ItemsAPI
minisearch
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ItemsAPI | minisearch | |
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0 | 10 | |
311 | 3,992 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 7.9 | |
about 3 years ago | 9 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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ItemsAPI
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Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
minisearch
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Character and Subsector generators for Classic Traveller, with TAS Forms!
I wrote an online catalog a while back (and I need to get back on adding graphics and products at some point). It’s written using Eleventy and the minisearch library. The source and data are available on Github if you want to see how I did things. I’m not a professional web designer either, but it was a fun project.
- What is your go to client-side fuzzy searching library?
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Meilisearch v1.0 – the open-source Rust alternative to Algolia and Elasticsearch
You could have a look at https://github.com/lucaong/minisearch/
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What do you use for site search? Custom built solution? Meilisearch? Algolia?
If you're dealing with thousands of records or less, searching titles and summaries rather than long bodies of text, I recommend looking into client-side solutions. Nothing beats the responsiveness of search-as-you-type entirely on the client side. It can be fairly sophisticated fulltext search. For example, I've built had great success with MiniSearch.
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Lyra: Fast, in-memory, typo-tolerant, full-text search engine in TypeScript
I quite enjoy minisearch[1] which is also 0 dependencies, actively maintained, and I expect would work well in a worker environment. I dropped it into a service worker and plugged it with a simple point in polygon script to enable geosearch for a recent project[2] and it played v. nicely.
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I highly recommend the Omnisearch plugin.
No magic here, the underlying engine is Minisearch, which uses the BM25 algorithm (the de facto standard among search libraries). Omnisearch adds a magic sauce during indexing by converting notes into custom objects, with the following fields: - body (the plain markdown text) - filename & yaml aliases - level 1 headers - level 2 headers - level 3 headers
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I made a tool to add instant search to your site in 2 steps: 1. Enter your URL 2. Add code snippet to <head>. Links in comments!
We use MiniSearch for searching, while fast-fuzzy is used for highlighting of detected search terms.
What are some alternatives?
flexsearch - Next-Generation full text search library for Browser and Node.js
lunr.js - A bit like Solr, but much smaller and not as bright
orama - 🌌 Fast, dependency-free, full-text and vector search engine with typo tolerance, filters, facets, stemming, and more. Works with any JavaScript runtime, browser, server, service!
itemsjs - Extremely fast faceted search engine in JavaScript - lightweight, flexible, and simple to use
obsidian-omnisearch - A search engine that "just works" for Obsidian. Supports OCR and PDF indexing.
regex-benchmark - It's just a simple regex benchmark of different programming languages.
Lyra - A simple to use, composable, command line parser for C++ 11 and beyond
catche-search-widget - A low-code way to add instant search to your website
re.places - An in-cache, searchable database of 41,000 global cities. It’s designed as a light-weight polyfill for ‘cities’ in Algolia's places API, for when it sunsets in May 2022
fast-fuzzy - Fast fuzzy search utility
ng-fuzzy-search - Fuzzy-search tool built for emacs-ng