NOTE: You are looking at documentation for an older release. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Document paths
editDocument paths
editMany APIs in Elasticsearch describe a path to a document. In NEST, besides generating a constructor that takes
and Index, Type and Id separately, we also generate a constructor that allows you to describe the path
to your document more succinctly using a an instance of the DocumentPath<T>
type.
Creating new instances
edithere we create a new document path based on Project with the id 1
IDocumentPath path = new DocumentPath<Project>(1); Expect("project").WhenSerializing(path.Index); Expect("doc").WhenSerializing(path.Type); Expect(1).WhenSerializing(path.Id);
You can still override the inferred index and type name
path = new DocumentPath<Project>(1).Type("project1"); Expect("project1").WhenSerializing(path.Type); path = new DocumentPath<Project>(1).Index("project1"); Expect("project1").WhenSerializing(path.Index);
and there is also a static way to describe such paths
path = DocumentPath<Project>.Id(1); Expect("project").WhenSerializing(path.Index); Expect("doc").WhenSerializing(path.Type); Expect(1).WhenSerializing(path.Id);
Creating from a document type instance
editif you have an instance of your document you can use it as well generate document paths
var project = new Project { Name = "hello-world" };
here we create a new document path based on the instance of Project
, project
IDocumentPath path = new DocumentPath<Project>(project); Expect("project").WhenSerializing(path.Index); Expect("doc").WhenSerializing(path.Type); Expect("hello-world").WhenSerializing(path.Id);
You can still override the inferred index and type name
path = new DocumentPath<Project>(project).Type("project1"); Expect("project1").WhenSerializing(path.Type); path = new DocumentPath<Project>(project).Index("project1"); Expect("project1").WhenSerializing(path.Index);
and again, there is also a static way to describe such paths
path = DocumentPath<Project>.Id(project); Expect("project").WhenSerializing(path.Index); Expect("doc").WhenSerializing(path.Type); Expect("hello-world").WhenSerializing(path.Id); DocumentPath<Project> p = project;
An example with requests
editvar project = new Project { Name = "hello-world" };
we can see an example of how DocumentPath
helps your describe your requests more tersely
var request = new IndexRequest<Project>(2) { Document = project }; request = new IndexRequest<Project>(project) { };
when comparing with the full blown constructor and passing document manually,
DocumentPath<T>
's benefits become apparent. Compare the following request that doesn’t
use DocumentPath<T>
with the former examples
request = new IndexRequest<Project>(IndexName.From<Project>(), TypeName.From<Project>(), 2) { Document = project };