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algoliasearch-helper
Advanced tools
The `algoliasearch-helper` package is a JavaScript library that provides a set of tools to manage search parameters and results when using Algolia's search API. It helps in building complex search interfaces by offering functionalities like managing search states, refining search queries, and handling pagination.
Managing Search Parameters
This feature allows you to manage search parameters such as facets and disjunctive facets. The code sample demonstrates how to initialize the helper with specific facets and add a facet refinement to filter search results.
const algoliasearch = require('algoliasearch');
const algoliasearchHelper = require('algoliasearch-helper');
const client = algoliasearch('YourApplicationID', 'YourAdminAPIKey');
const index = client.initIndex('your_index_name');
const helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, 'your_index_name', {
facets: ['category'],
disjunctiveFacets: ['brand']
});
helper.addFacetRefinement('category', 'Books').search();
Handling Pagination
This feature helps in handling pagination of search results. The code sample shows how to set the page number and listen for the search results.
helper.setPage(2).search();
helper.on('result', function(content) {
console.log(content.hits);
});
Refining Search Queries
This feature allows you to refine search queries. The code sample demonstrates how to set a search query and listen for the search results.
helper.setQuery('Harry Potter').search();
helper.on('result', function(content) {
console.log(content.hits);
});
Managing Search States
This feature allows you to manage the search state. The code sample shows how to get the current search state and set a new search state.
const state = helper.getState();
console.log(state);
helper.setState({
query: 'Harry Potter',
page: 1
}).search();
Elasticlunr.js is a lightweight full-text search engine developed in JavaScript for browser search and offline search. It provides functionalities similar to Algolia but is more suited for smaller datasets and offline use cases.
Lunr.js is a small, full-text search library for use in the browser and Node.js. It offers functionalities for indexing and searching documents, similar to Algolia, but is designed for smaller datasets and does not require a server.
Search-index is a powerful search engine for Node.js that allows you to index and search documents. It provides similar functionalities to Algolia but is more flexible and can be used for a variety of search use cases.
Coming from V1 (or js client v2)? Read the migration guide to the new version of the Helper.
Coming from V2? Read the migration guide to the new version of the Helper.
The JavaScript helper is an advanced library we provide to our users. If you are looking to build a complete search interface, we recommend you to use instantsearch.js. If you want to build an autocomplete menu, see autocomplete.js.
This module is the companion of the algolia/algoliasearch-client-js. It helps you keep track of the search parameters and provides a higher level API.
A small example that uses Browserify to manage modules.
var algoliasearch = require('algoliasearch');
var algoliasearchHelper = require('algoliasearch-helper');
var client = algoliasearch('appId', 'apiKey');
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, 'indexName', {
facets: ['mainCharacterFirstName', 'year'],
disjunctiveFacets: ['director']
});
helper.on('result', function(event){
console.log(event.results);
});
helper.addDisjunctiveFacetRefinement('director', 'Clint Eastwood');
helper.addDisjunctiveFacetRefinement('director', 'Sofia Coppola');
helper.addNumericRefinement('year', '=', 2003);
// Search for any movie filmed in 2003 and directed by either C. Eastwood or S. Coppola
helper.search();
See more examples in the examples folder
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/algoliasearch/3/algoliasearch.angular.js"></script>
<script src="dist/algoliasearch.helper.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
angular.module('searchApp', ['ngSanitize', 'algoliasearch'])
.controller('searchController', ['$scope', '$sce', 'algolia', function($scope, $sce, algolia) {
var algolia = algolia.Client('applicationId', 'apiKey');
$scope.q = '';
$scope.content = null;
$scope.helper = algoliasearchHelper(algolia, 'indexName', {
facets: ['type', 'shipping'],
disjunctiveFacets: ['category', 'manufacturer'],
hitsPerPage: 5,
});
$scope.helper.on('result', function(event) {
$scope.$apply(function() {
$scope.content = event.results;
});
});
$scope.toggleRefine = function($event, facet, value) {
$event.preventDefault();
$scope.helper.toggleRefine(facet, value).search();
};
$scope.$watch('q', function(q) {
$scope.helper.setQuery(q).search();
});
$scope.helper.search();
}]);
</script>
You can see the full Angular example here
There is also a complete JSDoc
<script>
tagUse our jsDelivr build:
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/algoliasearch.helper/2/algoliasearch.helper.min.js"></script>
npm install algoliasearch-helper
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, 'indexName'/*, parameters*/);
modify the parameters of the search (usually through user interactions)
helper.setQuery('iphone').addFacetRefinement('category', 'phone')
trigger the search (after all the modification have been applied)
helper.search()
read the results (with the event "result" handler) and update the UI with the results
helper.on('result', function(event) { updateUI(event.results); });
go back to 1
AlgoliasearchHelper: the helper. Keeps the state of the search, makes the queries and calls the handlers when an event happen.
SearchParameters: the object representing the state of the search. The current state is stored in helperInstance.state
.
SearchResults: the object in which the Algolia answers are transformed into. This object is passed to the result event handler. An example of SearchResults in JSON is available at the end of this readme
The search is triggered by the search()
method.
It takes all the previous modifications to the search and uses them to create the queries to Algolia. The search parameters are immutable.
Example:
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName);
// Let's monitor the results with the console
helper.on('result', function(event) {
console.log(event.results);
});
// Let's make an empty search
// The results are all sorted using the dashboard configuration
helper.search();
// Let's search for "landscape"
helper.setQuery('landscape').search();
// Let's add a category "photo"
// Will make a search with "photo" tag and "landscape" as the query
helper.addTag('photo').search();
The helper is a Node.js EventEmitter instance.
result
: get notified when new results are received. The handler function will receive
two objects (SearchResults
and SearchParameters
).
error
: get notified when errors are received from the API.
change
: get notified when a property has changed in the helper
search
: get notified when a request is sent to Algolia
result
eventhelper.on('result', updateTheResults);
result
event oncehelper.once('result', updateTheResults);
result
listenerhelper.removeListener('result', updateTheResults);
result
listenershelper.removeAllListeners('result');
All the methods from Node.js EventEmitter class are available.
helper.setQuery('fruit').search();
Facets are filters to retrieve a subset of an index having a specific value for a given attribute. First you need to define which attribute will be used as a facet in the dashboard: https://www.algolia.com/explorer#?tab=display
Refinements are ANDed by default (Conjunctive selection).
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
facets: ['ANDFacet']
});
helper.addFacetRefinement('ANDFacet', 'valueOfANDFacet').search();
helper.removeFacetRefinement('ANDFacet', 'valueOfANDFacet').search();
Refinements are ORed by default (Disjunctive selection).
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
disjunctiveFacets: ['ORFacet']
});
helper.addDisjunctiveFacetRefinement('ORFacet', 'valueOfORFacet').search();
helper.removeDisjunctiveFacetRefinement('ORFacet', 'valueOfORFacet').search();
Filter so that we do NOT get a given facet
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
facets: ['ANDFacet']
}).search();
helper.addFacetExclusion('ANDFacet', 'valueOfANDFacetToExclude');
helper.removeFacetExclusion('ANDFacet', 'valueOfANDFacetToExclude');
Filter over numeric attributes with math operations like =
, >
, <
, >=
, <=
. Can be used for numbers and dates (if converted to timestamp)
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
disjunctiveFacets: ['numericAttribute']
});
helper.addNumericRefinement('numericAttribute', '=', '3').search();
// filter to only the results that match numericAttribute=3
helper.addNumericRefinement('numericAttribute', '=', '4').search();
// filter to only the results that match numericAttribute=3 AND numericAttribute=4
// On another numeric with no previous filter
helper.addNumericRefinement('numericAttribute2', '=', ['42', '56', '37'] ).search();
// filter to only the results that match numericAttribute2=42 OR numericAttribute2=56 OR numericAttribute2=37
helper.removeNumericRefinement('numericAttribute', '=', '3').search();
// for the single operator = on numericAttribute
helper.removeNumericRefinement('numericAttribute', '=').search();
// for all the refinements on numericAttribute
helper.removeNumericRefinement('numericAttribute').search();
Hierarchical facets are useful to build such navigation menus:
| products
> fruits
> citrus
| strawberries
| peaches
| apples
Here, we refined the search this way:
To build such menu, you need to use hierarchical faceting:
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
hierarchicalFacets: [{
name: 'products',
attributes: ['categories.lvl0', 'categories.lvl1']
}]
});
Requirements: All the specified attributes
must be defined in your Algolia settings
as attributes for faceting.
Given your objects looks like this:
{
"objectID": "123",
"name": "orange",
"categories": {
"lvl0": "fruits",
"lvl1": "fruits > citrus"
}
}
And you refine products
:
helper.toggleFacetRefinement('products', 'fruits > citrus');
You will get a hierarchical presentation of your facet values: a navigation menu of your facet values.
helper.on('result', function(event){
console.log(event.results.hierarchicalFacets[0]);
// {
// 'name': 'products',
// 'count': null,
// 'isRefined': true,
// 'path': null,
// 'data': [{
// 'name': 'fruits',
// 'path': 'fruits',
// 'count': 1,
// 'isRefined': true,
// 'data': [{
// 'name': 'citrus',
// 'path': 'fruits > citrus',
// 'count': 1,
// 'isRefined': true,
// 'data': null
// }]
// }]
// }
});
To ease navigation, we always:
fruits > citrus > *
: n + 1)fruits > citrus
=> fruits
: n -1) categoriesYour records can also share multiple categories between one another by using arrays inside your object:
{
"objectID": "123",
"name": "orange",
"categories": {
"lvl0": ["fruits", "color"],
"lvl1": ["fruits > citrus", "color > orange"]
}
},
{
"objectID": "456",
"name": "grapefruit",
"categories": {
"lvl0": ["fruits", "color", "new"],
"lvl1": ["fruits > citrus", "color > yellow", "new > citrus"]
}
}
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
hierarchicalFacets: [{
name: 'products',
attributes: ['categories.lvl0', 'categories.lvl1'],
separator: '|'
}]
});
helper.toggleFacetRefinement('products', 'fruits|citrus');
Would mean that your objects look like so:
{
"objectID": "123",
"name": "orange",
"categories": {
"lvl0": "fruits",
"lvl1": "fruits|citrus"
}
}
The default sort for the hierarchical facet view is: isRefined:desc (first show refined), name:asc (then sort by name)
.
You can specify a different sort order by using:
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
hierarchicalFacets: [{
name: 'products',
attributes: ['categories.lvl0', 'categories.lvl1'],
sortBy: ['count:desc', 'name:asc'] // first show the most common values, then sort by name
}]
});
The available sort tokens are:
Let's say you have a lot of levels:
- fruits
- yellow
- citrus
- spicy
But you only want to get the values starting at "citrus", you can use rootPath
You can specify an root path to filter the hierarchical values
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
hierarchicalFacets: [{
name: 'products',
attributes: ['categories.lvl0', 'categories.lvl1', 'categories.lvl2', 'categories.lvl3'],
rootPath: 'fruits > yellow > citrus'
}]
});
Having a rootPath will refine the results on it automatically.
By default the hierarchical facet is going to return the child and parent facet values of the current refinement.
If you do not want to get the parent facet values you can set showParentLevel to false
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
hierarchicalFacets: [{
name: 'products',
attributes: ['categories.lvl0', 'categories.lvl1'],
showParentLevel: false
}]
});
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
hierarchicalFacets: [{
name: 'products',
attributes: ['categories.lvl0', 'categories.lvl1'],
separator: '|'
}]
});
helper.toggleFacetRefinement('products', 'fruits|citrus');
var breadcrumb = helper.getHierarchicalFacetBreadcrumb('products');
console.log(breadcrumb);
// ['fruits', 'citrus']
console.log(breadcrumb.join(' | '));
// 'fruits | citrus'
helper.clearRefinements().search();
helper.clearRefinements('ANDFacet').search();
helper.clearRefinements(function(value, attribute, type) {
return type === 'exclude' && attribute === 'ANDFacet';
}).search();
helper.on('result', function(event) {
// Get the facet values for the attribute age
event.results.getFacetValues('age');
// It will be ordered :
// - refined facets first
// - then ordered by number of occurence (bigger count -> higher in the list)
// - then ordered by name (alphabetically)
});
helper.on('result', function(event) {
// Get the facet values for the attribute age
event.results.getFacetValues('age', {sortBy: ['count:asc']});
// It will be ordered by number of occurence (lower number => higher position)
// Elements that can be sorted : count, name, isRefined
// Type of sort : 'asc' for ascending order, 'desc' for descending order
});
This only apply on numeric based facets/attributes.
helper.on('result', function(event) {
// Get the facet values for the attribute age
event.results.getFacetStats('age');
});
Tags are an easy way to do filtering. They are based on a special attribute in the records named _tags
, which can be a single string value or an array of strings.
helper.addTag('landscape').search();
helper.removeTag('landscape').search();
helper.clearTags().search();
helper.getPage();
helper.setPage(3).search();
During a search, changing the parameters will update the result set, which can then change the number of pages in the result set. Therefore, the behavior has been standardized so that any operation that may change the number of page will reset the pagination to page 0.
This may lead to some unexpected behavior. For example:
helper.setPage(4);
helper.getPage(); // 4
helper.setQuery('foo');
helper.getPage(); // 0
Non exhaustive list of operations that trigger a reset:
Index can be changed. The common use case is when you have several slaves with different sort order (sort by relevance, price or any other attribute).
helper.setIndex('index_orderByPrice').search();
var currentIndex = helper.getIndex();
Sometime it's convenient to reuse the current search parameters with small changes
without changing the state stored in the helper. That's why there is a function
called searchOnce
. This method does not trigger change
or error
events.
In the following, we are using searchOnce
to fetch only a single element using
all the other parameters already set in the search parameters.
var state = helper.searchOnce(
{hitsPerPage: 1},
function(error, content, state) {
// if an error occured it will be passed in error, otherwise its value is null
// content contains the results formatted as a SearchResults
// state is the instance of SearchParameters used for this search
});
var state1 = helper.searchOnce({hitsPerPage: 1})
.then(function(res) {
// res contains
// {
// content : SearchResults
// state : SearchParameters (the one used for this specific search)
// }
});
There are lots of other parameters you can set.
var helper = algoliasearchHelper(client, indexName, {
hitsPerPage: 50
});
helper.setQueryParameter('hitsPerPage', 20).search();
Name |
Type |
Description |
advancedSyntax |
boolean |
Enable the advanced syntax. |
allowTyposOnNumericTokens |
boolean |
Should the engine allow typos on numerics. |
analytics |
boolean |
Enable the analytics |
analyticsTags |
string |
Tag of the query in the analytics. |
aroundLatLng |
string |
Center of the geo search. |
aroundLatLngViaIP |
boolean |
Center of the search, retrieve from the user IP. |
aroundPrecision |
number |
Precision of the geo search. |
aroundRadius |
number |
Radius of the geo search. |
minimumAroundRadius |
number |
Minimum radius of the geo search. |
attributesToHighlight |
string |
List of attributes to highlight |
attributesToRetrieve |
string |
List of attributes to retrieve |
attributesToSnippet |
string |
List of attributes to snippet |
disjunctiveFacets |
Array.<string> |
All the declared disjunctive facets |
distinct |
boolean|number |
Remove duplicates based on the index setting attributeForDistinct |
facets |
Array.<string> |
All the facets that will be requested to the server |
filters |
string |
Add filters to the query (similar to WHERE clauses) |
getRankingInfo |
integer |
Enable the ranking informations in the response |
hitsPerPage |
number |
Number of hits to be returned by the search API |
ignorePlurals |
boolean |
Should the plurals be ignored |
insideBoundingBox |
string |
Geo search inside a box. |
insidePolygon |
string |
Geo search inside a polygon. |
maxValuesPerFacet |
number |
Number of values for each facetted attribute |
minWordSizefor1Typo |
number |
Number of characters to wait before doing one character replacement. |
minWordSizefor2Typos |
number |
Number of characters to wait before doing a second character replacement. |
optionalWords |
string |
Add some optional words to those defined in the dashboard |
page |
number |
The current page number |
query |
string |
Query string of the instant search. The empty string is a valid query. |
queryType |
string |
How the query should be treated by the search engine. Possible values: prefixAll, prefixLast, prefixNone |
removeWordsIfNoResults |
string |
Possible values are "lastWords" "firstWords" "allOptional" "none" (default) |
replaceSynonymsInHighlight |
boolean |
Should the engine replace the synonyms in the highlighted results. |
restrictSearchableAttributes |
string |
Restrict which attribute is searched. |
synonyms |
boolean |
Enable the synonyms |
tagFilters |
string |
Contains the tag filters in the raw format of the Algolia API. Setting this parameter is not compatible with the of the add/remove/toggle methods of the tag api. |
typoTolerance |
string |
How the typo tolerance behave in the search engine. Possible values: true, false, min, strict |
Here is an example of a result object you get with the result
event.
{
"hitsPerPage": 10,
"processingTimeMS": 2,
"facets": [
{
"name": "type",
"data": {
"HardGood": 6627,
"BlackTie": 550,
"Music": 665,
"Software": 131,
"Game": 456,
"Movie": 1571
},
"exhaustive": false
},
{
"exhaustive": false,
"data": {
"Free shipping": 5507
},
"name": "shipping"
}
],
"hits": [
{
"thumbnailImage": "http://img.bbystatic.com/BestBuy_US/images/products/1688/1688832_54x108_s.gif",
"_highlightResult": {
"shortDescription": {
"matchLevel": "none",
"value": "Safeguard your PC, Mac, Android and iOS devices with comprehensive Internet protection",
"matchedWords": []
},
"category": {
"matchLevel": "none",
"value": "Computer Security Software",
"matchedWords": []
},
"manufacturer": {
"matchedWords": [],
"value": "Webroot",
"matchLevel": "none"
},
"name": {
"value": "Webroot SecureAnywhere Internet Security (3-Device) (1-Year Subscription) - Mac/Windows",
"matchedWords": [],
"matchLevel": "none"
}
},
"image": "http://img.bbystatic.com/BestBuy_US/images/products/1688/1688832_105x210_sc.jpg",
"shipping": "Free shipping",
"bestSellingRank": 4,
"shortDescription": "Safeguard your PC, Mac, Android and iOS devices with comprehensive Internet protection",
"url": "http://www.bestbuy.com/site/webroot-secureanywhere-internet-security-3-devi…d=1219060687969&skuId=1688832&cmp=RMX&ky=2d3GfEmNIzjA0vkzveHdZEBgpPCyMnLTJ",
"name": "Webroot SecureAnywhere Internet Security (3-Device) (1-Year Subscription) - Mac/Windows",
"category": "Computer Security Software",
"salePrice_range": "1 - 50",
"objectID": "1688832",
"type": "Software",
"customerReviewCount": 5980,
"salePrice": 49.99,
"manufacturer": "Webroot"
},
....
],
"nbHits": 10000,
"disjunctiveFacets": [
{
"exhaustive": false,
"data": {
"5": 183,
"12": 112,
"7": 149,
...
},
"name": "customerReviewCount",
"stats": {
"max": 7461,
"avg": 157.939,
"min": 1
}
},
{
"data": {
"Printer Ink": 142,
"Wireless Speakers": 60,
"Point & Shoot Cameras": 48,
...
},
"name": "category",
"exhaustive": false
},
{
"exhaustive": false,
"data": {
"> 5000": 2,
"1 - 50": 6524,
"501 - 2000": 566,
"201 - 500": 1501,
"101 - 200": 1360,
"2001 - 5000": 47
},
"name": "salePrice_range"
},
{
"data": {
"Dynex™": 202,
"Insignia™": 230,
"PNY": 72,
...
},
"name": "manufacturer",
"exhaustive": false
}
],
"query": "",
"nbPages": 100,
"page": 0,
"index": "bestbuy"
}
This project works on any ES5 browser, basically >= IE9+.
FAQs
Helper for implementing advanced search features with algolia
The npm package algoliasearch-helper receives a total of 491,913 weekly downloads. As such, algoliasearch-helper popularity was classified as popular.
We found that algoliasearch-helper demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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