Searchkick
charabia
Searchkick | charabia | |
---|---|---|
10 | 5 | |
6,394 | 211 | |
- | 4.7% | |
7.3 | 8.4 | |
24 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Ruby | Rust | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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Searchkick
- Searchkick: Intelligent Search Made Easy
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Most performant way to build an analytics dashboard from a relational database backend that only stores numeric values, where the data the end-user sees is "categorized" into numeric brackets (e.g. 60-79 = Med, 80-100 = High, etc)
I run a large scale production application that does something along these lines. If the data needs to be close to real-time, I'd say use `searchkick` + Elasticsearch, and use `searchkick`'s async feature to "stream" the data from your table to the ES index. Your dashboard will then just query from the ES index via searchkick.
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Postgres Full Text Search vs. the Rest
You're right, that's actually what we implemented, application-level hooks, but they needed development and maintenance effort that come for free with the adapter we're using for OpenSearch integration, which also comes with welcome features: synonyms, partial matches, and many others.
Spoiler, the adapter is Searchkick: https://github.com/ankane/searchkick
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Full-text Search with Elasticsearch in Rails
Searchkick
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How does elasticsearch work with a rails app that's already connected to a MySQL database.
Normally for Rails applications you would use a gem like searchkick since it greatly reduces the initial Elasticsearch complexity.
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Building a Workflow for Async Searchkick Reindexing
We lean heavily on Elasticsearch at CompanyCam. One of it's primary use cases is serving our highly filterable project feed. It is incredibly fast, even when you apply multiple filters to your query and are searching a largish data set. Our primary interface for interacting with Elasticsearch is using the Searchkick gem. Searchkick is a powerhouse and provides so many features out of the box. One place where we bump up against the edges is when trying to reindex a large collection.
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Swapping Elasticsearch for Meilisearch in Rails feat. Docker
Convinced? Ok read on and I’ll show you what switching from Elasticsearch to Meilisearch looked like for a real production app — ScribeHub. We also moved from Ankane’s excellent Searchkick gem to the first party meilisearch-rails gem and I’ll show you the changes there as well.
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Searching/Querying with Active Record Encryption
If you want to use a look-aside pattern (like you might have used with Searchkick + Elasticsearch), you should check out ActiveStash: https://github.com/cipherstash/activestash
- Full Text Searching in a MySQL database via rails.
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ransack VS Searchkick - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 12 Aug 2021
Searchkick learns what your users are looking for. As more people search, it gets smarter and the results get better. It’s friendly for developers - and magical for your users. BONUS: it's written and supported by "ankane" who has flawless reputation amongst the Ruby community.
charabia
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tashkil: a lightweight library for removing Arabic diacritics
I hope to use this to submit a PR to meilisearch/charabia in the future based on the excellent example by benny-n in his pull request adding Hebrew support.
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Postgres Full Text Search vs. the Rest
Good to know. If you find some Russian language support improvement we can do, don't hesitate to create an issue on our tokeniser https://github.com/meilisearch/charabia.
Moreover, it's Hacktoberfest. If you want to help us improve the language support, it would be awesome!
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Meilisearch just announced its $15M Serie A, the search Rust engine strikes again
The Language support is mainly handled by the tokenizer where you can find specialized Segmenters and Normalizers that target some Language subtilities: https://github.com/meilisearch/charabia
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ZincSearch – lightweight alternative to Elasticsearch written in Go
Hi @tommoor
I work at Meilisearch so maybe a biased answer.
We do support other languages than English, it actually depends on what are the languages supported by our tokenizer https://github.com/meilisearch/charabia, so any language that uses whitespace to separate words(including English), Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew and Thai (Japaneze and Thai might work a little bit less)
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Where to start to learn about implementing website's search engine?
Hello u/pkeep-go, at MeiliSearch we are implementing with the help of a contributor the CJK language support. We already have the Chinese support with Jieba but a contributor is adding the Korean and Japaneese support with Lindera. For us, it's really important to have people trying and helping us with languages we don't speak. If you want to make any contribution on the tokenization/language support part, we'll be happy to help!
What are some alternatives?
chewy - High-level Elasticsearch Ruby framework based on the official elasticsearch-ruby client
pagefind - Static low-bandwidth search at scale
Elasticsearch Rails - Elasticsearch integrations for ActiveModel/Record and Ruby on Rails
ElasticPress - A fast and flexible search and query engine for WordPress.
ransack - Object-based searching.
MeiliSearch - A lightning-fast search API that fits effortlessly into your apps, websites, and workflow
pg_search - pg_search builds ActiveRecord named scopes that take advantage of PostgreSQL’s full text search
sql - Query your data using familiar SQL or intuitive Piped Processing Language (PPL)
Sunspot - Solr-powered search for Ruby objects
redb - An embedded key-value database in pure Rust
elasticsearch-ruby - Ruby integrations for Elasticsearch
postgres-elasticsearch-fdw - Postgres to Elastic Search Foreign Data Wrapper