Whether to support phrase matching and excluding words from search queries. Use the advancedSyntaxFeatures parameter to control which feature is supported.
Advanced search syntax features you want to support. - exactPhrase. Phrases in quotes must match exactly. For example, sparkly blue \"iPhone case\" only returns records with the exact string "iPhone case". - excludeWords. Query words prefixed with a - must not occur in a record. For example, search -engine matches records that contain "search" but not "engine". This setting only has an effect if advancedSyntax is true.
Whether to allow typos on numbers in the search query. Turn off this setting to reduce the number of irrelevant matches when searching in large sets of similar numbers.
Determine which plurals and synonyms should be considered an exact matches. By default, Algolia treats singular and plural forms of a word, and single-word synonyms, as exact matches when searching. For example: - "swimsuit" and "swimsuits" are treated the same - "swimsuit" and "swimwear" are treated the same (if they are synonyms). - ignorePlurals. Plurals and similar declensions added by the ignorePlurals setting are considered exact matches. - singleWordSynonym. Single-word synonyms, such as "NY" = "NYC", are considered exact matches. - multiWordsSynonym. Multi-word synonyms, such as "NY" = "New York", are considered exact matches.
Coordinates for the center of a circle, expressed as a comma-separated string of latitude and longitude. Only records included within a circle around this central location are included in the results. The radius of the circle is determined by the aroundRadius and minimumAroundRadius settings. This parameter is ignored if you also specify insidePolygon or insideBoundingBox.
Whether the best matching attribute should be determined by minimum proximity. This setting only affects ranking if the Attribute ranking criterion comes before Proximity in the ranking setting. If true, the best matching attribute is selected based on the minimum proximity of multiple matches. Otherwise, the best matching attribute is determined by the order in the searchableAttributes setting.
Attributes to highlight. By default, all searchable attributes are highlighted. Use * to highlight all attributes or use an empty array [] to turn off highlighting. Attribute names are case-sensitive. With highlighting, strings that match the search query are surrounded by HTML tags defined by highlightPreTag and highlightPostTag. You can use this to visually highlight matching parts of a search query in your UI. For more information, see Highlighting and snippeting.
Attributes to include in the API response. To reduce the size of your response, you can retrieve only some of the attributes. Attribute names are case-sensitive. - * retrieves all attributes, except attributes included in the customRanking and unretrievableAttributes settings. - To retrieve all attributes except a specific one, prefix the attribute with a dash and combine it with the *: [\"*\", \"-ATTRIBUTE\"]. - The objectID attribute is always included.
Attributes for which to enable snippets. Attribute names are case-sensitive. Snippets provide additional context to matched words. If you enable snippets, they include 10 words, including the matched word. The matched word will also be wrapped by HTML tags for highlighting. You can adjust the number of words with the following notation: ATTRIBUTE:NUMBER, where NUMBER is the number of words to be extracted.
Whether to include a queryID attribute in the response. The query ID is a unique identifier for a search query and is required for tracking click and conversion events.
Attributes to use as custom ranking. Attribute names are case-sensitive. The custom ranking attributes decide which items are shown first if the other ranking criteria are equal. Records with missing values for your selected custom ranking attributes are always sorted last. Boolean attributes are sorted based on their alphabetical order. Modifiers - asc(\"ATTRIBUTE\"). Sort the index by the values of an attribute, in ascending order. - desc(\"ATTRIBUTE\"). Sort the index by the values of an attribute, in descending order. If you use two or more custom ranking attributes, reduce the precision of your first attributes, or the other attributes will never be applied.
Whether to split compound words in the query into their building blocks. For more information, see Word segmentation. Word segmentation is supported for these languages: German, Dutch, Finnish, Swedish, and Norwegian. Decompounding doesn't work for words with non-spacing mark Unicode characters. For example, Gartenstühle won't be decompounded if the ü consists of u (U+0075) and ◌̈ (U+0308).
Searchable attributes for which you want to turn off the Exact ranking criterion. Attribute names are case-sensitive. This can be useful for attributes with long values, where the likelihood of an exact match is high, such as product descriptions. Turning off the Exact ranking criterion for these attributes favors exact matching on other attributes. This reduces the impact of individual attributes with a lot of content on ranking.
Attributes for which you want to turn off typo tolerance. Attribute names are case-sensitive. Returning only exact matches can help when: - Searching in hyphenated attributes. - Reducing the number of matches when you have too many. This can happen with attributes that are long blocks of text, such as product descriptions. Consider alternatives such as disableTypoToleranceOnWords or adding synonyms if your attributes have intentional unusual spellings that might look like typos.
Whether this search will use Dynamic Re-Ranking. This setting only has an effect if you activated Dynamic Re-Ranking for this index in the Algolia dashboard.
Whether faceting should be applied after deduplication with distinct. This leads to accurate facet counts when using faceting in combination with distinct. It's usually better to use afterDistinct modifiers in the attributesForFaceting setting, as facetingAfterDistinct only computes correct facet counts if all records have the same facet values for the attributeForDistinct.
Facets for which to retrieve facet values that match the search criteria and the number of matching facet values. To retrieve all facets, use the wildcard character *. For more information, see facets.
Filter expression to only include items that match the filter criteria in the response. You can use these filter expressions: - Numeric filters.<facet> <op> <number>, where <op> is one of <, <=, =, !=, >, >=. - Ranges.<facet>:<lower> TO <upper> where <lower> and <upper> are the lower and upper limits of the range (inclusive). - Facet filters.<facet>:<value> where <facet> is a facet attribute (case-sensitive) and <value> a facet value. - Tag filters._tags:<value> or just <value> (case-sensitive). - Boolean filters.<facet>: true | false. You can combine filters with AND, OR, and NOT operators with the following restrictions: - You can only combine filters of the same type with OR. Not supported:facet:value OR num > 3. - You can't use NOT with combinations of filters. Not supported:NOT(facet:value OR facet:value) - You can't combine conjunctions (AND) with OR. Not supported:facet:value OR (facet:value AND facet:value) Use quotes around your filters, if the facet attribute name or facet value has spaces, keywords (OR, AND, NOT), or quotes. If a facet attribute is an array, the filter matches if it matches at least one element of the array. For more information, see Filters.
Coordinates of a polygon in which to search. Polygons are defined by 3 to 10,000 points. Each point is represented by its latitude and longitude. Provide multiple polygons as nested arrays. For more information, see filtering inside polygons. This parameter is ignored if you also specify insideBoundingBox.
Characters for which diacritics should be preserved. By default, Algolia removes diacritics from letters. For example, é becomes e. If this causes issues in your search, you can specify characters that should keep their diacritics.
Minimum proximity score for two matching words. This adjusts the Proximity ranking criterion by equally scoring matches that are farther apart. For example, if minProximity is 2, neighboring matches and matches with one word between them would have the same score.
ISO language codes that adjust settings that are useful for processing natural language queries (as opposed to keyword searches): - Sets removeStopWords and ignorePlurals to the list of provided languages. - Sets removeWordsIfNoResults to allOptional. - Adds a natural_language attribute to ruleContexts and analyticsTags.
Impact that Personalization should have on this search. The higher this value is, the more Personalization determines the ranking compared to other factors. For more information, see Understanding Personalization impact.
Languages for language-specific query processing steps such as plurals, stop-word removal, and word-detection dictionaries. This setting sets a default list of languages used by the removeStopWords and ignorePlurals settings. This setting also sets a dictionary for word detection in the logogram-based CJK languages. To support this, you must place the CJK language first. You should always specify a query language. If you don't specify an indexing language, the search engine uses all supported languages, or the languages you specified with the ignorePlurals or removeStopWords parameters. This can lead to unexpected search results. For more information, see Language-specific configuration.
Determines the order in which Algolia returns your results. By default, each entry corresponds to a ranking criteria. The tie-breaking algorithm sequentially applies each criterion in the order they're specified. If you configure a replica index for sorting by an attribute, you put the sorting attribute at the top of the list. Modifiers - asc(\"ATTRIBUTE\"). Sort the index by the values of an attribute, in ascending order. - desc(\"ATTRIBUTE\"). Sort the index by the values of an attribute, in descending order. Before you modify the default setting, you should test your changes in the dashboard, and by A/B testing.
Relevancy threshold below which less relevant results aren't included in the results. You can only set relevancyStrictness on virtual replica indices. Use this setting to strike a balance between the relevance and number of returned results.
Whether to replace a highlighted word with the matched synonym. By default, the original words are highlighted even if a synonym matches. For example, with home as a synonym for house and a search for home, records matching either "home" or "house" are included in the search results, and either "home" or "house" are highlighted. With replaceSynonymsInHighlight set to true, a search for home still matches the same records, but all occurrences of "house" are replaced by "home" in the highlighted response.
Properties to include in the API response of search and browse requests. By default, all response properties are included. To reduce the response size, you can select, which attributes should be included. You can't exclude these properties: message, warning, cursor, serverUsed, indexUsed, abTestVariantID, parsedQuery, or any property triggered by the getRankingInfo parameter. Don't exclude properties that you might need in your search UI.
Whether to restrict highlighting and snippeting to items that at least partially matched the search query. By default, all items are highlighted and snippeted.
Keywords to be used instead of the search query to conduct a more broader search. Using the similarQuery parameter changes other settings: - queryType is set to prefixNone. - removeStopWords is set to true. - words is set as the first ranking criterion. - All remaining words are treated as optionalWords. Since the similarQuery is supposed to do a broad search, they usually return many results. Combine it with filters to narrow down the list of results.
Order in which to retrieve facet values. - count. Facet values are retrieved by decreasing count. The count is the number of matching records containing this facet value. - alpha. Retrieve facet values alphabetically. This setting doesn't influence how facet values are displayed in your UI (see renderingContent). For more information, see facet value display.
Whether to sum all filter scores. If true, all filter scores are summed. Otherwise, the maximum filter score is kept. For more information, see filter scores.