Wildcard searches
You can use wildcards in basic text search queries on single terms. You cannot use wildcards in searches on phrases.
To perform a single-character wildcard search, use a question mark
(?) in the search term. The single-character wildcard search looks
for terms that match with the single character replaced. For example,
to search for the terms text
and test
,
use te?t
in the search predicate:
bts_contains(column, 'te?t')
You can use a single wildcard character (?) as the first character of the search term.
Multiple-character wildcard searches
Multiple-character wildcard searches look for zero or more characters.
geo
, geography
,
and geology
, use geo*
in the search
predicate: bts_contains(column, 'geo*')
c*r
will match contour
, crater
, color
,
and any other words that start with the letter c and end with the
letter r: bts_contains(column, 'c*r')
You cannot use a multiple wildcard character (*) as the first character of the search term.
If the number of indexed tokens that match your wildcard query exceed 1024, you receive the following error:
(BTSB0) - bts clucene error: Too Many Clauses
To solve this problem, you can make the query more restrictive or you can recreate the bts index with the max_clause_count index parameter set to a number greater than 1024.