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Configure and Manage Stopwords and Stoplists for Full-Text Search

To prevent a full-text index from becoming bloated, SQL Server has a mechanism that discards commonly occurring strings that do not help the search. These discarded strings are called stopwords. During index creation, the Full-Text Engine omits stopwords from the full-text index. This means that full-text queries will not search on stopwords.

In This Topic

  • Understanding Stopwords and Stoplists

  • Creating a Stoplist

  • Using a Stoplist in Full-Text Queries

  • Viewing Stoplists and Stoplist Metadata

  • Changing the Stopwords in a Stoplist

  • Upgrading Noise Words from SQL Server 2005

Understanding Stopwords and Stoplists

A stopword can be a word with meaning in a specific language, or it can be a token that does not have linguistic meaning. For example, in the English language, words such as "a," "and," "is," and "the" are left out of the full-text index since they are known to be useless to a search.

Although it ignores the inclusion of stopwords, the full-text index does take into account their position. For example, consider the phrase, "Instructions are applicable to these Adventure Works Cycles models". The following table depicts the position of the words in the phrase:

Word

Position

Instructions

1

are

2

applicable

3

to

4

these

5

Adventure

6

Works

7

Cycles

8

models

9

The stopwords "are", "to", and "these" that are in positions 2, 4, and 5 are left out of the full-text index. However, their positional information is maintained, thereby leaving the position of the other words in the phrase unaffected.

Stopwords are managed in databases using objects called stoplists. A stoplist is a list of stopwords that, when associated with a full-text index, is applied to full-text queries on that index.

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Creating a Stoplist

You can create a stoplist in any of the following ways:

  • Using the system-supplied stoplist in the database. SQL Server ships with a system stoplist that contains the most commonly used stopwords for each supported language, that is for every language that is associated with given word breakers by default. The system stoplist contains common stopwords for all supported languages. You can copy the system stoplist, and customize your copy by adding and removing stopwords.

    The system stoplist is installed in the Resource database.

  • Creating your own stoplist, and then adding stopwords to it for any language that you specify. You can also drop stopwords from your stoplist when necessary.

  • Using an existing custom stoplist from any other database in the current server instance and then adding and dropping stopwords as necessary.

Important

CREATE FULLTEXT STOPLIST, ALTER FULLTEXT STOPLIST, and DROP FULLTEXT STOPLIST are supported only under compatibility level 100. Under compatibility levels 80 and 90, these statements are not supported. However, under all compatibility levels the system stoplist is automatically associated with new full-text indexes.

To create a stoplist

To create a full-text stoplist in Management Studio

  1. In Object Explorer, expand the server.

  2. Expand Databases, and then expand the database in which you want to create the full-text stoplist.

  3. Expand Storage, and then right-click Full-Text Stoplists.

  4. Select New Full-Text Stoplist.

  5. Specify the stoplist name.

  6. Optionally, specify someone else as the stoplist owner.

  7. Select one of the following create stoplist options:

    • Create an empty stoplist

    • Create from the system stoplist

    • Create from an existing full-text stoplist

    For more information, see New Full-Text Stoplist (General Page).

  8. Click OK.  

To drop a stoplist

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Using a Stoplist in Full-Text Queries

To make use of a stoplist in queries, you must associate it with a full-text index. You can attach a stoplist to a full-text index when you create the index, or you can alter the index later to add a stoplist.

To create a full-text index and associate a stoplist with it

To associate or disassociate a stoplist with an existing full-text index

To suppress an error message if stopwords cause a Boolean operation on a full-text query to fail

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Viewing Stoplists and Stoplist Metadata

To view all the stopwords of a stoplist

To get information about all the stoplists in the current database

To view the tokenization result of a word breaker, thesaurus, and stoplist combination

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Changing the Stopwords in a Stoplist

To add or drop stopwords from a stoplist

To change the stopwords in a stoplist in Management Studio

  1. In Object Explorer, expand the server.

  2. Expand Databases, and then expand the database.

  3. Expand Storage, and then select Full Text Stoplists.

  4. Right-click the stoplist whose properties you want to change, and select Properties.

  5. In the Full-Text Stoplist Properties dialog box:

    1. In the Action list box, select one of the following actions: Add stopword, Delete stopword, Delete all stopwords, or Clear stoplist.

    2. If the Stopword text box is enabled for the selected action, enter a single stopword. This stopword must be unique; that is, not yet in this stoplist for the language that you select.

    3. If the Full-text language list box is enabled for the selected action, select a language.

  6. Click OK.  

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Upgrading Noise Words from SQL Server 2005

SQL Server 2005 noise words have been replaced by stopwords. When a database is upgraded from SQL Server 2005, the noise-word files are no longer used. However, the noise-word files are stored in the FTDATA\ FTNoiseThesaurusBak folder, and you can use them later when updating or building the corresponding stoplists. For information about upgrading noise-word files to stoplists, see Upgrade Full-Text Search from SQL Server 2005.

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