No gems, no dependencies, no complexity. Here’s a basic full text search to use on simpler, smaller rails apps.
Don’t get me wrong, I love ElasticSearch, or Ransack for larger more complex projects. But sometimes you just need something simple. This website for example.
At the time of writing this I’ve implemented search using plain old Ruby. This example not only does “full text” search, but it also searches the full text across multiple attributes, lastly, it also supports searching within ActionText rich text blocks as well.
Here's the basics for Searching the Post model within my blog:
I have a before_action for the controller to a set_scope method:
before_action :set_scope, only: :index Here's that set_scope method:
def set_scope @posts = Post.all if params[:search] basics = search_basics body = search_body tags = search_tags post_ids = basics | body | tags @posts = @posts.find(post_ids) end end def search_basics @posts.where( "title ilike ? OR description ilike ?", "%#{params[:search]}%","%#{params[:search]}%" ).pluck(:id) end def search_body @posts.joins(:action_text_rich_text) .where( "action_text_rich_texts.body ilike ?", "%#{params[:search]}%" ).pluck(:id) end def search_tags tags = params[:search].split(" ") Post.tagged_with(tags, :any => true).pluck(:id) end Here's how I render my basic search bar at the top of my posts index to wire it up in the view:
<form id="search" action="<%= posts_path %>"> <div class="input-group"> <%= text_field_tag :search, params[:search], id: 'content_search_term',class: 'form-control', placeholder:'Search...' %> <div class="input-group-append"> <button class="btn btn-primary" type="submit" id="button-addon2">Search</button> </div> </div> <% unless params[:search].blank? %> <small><%= pluralize(@posts.count, "post", "posts") %> found for search "<%= params[:search] %>" <a href="<%= posts_path %>" class="text-muted pl-2 text-decoration-none"><i class="fas fa-times"></i> Clear Search</a></small> <% end %> </form> Bottom Line
This is not the cleanest or most performant way to do search in rails, but sometimes simpler is better. If you only have a few dozen records to search and don't need "sloppy" search, this hack will probably suffice. Otherwise, there's plenty of resources out there on Elastic search and search-kick.
Top comments (1)
This post is misleading.
Full Text Search has a different meaning. For example, if my data has the word
jumpingand if I searched forjumped, it will return the results, which is not possible with your approach. Please read about this conceptcompose.com/articles/mastering-pos...