searching within sentences within HTML documents:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_special_section('htmgroup', 'SENTENCE');
end;

You can also add zone sections to the group to enable zone searching in addition to sentence searching. The following example adds the zone section Headline to the section group htmgroup:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_special_section('htmgroup', 'SENTENCE');
ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'Headline', 'H1');
end;

8.2 HTML Section Searching with Oracle Text

HTML has internal structure in the form of tagged text which you can use for section searching. For example, you can define a section called headings for the <H1> tag. This enables you to search for terms only within these tags across your document set.

To query, you use the WITHIN operator. Oracle Text returns all documents that contain your query term within the headings section. Thus, if you wanted to find all documents that contain the word oracle within headings, enter the following query:

'oracle within headings'

This section contains these topics:

8.2.1 Creating HTML Sections

The following code defines a section group called htmgroup of type HTML_SECTION_GROUP. It then creates a zone section in htmgroup called heading identified by the <H1> tag:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'heading', 'H1');
end;

You can then index your documents as follows:

create index myindex on docs(htmlfile) indextype is ctxsys.context
parameters('filter ctxsys.null_filter section group htmgroup');

After indexing with section group htmgroup, you can query within the heading section by issuing a query as follows:

'Oracle WITHIN heading'

8.2.2 Searching HTML Meta Tags

With HTML documents you can also create sections for NAME/CONTENT pairs in <META> tags. When you do so you can limit your searches to text within CONTENT.

8.2.2.1 Example: Creating Sections for <META>Tags

Consider an HTML document that has a META tag as follows:

<META NAME="author" CONTENT="ken">

To create a zone section that indexes all CONTENT attributes for the META tag whose NAME value is author:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'author', 'meta@author');
end

After indexing with section group htmgroup, you can query the document as follows:

'ken WITHIN author'

8.3 XML Section Searching with Oracle Text

Like HTML documents, XML documents have tagged text which you can use to define blocks of text for section searching. The contents of a section can be searched on with the WITHIN or INPATH operators.

The following sections describe the different types of XML searching:

8.3.1 Automatic Sectioning

You can set up your indexing operation to automatically create sections from XML documents using the section group AUTO_SECTION_GROUP. The system creates zone sections for XML tags. Attribute sections are created for the tags that have attributes and these sections named in the form tag@attribute.

For example, the following statement creates the index myindex on a column containing the XML files using the AUTO_SECTION_GROUP:

CREATE INDEX myindex
ON xmldocs(xmlfile)
 INDEXTYPE IS ctxsys.context
PARAMETERS ('datastore ctxsys.default_datastore 
             filter ctxsys.null_filter 
             section group ctxsys.auto_section_group'
           );

8.3.2 Attribute Searching

You can search XML attribute text in one of two ways:

  • Create attribute sections with CTX_DDL.ADD_ATTR_SECTION and then index with XML_SECTION_GROUP. If you use AUTO_SECTION_GROUP when you index, attribute sections are created automatically. You can query attribute sections with the WITHIN operator.

  • Index with the PATH_SECTION_GROUP and query attribute text with the INPATH operator.

8.3.2.1 Creating Attribute Sections

Consider an XML file that defines the BOOK tag with a TITLE attribute as follows:

<BOOK TITLE="Tale of Two Cities"> 
  It was the best of times. 
</BOOK> 

To define the title attribute as an attribute section, create an XML_SECTION_GROUP and define the attribute section as follows:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('myxmlgroup', 'XML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_attr_section('myxmlgroup', 'booktitle', 'book@title');
end;

To index:

CREATE INDEX myindex
ON xmldocs(xmlfile)
INDEXTYPE IS ctxsys.context
PARAMETERS ('datastore ctxsys.default_datastore 
             filter ctxsys.null_filter 
             section group myxmlgroup'
           );

You can query the XML attribute section booktitle as follows:

'Cities within booktitle'

8.3.2.2 Searching Attributes with the INPATH Operator

You can search attribute text with the INPATH operator. To do so, you must index your XML document set with the PATH_SECTION_GROUP.

8.3.3 Creating Document Type Sensitive Sections

For an XML document set that contains the <book> tag declared for different document types, you may want to create a distinct book section for each document type. The following scenario shows how to create book sections for each document type to improve search capability.

Assume that mydocname1 is declared as an XML document type (root element) as follows:

<!DOCTYPE mydocname1 ... [...

Within mydocname1, the element <book> is declared. For this tag, you can create a section named mybooksec1 that is sensitive to the tag's document type as follows:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('myxmlgroup', 'XML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('myxmlgroup', 'mybooksec1', 'mydocname1(book)');
end;

Assume that mydocname2 is declared as another XML document type (root element) as follows:

<!DOCTYPE mydocname2 ... [...

Within mydocname2, the element <book> is declared. For this tag, you can create a section named mybooksec2 that is sensitive to the tag's document type as follows:

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('myxmlgroup', 'XML_SECTION_GROUP');
ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('myxmlgroup', 'mybooksec2', 'mydocname2(book)');
end;

To query within the section mybooksec1, use WITHIN as follows:

'oracle within mybooksec1'

8.3.4 Path Section Searching

XML documents can have parent-child tag structures such as:

<A> <B> <C> dog </C> </B> </A>

In this scenario, tag C is a child of tag B which is a child of tag A.

With Oracle Text, you can do path searching with PATH_SECTION_GROUP. This section group enables you to specify direct parentage in queries, such as to find all documents that contain the term dog in element C which is a child of element B and so on.

With PATH_SECTION_GROUP, you can also perform attribute value searching and attribute equality testing.

The new operators associated with this feature are

  • INPATH

  • HASPATH

8.3.4.1 Creating an Index with PATH_SECTION_GROUP

To enable path section searching, index your XML document set with PATH_SECTION_GROUP. For example:

Create the preference.

begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('xmlpathgroup', 'PATH_SECTION_GROUP');
end;

Create the index.

CREATE INDEX myindex
ON xmldocs(xmlfile)
INDEXTYPE IS ctxsys.context
PARAMETERS ('datastore ctxsys.default_datastore 
             filter ctxsys.null_filter 
             section group xmlpathgroup'
           );

When you create the index, you can use the INPATH and HASPATH operators.

8.3.4.2 Top-Level Tag Searching

To find all documents that contain the term dog in the top-level tag <A>:

dog INPATH (/A)

or

dog INPATH(A)

8.3.4.3 Any-Level Tag Searching

To find all documents that contain the term dog in the <A> tag at any level:

dog INPATH(//A)

This query finds the following documents:

<A>dog</A>

and

<C><B><A>dog</A></B></C>

8.3.4.4 Direct Parentage Searching

To find all documents that contain the term dog in a B element that is a direct child of a top-level A element:

dog INPATH(A/B)

This query finds the following XML document:

<A><B>My dog is friendly.</B></A>

but does not find:

<C><B>My dog is friendly.</B></C>

8.3.4.5 Tag Value Testing

You can test the value of tags. For example, the query:

dog INPATH(A[B="dog"])

Finds the following document:

<A><B>dog</B></A>

But does not find:

<A><B>My dog is friendly.</B></A>

8.3.4.6 Attribute Searching

You can search the content of attributes. For example, the query:

dog INPATH(//A/@B)

Finds the document

<C><A  B="snoop dog"> </A> </C>

8.3.4.7 Attribute Value Testing

You can test the value of attributes. For example, the query

California INPATH (//A[@B = "home address"])

Finds the document:

<A B="home address">San Francisco, California, USA</A>

But does not find:

<A B="work address">San Francisco, California, USA</A>

8.3.4.8 Path Testing

You can test if a path exists with the HASPATH operator. For example, the query:

HASPATH(A/B/C)

finds and returns a score of 100 for the document

<A><B><C>dog</C></B></A>

without the query having to reference dog at all.

8.3.4.9 Section Equality Testing with HASPATH

You can use the HASPATH operator to do section quality tests. For example, consider the following query:

dog INPATH A

finds

<A>dog</A>

but it also finds

<A>dog park</A>

To limit the query to the term dog and nothing else, you can use a section equality test with the HASPATH operator. For example,

HASPATH(A="dog")

finds and returns a score of 100 only for the first document, and not the second.

See Also:

Oracle Text Reference to learn more about using the INPATH and HASPATH operators