lunr.js
orama
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lunr.js | orama | |
---|---|---|
14 | 11 | |
8,778 | 8,059 | |
- | 9.7% | |
0.0 | 9.4 | |
almost 2 years ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
lunr.js
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Ask HN: What's the best way to add search to my website?
If your content is mostly static, you might want to consider pre-building an index and shipping it as a whole. You could look into something like
* https://stork-search.net/ (Rust/WASM)
* tinysearch: https://github.com/tinysearch/tinysearch (Rust/WASM)
* https://lunrjs.com/ (JS, simple, stable)
* http://elasticlunr.com/ - based on the former, slightly more sophisticated tuning options
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How do people make basic AWS sites so cost effectively? How do they limit users from making their budget insane? Am I missing something?
Also search results can be pre-indexed and stored in a Json file. Just as an example. https://lunrjs.com/
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Transcripts
Would anyone be willing to help make this more accessible and clean? I have some front-end dev experience, but it would be cool to work together with people to make sure we have something that makes sense and looks nicer than what I could do myself. As for functionality, searching on GitHub directly seems to work pretty well, but it might be better to have a page and a search feature maybe using something like Lunr. I would also like to create some sort of easy "API" in case Matt wants to embed some transcripts on his website. It would be cool if it would be as easy as just adding a blank div with a special id and a data attribute with the episode number on the Squarespace page.
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Search my site?
which is open source, appears to be free, and claims that it can run in the browser
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Meilisearch v1.0 – the open-source Rust alternative to Algolia and Elasticsearch
Is there a way to run it in WASM, to get something like Lunr[1]? We prefer to do our (small-index, <2MB) search client-side for a bunch of reasons, currently using Lunr.js, but it's a bit annoying and the typeahead search is something I improvised and not really official.
[1] https://lunrjs.com/
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How can I search contents of a Secure Note?
To ensure cross-platform compatibility, Bitwarden uses Lunr.js for searching. This search engine is a bit quirky, and difficult to get used to.
- Best library to implement fuzzy search for a large database?
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Autocomplete
Slightly more js work required, but this should a more customisable solution: https://lunrjs.com/
- Self-Contained Search for Archived Static Site?
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Old World Data Explorer: now with search!
OWDX runs entirely in the browser; as such, it cannot offer cutting-edge search functionality of the sort you'd find in a search engine or an expensive piece of enterprise software. The search library I'm using — lunr.js, for anyone who's interested — does, however, offer a nice set of core functionality and a modest but handy query language.
orama
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Sky's the Limit! Supercharging Your Astro Blog with Orama, the Ultimate Stargazing Search Engine!
Let's break into the steps to utilize Orama and analyze how it works. I won't dig into the technical stuff because, hey, it's an open-source project, which means you can easily peek at the source code, no problemo!
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OramaSearch, a full-text search in your React application
If you are interested in it, you can learn more about it in the official documentation. And don't forget to follow Orama on Twitter and Michere Riva its CTO.
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Why I love GitLens in my VsCode - Part 1
I'll use the Lyra repository for this article, so thanks to the Lyra contributors if this article has a great git history and awesome code.
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What is your go to client-side fuzzy searching library?
You can checkout lyra, its in-memory full text search engine for javascript
- An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM
- Lyra
- Lyra: Fast, in-memory, typo-tolerant, full-text search engine in TypeScript
What are some alternatives?
flexsearch - Next-Generation full text search library for Browser and Node.js
minisearch - Tiny and powerful JavaScript full-text search engine for browser and Node
Lyra - A simple to use, composable, command line parser for C++ 11 and beyond
fuzzysort - Fast SublimeText-like fuzzy search for JavaScript.
whoosh - Pure-Python full-text search library
regex-benchmark - It's just a simple regex benchmark of different programming languages.
elasticsearch-py - Official Python client for Elasticsearch
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