User Guide

Table Of Contents
590 Chapter 25: Using Verity Search Expressions
Pass-through of terms
Search terms are passed through to the VDK-level and are interpreted as Verity Query Language
(VQL) syntax. No issues arise if the terms contain only alphabetic or numeric characters. Other
kinds of characters might be interpreted by the language youre using. If a term contains a
character that is not handled by the specified language, it might be interpreted as VQL. For
example, a search term that includes an asterisk (*) might be interpreted as a wildcard.
Stop words
The configurable Internet query parser uses its own stop-word list, qp_inet.stp, to specify terms
to ignore for natural language processing.
Note: You can override the “stop out” by using quotation marks around the word.
For example, the following stop words are provided in the query parser’s stop-word file for the
English (Basic) template:
Verity provides a populated stop-word file for the English and English (Advanced) languages. You
do not need to modify the qp_inet.stp file for these languages. If you use the configurable
Internet query parser for another language, you must provide your own qp_inet.stp file that
contains the stop words that you want to ignore in that language. This stop-word file must
contain, at a minimum, the language-equivalent words for or and <or>.
Note: The configurable Internet query parser’s stop-word file contains a different word list than the
vdk30.stp word file, which is used for other purposes, such as summarization.
adidi orwhat
also do i’m should when
an does if so where
and find in than whether
any for is that which
am from it the who
are get its there whose
as got it’s to why
at had like too will
be has not want with
but have of was would
can how on were <or>