Full text search¶
The database functions in the django.contrib.postgres.search
module ease
the use of PostgreSQL’s full text search engine.
For the examples in this document, we’ll use the models defined in Making queries.
See also
For a high-level overview of searching, see the topic documentation.
The search
lookup¶
The simplest way to use full text search is to search a single term against a single column in the database. For example:
>>> Entry.objects.filter(body_text__search='Cheese')
[<Entry: Cheese on Toast recipes>, <Entry: Pizza Recipes>]
This creates a to_tsvector
in the database from the body_text
field
and a plainto_tsquery
from the search term 'Cheese'
, both using the
default database search configuration. The results are obtained by matching the
query and the vector.
To use the search
lookup, 'django.contrib.postgres'
must be in your
INSTALLED_APPS
.
SearchVector
¶
Searching against a single field is great but rather limiting. The Entry
instances we’re searching belong to a Blog
, which has a tagline
field.
To query against both fields, use a SearchVector
:
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.search import SearchVector
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(
... search=SearchVector('body_text', 'blog__tagline'),
... ).filter(search='Cheese')
[<Entry: Cheese on Toast recipes>, <Entry: Pizza Recipes>]
The arguments to SearchVector
can be any
Expression
or the name of a field. Multiple
arguments will be concatenated together using a space so that the search
document includes them all.
SearchVector
objects can be combined together, allowing you to reuse them.
For example:
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(
... search=SearchVector('body_text') + SearchVector('blog__tagline'),
... ).filter(search='Cheese')
[<Entry: Cheese on Toast recipes>, <Entry: Pizza Recipes>]
See Changing the search configuration and
Weighting queries for an explanation of the config
and weight
parameters.
SearchQuery
¶
SearchQuery
translates the terms the user provides into a search query
object that the database compares to a search vector. By default, all the words
the user provides are passed through the stemming algorithms, and then it
looks for matches for all of the resulting terms.
SearchQuery
terms can be combined logically to provide more flexibility:
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.search import SearchQuery
>>> SearchQuery('meat') & SearchQuery('cheese') # AND
>>> SearchQuery('meat') | SearchQuery('cheese') # OR
>>> ~SearchQuery('meat') # NOT
See Changing the search configuration for an explanation of the
config
parameter.
SearchRank
¶
So far, we’ve just returned the results for which any match between the vector and the query are possible. It’s likely you may wish to order the results by some sort of relevancy. PostgreSQL provides a ranking function which takes into account how often the query terms appear in the document, how close together the terms are in the document, and how important the part of the document is where they occur. The better the match, the higher the value of the rank. To order by relevancy:
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.search import SearchQuery, SearchRank, SearchVector
>>> vector = SearchVector('body_text')
>>> query = SearchQuery('cheese')
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(rank=SearchRank(vector, query)).order_by('-rank')
[<Entry: Cheese on Toast recipes>, <Entry: Pizza recipes>]
See Weighting queries for an explanation of the
weights
parameter.
Changing the search configuration¶
You can specify the config
attribute to a SearchVector
and
SearchQuery
to use a different search configuration. This allows using
a different language parsers and dictionaries as defined by the database:
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.search import SearchQuery, SearchVector
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(
... search=SearchVector('body_text', config='french'),
... ).filter(search=SearchQuery('œuf', config='french'))
[<Entry: Pain perdu>]
The value of config
could also be stored in another column:
>>> from django.db.models import F
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(
... search=SearchVector('body_text', config=F('blog__language')),
... ).filter(search=SearchQuery('œuf', config=F('blog__language')))
[<Entry: Pain perdu>]
Weighting queries¶
Every field may not have the same relevance in a query, so you can set weights of various vectors before you combine them:
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.search import SearchQuery, SearchRank, SearchVector
>>> vector = SearchVector('body_text', weight='A') + SearchVector('blog__tagline', weight='B')
>>> query = SearchQuery('cheese')
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(rank=SearchRank(vector, query)).filter(rank__gte=0.3).order_by('rank')
The weight should be one of the following letters: D, C, B, A. By default,
these weights refer to the numbers 0.1
, 0.2
, 0.4
, and 1.0
,
respectively. If you wish to weight them differently, pass a list of four
floats to SearchRank
as weights
in the same order above:
>>> rank = SearchRank(vector, query, weights=[0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8])
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(rank=rank).filter(rank__gte=0.3).order_by('-rank')
Performance¶
Special database configuration isn’t necessary to use any of these functions, however, if you’re searching more than a few hundred records, you’re likely to run into performance problems. Full text search is a more intensive process than comparing the size of an integer, for example.
In the event that all the fields you’re querying on are contained within one particular model, you can create a functional index which matches the search vector you wish to use. The PostgreSQL documentation has details on creating indexes for full text search.
SearchVectorField
¶
If this approach becomes too slow, you can add a SearchVectorField
to your
model. You’ll need to keep it populated with triggers, for example, as
described in the PostgreSQL documentation. You can then query the field as
if it were an annotated SearchVector
:
>>> Entry.objects.update(search_vector=SearchVector('body_text'))
>>> Entry.objects.filter(search_vector='cheese')
[<Entry: Cheese on Toast recipes>, <Entry: Pizza recipes>]
Trigram similarity¶
Another approach to searching is trigram similarity. A trigram is a group of
three consecutive characters. In addition to the trigram_similar
lookup, you can use a couple of other expressions.
To use them, you need to activate the pg_trgm extension on
PostgreSQL. You can install it using the
TrigramExtension
migration
operation.
TrigramSimilarity
¶
Accepts a field name or expression, and a string or expression. Returns the trigram similarity between the two arguments.
Usage example:
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.search import TrigramSimilarity
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Katy Stevens')
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Stephen Keats')
>>> test = 'Katie Stephens'
>>> Author.objects.annotate(
... similarity=TrigramSimilarity('name', test),
... ).filter(similarity__gt=0.3).order_by('-similarity')
[<Author: Katy Stevens>, <Author: Stephen Keats>]
TrigramDistance
¶
Accepts a field name or expression, and a string or expression. Returns the trigram distance between the two arguments.
Usage example:
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.search import TrigramDistance
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Katy Stevens')
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Stephen Keats')
>>> test = 'Katie Stephens'
>>> Author.objects.annotate(
... distance=TrigramDistance('name', test),
... ).filter(distance__lte=0.7).order_by('distance')
[<Author: Katy Stevens>, <Author: Stephen Keats>]