The behavior of a custom text search configuration can easily become confusing. The functions described in this section are useful for testing text search objects. You can test a complete configuration, or test parsers and dictionaries separately.
The function ts_debug
allows easy testing of a
text search configuration.
ts_debug([config
regconfig
, ]document
text
, OUTalias
text
, OUTdescription
text
, OUTtoken
text
, OUTdictionaries
regdictionary[]
, OUTdictionary
regdictionary
, OUTlexemes
text[]
) returns setof record
ts_debug
displays information about every token of
document
as produced by the
parser and processed by the configured dictionaries. It uses the
configuration specified by config
,
or default_text_search_config
if that argument is
omitted.
ts_debug
returns one row for each token identified in the text
by the parser. The columns returned are
alias
text
— short name of the token type
description
text
— description of the
token type
token
text
— text of the token
dictionaries
regdictionary[]
— the
dictionaries selected by the configuration for this token type
dictionary
regdictionary
— the dictionary
that recognized the token, or NULL
if none did
lexemes
text[]
— the lexeme(s) produced
by the dictionary that recognized the token, or NULL
if
none did; an empty array ({}
) means it was recognized as a
stop word
Here is a simple example:
SELECT * FROM ts_debug('english','a fat cat sat on a mat - it ate a fat rats'); alias | description | token | dictionaries | dictionary | lexemes -----------+-----------------+-------+----------------+--------------+--------- asciiword | Word, all ASCII | a | {english_stem} | english_stem | {} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | fat | {english_stem} | english_stem | {fat} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | cat | {english_stem} | english_stem | {cat} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | sat | {english_stem} | english_stem | {sat} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | on | {english_stem} | english_stem | {} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | a | {english_stem} | english_stem | {} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | mat | {english_stem} | english_stem | {mat} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | blank | Space symbols | - | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | it | {english_stem} | english_stem | {} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | ate | {english_stem} | english_stem | {ate} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | a | {english_stem} | english_stem | {} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | fat | {english_stem} | english_stem | {fat} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | rats | {english_stem} | english_stem | {rat}
For a more extensive demonstration, we
first create a public.english
configuration and
Ispell dictionary for the English language:
CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION public.english ( COPY = pg_catalog.english ); CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY english_ispell ( TEMPLATE = ispell, DictFile = english, AffFile = english, StopWords = english ); ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION public.english ALTER MAPPING FOR asciiword WITH english_ispell, english_stem;
SELECT * FROM ts_debug('public.english','The Brightest supernovaes'); alias | description | token | dictionaries | dictionary | lexemes -----------+-----------------+-------------+-------------------------------+----------------+------------- asciiword | Word, all ASCII | The | {english_ispell,english_stem} | english_ispell | {} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | Brightest | {english_ispell,english_stem} | english_ispell | {bright} blank | Space symbols | | {} | | asciiword | Word, all ASCII | supernovaes | {english_ispell,english_stem} | english_stem | {supernova}
In this example, the word Brightest
was recognized by the
parser as an ASCII word
(alias asciiword
).
For this token type the dictionary list is
english_ispell
and
english_stem
. The word was recognized by
english_ispell
, which reduced it to the noun
bright
. The word supernovaes
is
unknown to the english_ispell
dictionary so it
was passed to the next dictionary, and, fortunately, was recognized (in
fact, english_stem
is a Snowball dictionary which
recognizes everything; that is why it was placed at the end of the
dictionary list).
The word The
was recognized by the
english_ispell
dictionary as a stop word (Section 12.6.1) and will not be indexed.
The spaces are discarded too, since the configuration provides no
dictionaries at all for them.
You can reduce the width of the output by explicitly specifying which columns you want to see:
SELECT alias, token, dictionary, lexemes FROM ts_debug('public.english','The Brightest supernovaes'); alias | token | dictionary | lexemes -----------+-------------+----------------+------------- asciiword | The | english_ispell | {} blank | | | asciiword | Brightest | english_ispell | {bright} blank | | | asciiword | supernovaes | english_stem | {supernova}
The following functions allow direct testing of a text search parser.
ts_parse(parser_name
text
,document
text
, OUTtokid
integer
, OUTtoken
text
) returnssetof record
ts_parse(parser_oid
oid
,document
text
, OUTtokid
integer
, OUTtoken
text
) returnssetof record
ts_parse
parses the given document
and returns a series of records, one for each token produced by
parsing. Each record includes a tokid
showing the
assigned token type and a token
which is the text of the
token. For example:
SELECT * FROM ts_parse('default', '123 - a number'); tokid | token -------+-------- 22 | 123 12 | 12 | - 1 | a 12 | 1 | number
ts_token_type(parser_name
text
, OUTtokid
integer
, OUTalias
text
, OUTdescription
text
) returnssetof record
ts_token_type(parser_oid
oid
, OUTtokid
integer
, OUTalias
text
, OUTdescription
text
) returnssetof record
ts_token_type
returns a table which describes each type of
token the specified parser can recognize. For each token type, the table
gives the integer tokid
that the parser uses to label a
token of that type, the alias
that names the token type
in configuration commands, and a short description
. For
example:
SELECT * FROM ts_token_type('default'); tokid | alias | description -------+-----------------+------------------------------------------ 1 | asciiword | Word, all ASCII 2 | word | Word, all letters 3 | numword | Word, letters and digits 4 | email | Email address 5 | url | URL 6 | host | Host 7 | sfloat | Scientific notation 8 | version | Version number 9 | hword_numpart | Hyphenated word part, letters and digits 10 | hword_part | Hyphenated word part, all letters 11 | hword_asciipart | Hyphenated word part, all ASCII 12 | blank | Space symbols 13 | tag | XML tag 14 | protocol | Protocol head 15 | numhword | Hyphenated word, letters and digits 16 | asciihword | Hyphenated word, all ASCII 17 | hword | Hyphenated word, all letters 18 | url_path | URL path 19 | file | File or path name 20 | float | Decimal notation 21 | int | Signed integer 22 | uint | Unsigned integer 23 | entity | XML entity
The ts_lexize
function facilitates dictionary testing.
ts_lexize(dict
regdictionary
,token
text
) returnstext[]
ts_lexize
returns an array of lexemes if the input
token
is known to the dictionary,
or an empty array if the token
is known to the dictionary but it is a stop word, or
NULL
if it is an unknown word.
Examples:
SELECT ts_lexize('english_stem', 'stars'); ts_lexize ----------- {star} SELECT ts_lexize('english_stem', 'a'); ts_lexize ----------- {}
The ts_lexize
function expects a single
token, not text. Here is a case
where this can be confusing:
SELECT ts_lexize('thesaurus_astro','supernovae stars') is null; ?column? ---------- t
The thesaurus dictionary thesaurus_astro
does know the
phrase supernovae stars
, but ts_lexize
fails since it does not parse the input text but treats it as a single
token. Use plainto_tsquery
or to_tsvector
to
test thesaurus dictionaries, for example:
SELECT plainto_tsquery('supernovae stars'); plainto_tsquery ----------------- 'sn'