This brief guide describes the basic steps for creating your first search index.
Step #1: Create new index
First of all you need to create an index. An index can be created in memory or on disk. An index created in memory cannot be saved after exiting your program. In contrast, an index created on disk may be loaded in the future to continue working. Details on creating an index are described in the section Creating an index. The following example shows how to create an index on disk.
C#
stringindexFolder=@"c:\MyIndex\";// Specify the path to the index folderIndexindex=newIndex(indexFolder);
Step #2: Open existing index
To continue working with a previously created index, it must be loaded. Each constructor of the Index class by default loads the index, if it exists at the specified path. And only an explicit indication causes an index to be overwritten. The following example shows how to load an existing index.
C#
stringindexFolder=@"c:\MyIndex\";// Specify the path to the index folderIndexindex=newIndex(indexFolder);
Step #3: Subscribe to index events
After creating an index, you need to add documents to the index for indexing. Indexing documents can be successful or unsuccessful for various reasons, for example, due to read errors from the disk or the presence of a password to access a document. To receive information about indexing errors, you can subscribe to the ErrorOccurred event. To work with events, see the section Search index events. The following example shows how to subscribe to the ErrorOccurred event.
C#
index.Events.ErrorOccurred+=(sender,args)=>{Console.WriteLine(args.Message);// Writing error messages to the console};
Step #4: Add files synchronously
Document indexing can be performed synchronously or asynchronously. Synchronous indexing means that a thread that started the indexing process will be busy until the operation is completed. The following example shows how to perform indexing synchronously.
C#
stringindexFolder=@"c:\MyIndex\";// Specify path to the index folderstringdocumentsFolder=@"c:\MyDocuments\";// Specify the path to a folder containing documents to searchIndexindex=newIndex(indexFolder);// Creating an index in the specified folderindex.Add(documentsFolder);// Synchronous indexing documents from the specified folder
Step #5: Add files asynchronously
More often, however, it is necessary to perform indexing asynchronously, with the ability to execute other tasks in the thread that launched the operation. A detailed description of all aspects of the indexing process is provided in the section Indexing. The following example shows how to perform indexing asynchronously.
C#
stringindexFolder=@"c:\MyIndex\";// Specify path to the index folderstringdocumentsFolder=@"c:\MyDocuments\";// Specify the path to a folder containing documents to search// Creating an indexIndexindex=newIndex(indexFolder);// Subscribing to the eventindex.Events.StatusChanged+=(sender,args)=>{if(args.Status!=IndexStatus.InProgress){// There should be a code indicating the completion of the operation}};// Setting the flag for asynchronous indexingIndexingOptionsoptions=newIndexingOptions();options.IsAsync=true;// Asynchronous indexing documents from the specified folder// The current method terminates before the operation completesindex.Add(documentsFolder,options);
Step #6: Perform search
When documents are indexed, the index is ready to handle search queries. The following types of search queries are supported: simple, fuzzy, case sensitive, boolean, phrasal, faceted, with wildcards, and others. Description of search queries of various types is presented in the section Searching. The example below shows how to perform simple search in an index.
C#
stringquery="Einstein";// Specify a search querySearchResultresult=index.Search(query);// Searching in the index
Step #7: Use search results
When a search is completed, you need to somehow interpret a result. The result can be represented by a simple list of documents found, or the words and phrases found can be highlighted in the text of the document. For more information on processing search results, see Search results. The example below shows how to list found documents in the console.
C#
// Search in indexSearchResultresult=index.Search(query);// Printing the resultConsole.WriteLine("Documents found: "+result.DocumentCount);Console.WriteLine("Total occurrences found: "+result.OccurrenceCount);for(inti=0;i<result.DocumentCount;i++){FoundDocumentdocument=result.GetFoundDocument(i);Console.WriteLine("\tDocument: "+document.DocumentInfo.FilePath);Console.WriteLine("\tOccurrences: "+document.OccurrenceCount);}
The following example shows how to highlight search results in the text of a document. Detailed information on how to highlight search results is described in the section Highlighting search results.
C#
SearchResultresult=index.Search(query,options);// Search in the indexif(result.DocumentCount>0){FoundDocumentdocument=result.GetFoundDocument(0);// Getting the first found documentOutputAdapteroutputAdapter=newFileOutputAdapter(@"c:\Highlighted.html");// Creating the output adapter to a fileHtmlHighlighterhighlighter=newHtmlHighlighter(outputAdapter);// Creating the highlighter objectindex.Highlight(document,highlighter);// Generating output HTML formatted document with highlighted search results}
More resources
Advanced usage topics
To learn more about search features and get familiar how to enhance your search solution, please refer to the advanced usage section.
GitHub examples
You may easily run the code from documentation articles and see the features in action in our GitHub examples: