============== Whoosh recipes ============== General ======= Get the stored fields for a document from the document number ------------------------------------------------------------- :: stored_fields = searcher.stored_fields(docnum) Analysis ======== Eliminate words shorter/longer than N ------------------------------------- Use a :class:`~whoosh.analysis.StopFilter` and the ``minsize`` and ``maxsize`` keyword arguments. If you just want to filter based on size and not common words, set the ``stoplist`` to ``None``:: sf = analysis.StopFilter(stoplist=None, minsize=2, maxsize=40) Allow optional case-sensitive searches -------------------------------------- A quick and easy way to do this is to index both the original and lowercased versions of each word. If the user searches for an all-lowercase word, it acts as a case-insensitive search, but if they search for a word with any uppercase characters, it acts as a case-sensitive search:: class CaseSensitivizer(analysis.Filter): def __call__(self, tokens): for t in tokens: yield t if t.mode == "index": low = t.text.lower() if low != t.text: t.text = low yield t ana = analysis.RegexTokenizer() | CaseSensitivizer() [t.text for t in ana("The new SuperTurbo 5000", mode="index")] # ["The", "the", "new", "SuperTurbo", "superturbo", "5000"] Searching ========= Find every document ------------------- :: myquery = query.Every() iTunes-style search-as-you-type ------------------------------- Use the :class:`whoosh.analysis.NgramWordAnalyzer` as the analyzer for the field you want to search as the user types. You can save space in the index by turning off positions in the field using ``phrase=False``, since phrase searching on N-gram fields usually doesn't make much sense:: # For example, to search the "title" field as the user types analyzer = analysis.NgramWordAnalyzer() title_field = fields.TEXT(analyzer=analyzer, phrase=False) schema = fields.Schema(title=title_field) See the documentation for the :class:`~whoosh.analysis.NgramWordAnalyzer` class for information on the available options. Shortcuts ========= Look up documents by a field value ---------------------------------- :: # Single document (unique field value) stored_fields = searcher.document(id="bacon") # Multiple documents for stored_fields in searcher.documents(tag="cake"): ... Sorting and scoring =================== See :doc:`facets`. Score results based on the position of the matched term ------------------------------------------------------- The following scoring function uses the position of the first occurance of a term in each document to calculate the score, so documents with the given term earlier in the document will score higher:: from whoosh import scoring def pos_score_fn(searcher, fieldname, text, matcher): poses = matcher.value_as("positions") return 1.0 / (poses[0] + 1) pos_weighting = scoring.FunctionWeighting(pos_score_fn) with myindex.searcher(weighting=pos_weighting) as s: ... Results ======= How many hits were there? ------------------------- The number of *scored* hits:: found = results.scored_length() Depending on the arguments to the search, the exact total number of hits may be known:: if results.has_exact_length(): print("Scored", found, "of exactly", len(results), "documents") Usually, however, the exact number of documents that match the query is not known, because the searcher can skip over blocks of documents it knows won't show up in the "top N" list. If you call ``len(results)`` on a query where the exact length is unknown, Whoosh will run an unscored version of the original query to get the exact number. This is faster than the scored search, but may still be noticeably slow on very large indexes or complex queries. As an alternative, you might display the *estimated* total hits:: found = results.scored_length() if results.has_exact_length(): print("Scored", found, "of exactly", len(results), "documents") else: low = results.estimated_min_length() high = results.estimated_length() print("Scored", found, "of between", low, "and", high, "documents") Which terms matched in each hit? -------------------------------- :: # Use terms=True to record term matches for each hit results = searcher.search(myquery, terms=True) for hit in results: # Which terms matched in this hit? print("Matched:", hit.matched_terms()) # Which terms from the query didn't match in this hit? print("Didn't match:", myquery.all_terms() - hit.matched_terms()) Global information ================== How many documents are in the index? ------------------------------------ :: # Including documents that are deleted but not yet optimized away numdocs = searcher.doc_count_all() # Not including deleted documents numdocs = searcher.doc_count() What fields are in the index? ----------------------------- :: return myindex.schema.names() Is term X in the index? ----------------------- :: return ("content", "wobble") in searcher How many times does term X occur in the index? ---------------------------------------------- :: # Number of times content:wobble appears in all documents freq = searcher.frequency("content", "wobble") # Number of documents containing content:wobble docfreq = searcher.doc_frequency("content", "wobble") Is term X in document Y? ------------------------ :: # Check if the "content" field of document 500 contains the term "wobble" # Without term vectors, skipping through list... postings = searcher.postings("content", "wobble") postings.skip_to(500) return postings.id() == 500 # ...or the slower but easier way docset = set(searcher.postings("content", "wobble").all_ids()) return 500 in docset # If field has term vectors, skipping through list... vector = searcher.vector(500, "content") vector.skip_to("wobble") return vector.id() == "wobble" # ...or the slower but easier way wordset = set(searcher.vector(500, "content").all_ids()) return "wobble" in wordset