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http://www.kinook.com/Forum/showthre...&threadid=1133 As I already said, I think simple list with frequency would be enough (and much easier to implement), the graphical output doesn't add any further value to this feature imho, this is where I disagree with wordmuse who states that "there is something very powerful in the tag cloud" |
#19
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In search engine results, the relevance is expressed in the order the results are displayed. If I understand this request this gives user keyword statistics within each item returned by the search criteria. So why do I care how many times the keyword is expressed in each item? The only thing I would care about is if the list is ordered correctly, i..e the most relevant item displayrd @ the top of the list with some relevance statistic attribute which can be seen in a column in the search pane. What am I missing? |
#20
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I hope this helps. Lord Zargron. |
#21
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As for the rest of your post, I've come to see the reason for our divergence of interest in this subject. It boils down to perspective. You see, at my age, I altready spend a great deal of time in the fuzzy, furry landscapes of my past, trying to uderstand all the dimmed words flowing thru my consciousness. So at the end of the day, I appreciate the clarity of "hard core precise quantitive analysis" when I can find it. |
#22
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"Tag cloud" and "relevance" features could be implemented at the same time. Example: Imagine you imported several documents dealing with some financial analysis, and put them in the "new documents" directory. Now you create search, tick "limit search to siblings" and tick the newly created "keyword frequency analysis" option. The search returns this list: keyword frequency dollar 1000 volatility 600 bond 300 market 200 price 100 ... By this search, I know what is the main topic the documents deal with. If I wanted to learn more about bonds, I'd click on "bond", this would perform the search on the same subset of documents, but with search string "bond", and the result would look like: item frequency Bond analysis.pdf 78 Capital markets.pdf 23 Fixed income products.pdf 20 ... So if I want to learn about bonds, the above documents would be probably the best candidates to start with ... without frequency, the search would return 20 documents that contain keyword "bond" maybe once, and I'd waste time opening each of them trying to see if I that is the document I need to learn about bonds This is very primitive frequency analysis, easily implemented, ... maybe enough for the start. For the better search results, I decided to only link documents to UR, on which I can perform much more with SearchInform that includes morphology, exact, containing, phrase, ... search |
#23
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I'd just link/import to the first few documents assuming these would be the most relevant documents to import into UR. If, however, what I get from the internet is not sorted by relevance then your relevance list is extremely useful. Again, I repeat, I am not aginst this improvement. I'm just having an 'intellectual' discussion here. But I would say in the scheme of things that UR needs, I don't think clouds should be higher in priority than other things..... IMO a global search ability across all open databases like Zoot would be one those things. |
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BTW, my first Bouvier des Flanders pup was named "Bogart" as in Don't bogart my doob.... |
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I've been away awhile... (grumble, grumble...)
As the originator of this thread, I'd like to weigh in again... If all the information I have is self-created, then a tag cloud isn't all that useful to me. But... ... if I import 20 pdf files, a dozen Word documents, etc. from a bunch of different sources, and I want to get the common threads without having to even scan the documents at all, a tag cloud seems to be the best way that I've seen available. If someone has a way, using URP3 as it's currently developed, to let me have an idea of the information I've imported without doing visual inspections, I'd be grateful. Again - my idea is to give me a very fast gander at the major themes of my imports. I don't much care how I get to do this; I just want to do it; and a tag cloud seems like it could do the trick. Savvy? Regards, Bal |
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Hi janrif,
nope - that won't let me do what I asked for, i.e., to get the basic themes of my imported documents without having to visually inspect them. If I already knew the content and the themes, then I wouldn't need or ask for a tag cloud or something that would let me do what I'm after. It's the visual inspection that's the time killer. I want to automate this, and I'd like to do so in the URP3 environment if possible. Regards, Bal |
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