Edge n-gram token filter
editEdge n-gram token filter
editForms an n-gram of a specified length from the beginning of a token.
For example, you can use the edge_ngram
token filter to change quick
to
qu
.
When not customized, the filter creates 1-character edge n-grams by default.
This filter uses Lucene’s EdgeNGramTokenFilter.
The edge_ngram
filter is similar to the ngram
token filter. However, the edge_ngram
only outputs n-grams that start at the
beginning of a token. These edge n-grams are useful for
search-as-you-type queries.
Example
editThe following analyze API request uses the edge_ngram
filter to convert the quick brown fox jumps
to 1-character and 2-character
edge n-grams:
GET _analyze { "tokenizer": "standard", "filter": [ { "type": "edge_ngram", "min_gram": 1, "max_gram": 2 } ], "text": "the quick brown fox jumps" }
The filter produces the following tokens:
[ t, th, q, ui, b, br, f, fo, j, ju ]
Add to an analyzer
editThe following create index API request uses the
edge_ngram
filter to configure a new
custom analyzer.
PUT edge_ngram_example { "settings": { "analysis": { "analyzer": { "standard_edge_ngram": { "tokenizer": "standard", "filter": [ "edge_ngram" ] } } } } }
Configurable parameters
edit-
max_gram
-
(Optional, integer) Maximum character length of a gram. For custom token filters, defaults to
2
. For the built-inedge_ngram
filter, defaults to1
. -
min_gram
-
(Optional, integer)
Minimum character length of a gram. Defaults to
1
. -
side
-
(Optional, string) Deprecated. Indicates whether to truncate tokens from the
front
orback
. Defaults tofront
.Instead of using the
back
value, you can use thereverse
token filter before and after theedge_ngram
filter to achieve the same results.
Customize
editTo customize the edge_ngram
filter, duplicate it to create the basis
for a new custom token filter. You can modify the filter using its configurable
parameters.
For example, the following request creates a custom edge_ngram
filter that forms n-grams between 3-5 characters.
PUT edge_ngram_custom_example { "settings": { "analysis": { "analyzer": { "default": { "tokenizer": "whitespace", "filter": [ "3_5_edgegrams" ] } }, "filter": { "3_5_edgegrams": { "type": "edge_ngram", "min_gram": 3, "max_gram": 5 } } } } }
Limitations of the max_gram
parameter
editThe edge_ngram
filter’s max_gram
value limits the character length of
tokens. When the edge_ngram
filter is used with an index analyzer, this
means search terms longer than the max_gram
length may not match any indexed
terms.
For example, if the max_gram
is 3
, searches for apple
won’t match the
indexed term app
.
To account for this, you can use the
truncate
filter with a search analyzer
to shorten search terms to the max_gram
character length. However, this could
return irrelevant results.
For example, if the max_gram
is 3
and search terms are truncated to three
characters, the search term apple
is shortened to app
. This means searches
for apple
return any indexed terms matching app
, such as apply
, snapped
,
and apple
.
We recommend testing both approaches to see which best fits your use case and desired search experience.