mini_search 1.0.3
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- checksums.yaml +7 -0
- data/.gitignore +14 -0
- data/.rspec +3 -0
- data/.travis.yml +7 -0
- data/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md +74 -0
- data/Gemfile +6 -0
- data/Gemfile.lock +35 -0
- data/LICENSE.txt +21 -0
- data/README.md +267 -0
- data/Rakefile +6 -0
- data/bin/console +14 -0
- data/bin/setup +8 -0
- data/formula1.svg +144 -0
- data/formula2.svg +79 -0
- data/lib/mini_search.rb +75 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/bm_25.rb +14 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/downcase_filter.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/idf.rb +12 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/inverted_index.rb +163 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/inverted_index_spec.rb +34 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/language_support/portuguese.rb +19 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/pipeline.rb +20 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/remove_punctuation_filter.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/standard_whitespace_tokenizer.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/stemmer/portuguese.rb +365 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/stemmer_filter.rb +19 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/stop_words_filter.rb +13 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/strip_filter.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/synonyms_filter.rb +19 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/tf.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/mini_search/version.rb +3 -0
- data/mini_search.gemspec +29 -0
- metadata +116 -0
checksums.yaml
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---
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz: acd453c483524bd3ab16323edf2d237a6c037ac6aac48d365f395c80a343a606
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data.tar.gz: '0681c134db08c7b354ef53ef6670aa7d984de43fbb959175cf94f0efc7d0d86c'
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SHA512:
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metadata.gz: 726b0e4d969f9040d1b18ec9967dbf0cf28fc473b36377279f03b5ee782f8e619c9ee0e89087a540ac61a7a27fc8757113f15c7acd3153bc6b6e5fd427174fc7
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data.tar.gz: 816d97d2bb91349bbe9b134d5d1b8425910fa1507c76db0743e5d9921bf74c1446e5939a50b34b1116bf0712a279af5766587ec771557ba66f29527f2f719b92
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data/.gitignore
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data/.rspec
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data/.travis.yml
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data/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
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# Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct
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## Our Pledge
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In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as
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contributors and maintainers pledge to making participation in our project and
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our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body
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size, disability, ethnicity, gender identity and expression, level of experience,
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nationality, personal appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and
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orientation.
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## Our Standards
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Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment
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include:
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* Using welcoming and inclusive language
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* Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences
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* Gracefully accepting constructive criticism
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* Focusing on what is best for the community
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* Showing empathy towards other community members
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Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:
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* The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or
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advances
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* Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
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* Public or private harassment
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* Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or electronic
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address, without explicit permission
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* Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a
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professional setting
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## Our Responsibilities
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Project maintainers are responsible for clarifying the standards of acceptable
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behavior and are expected to take appropriate and fair corrective action in
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response to any instances of unacceptable behavior.
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Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or
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reject comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions
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that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, or to ban temporarily or
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permanently any contributor for other behaviors that they deem inappropriate,
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threatening, offensive, or harmful.
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## Scope
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This Code of Conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces
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when an individual is representing the project or its community. Examples of
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representing a project or community include using an official project e-mail
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address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed
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representative at an online or offline event. Representation of a project may be
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further defined and clarified by project maintainers.
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## Enforcement
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Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be
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reported by contacting the project team at andrewaguiar6@gmail.com. All
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complaints will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that
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is deemed necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. The project team is
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obligated to maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident.
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Further details of specific enforcement policies may be posted separately.
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Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct in good
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faith may face temporary or permanent repercussions as determined by other
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members of the project's leadership.
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## Attribution
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This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage], version 1.4,
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available at [http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4][version]
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[homepage]: http://contributor-covenant.org
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[version]: http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/
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data/Gemfile
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data/Gemfile.lock
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PATH
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remote: .
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specs:
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mini_search (1.0.0)
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GEM
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remote: https://rubygems.org/
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specs:
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diff-lcs (1.3)
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rake (10.5.0)
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rspec (3.8.0)
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rspec-core (~> 3.8.0)
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rspec-expectations (~> 3.8.0)
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rspec-mocks (~> 3.8.0)
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rspec-core (3.8.0)
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rspec-support (~> 3.8.0)
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rspec-expectations (3.8.1)
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diff-lcs (>= 1.2.0, < 2.0)
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rspec-support (~> 3.8.0)
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rspec-mocks (3.8.0)
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diff-lcs (>= 1.2.0, < 2.0)
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rspec-support (~> 3.8.0)
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rspec-support (3.8.0)
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PLATFORMS
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ruby
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DEPENDENCIES
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bundler (~> 1.16)
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mini_search!
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rake (~> 10.0)
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rspec (~> 3.0)
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BUNDLED WITH
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1.16.4
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data/LICENSE.txt
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The MIT License (MIT)
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Copyright (c) 2018 Andrew S Aguiar
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
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of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
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in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
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to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
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copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
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furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
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all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
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IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
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AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
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LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
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OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
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THE SOFTWARE.
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data/README.md
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# MiniSearch
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A simple and naive mini search engine in memory using BM25 algorithm.
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MiniSearch implements a inverted index (basically a hashmap where terms are keys and values are documents that contains that key.
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## Installation
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Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
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```ruby
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gem 'mini_search'
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```
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And then execute:
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$ bundle
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Or install it yourself as:
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$ gem install mini_search
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## Inverted Index
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MiniSearch implements a inverted index (basically a hashmap where terms are keys and values are documents that contains that key.
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Lets take two small documents as examples:
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```
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doc1 = 'The domestic dog is a member of the genus Canis, which forms part of the wolf-like canids'
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doc2 = 'The cat is a small carnivorous mammal. It is the only domesticated species in the family Felidae and often referred to as the domestic cat.
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```
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To create an inverted index we start with an empty hashmap:
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```
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ii = {}
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```
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Now for a given document we transform its text in tokens (words):
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```
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doc1 = ["The", "domestic", "dog", "is", "a", "member", "of", "the", "genus", "Canis,", "which", "forms", "part", "of", "the", "wolf-like", "canids"]
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doc2 = ["The", "cat", "is", "a", "small", "carnivorous", "mammal.", "It", "is", "the", "only", "domesticated", "species", "in", "the", "family", "Felidae", "and", "often", "referred", "to", "as", "the", "domestic", "cat."]
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```
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We take each term and create use it as a key in are hashmap `ii` and the value will be a list with all documents containing that term.
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```
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def index(doc_id, doc, ii)
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# 1 - tokenizer
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tokens = doc.split(' ')
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tokens.each { |token| ii[token] ||= []; ii[token] << doc_id }
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end
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ii = {}
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index(:doc1, doc1, ii)
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index(:doc2, doc2, ii)
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puts ii
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# {
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# 'The' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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# 'domestic' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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# 'dog' => [:doc1],
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# 'is' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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# 'a' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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# 'member' => [:doc1],
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# 'of' => [:doc1, :doc1],
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# 'the' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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# 'genus' => [:doc1],
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# 'Canis,' => [:doc1],
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# 'which' => [:doc1],
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# 'forms' => [:doc1],
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# 'part' => [:doc1],
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# 'wolf-like' => [:doc1],
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# 'canids' => [:doc1],
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# 'cat' => [:doc2],
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# 'small' => [:doc2],
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# 'carnivorous' => [:doc2],
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# 'mammal.' => [:doc2],
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# 'It' => [:doc2],
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# 'only' => [:doc2],
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# 'domesticated' => [:doc2],
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# 'species' => [:doc2],
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# 'in' => [:doc2],
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# 'family' => [:doc2],
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# 'Felidae' => [:doc2],
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# 'and' => [:doc2],
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# 'often' => [:doc2],
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# 'referred' => [:doc2],
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# 'to' => [:doc2],
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# 'as' => [:doc2],
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# 'cat.' => [:doc2]
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# }
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```
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Now it is ease to perform any search, if we want to get all documents about `cat` we could simply take the term cat and see the list o documents
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in it `'cat' => [:doc2]`, if we want to search for 2 or more terms we can do the same `small cat` = `'cat' => [:doc2] and 'small' => [:doc2]`.
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Clearly we can improve our index performing some transformations in the tokens before indexing them. For instance we can see we have `cat` and `cat.`
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tokens, we have `The` and `the`. lets clean the data before indexing.
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Lets change our define an index pipeline that will be called everytime a document is indexed
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```
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def index(doc_id, doc, ii)
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# 1 - tokenizer
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tokens = doc.split(' ')
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# 2 - trim
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tokens = tokens.map(&:strip)
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# 3 - downcase all tokens
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tokens = tokens.map(&:downcase)
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# 4 - remove punctuation
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tokens = tokens.map { |token| token.tr(',.!;:', '') }
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tokens.each { |token| ii[token] ||= []; ii[token] << doc_id }
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# ... index
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end
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```
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With this changes our index would be:
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```
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{
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'the' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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'domestic' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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'dog' => [:doc1],
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'is' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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'a' => [:doc1, :doc2],
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'member' => [:doc1],
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'of' => [:doc1],
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'genus' => [:doc1],
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'canis' => [:doc1],
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'which' => [:doc1],
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'forms' => [:doc1],
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'part' => [:doc1],
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'wolf-like' => [:doc1],
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'canids' => [:doc1],
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'cat' => [:doc2],
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'small' => [:doc2],
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'carnivorous' => [:doc2],
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'mammal' => [:doc2],
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'it' => [:doc2],
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'only' => [:doc2],
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'domesticated' => [:doc2],
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'species' => [:doc2],
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'in' => [:doc2],
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'family' => [:doc2],
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'felidae' => [:doc2],
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'and' => [:doc2],
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'often' => [:doc2],
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'referred' => [:doc2],
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'to' => [:doc2],
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'as' => [:doc2]
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}
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```
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Pretty better now, we could apply other steps like removing some words that are irrelevant for us (stop words),
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add synonyms for some words but this other changes are specifics from languages.
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TODO
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## Language support (stop words, stemmers)
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TODO
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## BM25 (from wikipedia)
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BM25 is a bag-of-words retrieval function that ranks a set of documents based on the query terms appearing in each document, regardless
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of their proximity within the document. It is a family of scoring functions with slightly different components and parameters.
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One of the most prominent instantiations of the function is as follows.
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Given a query Q, containing keywords `q1....qn` the BM25 score of a document `D` is:
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![BM25 Formula](formula1.svg)
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where `f(qi, D)` is qi's term frequency (tf) in the document `D`, `|D|` is the length of the document `D` in words, and avgdl is the
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average document length in the text collection from which documents are drawn. `k1` and `b` are free parameters, usually chosen, in absence of
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an advanced optimization, as `k1 in |1.2,2.0|` and `b = 0.75`. `IDF(qi)` is the IDF (inverse document frequency) weight of the query term
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`qi`. It is usually computed as:
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![IDF Formula](formula2.svg)
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where `N` is the total number of documents in the collection, and `n(q)` is the number of documents containing `qi`.
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There are several interpretations for IDF and slight variations on its formula. In the original BM25 derivation,
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the IDF component is derived from the Binary Independence Model.
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The above formula for IDF has drawbacks for terms appearing in more than half of the corpus documents. These terms' IDF is negative,
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so for any two almost-identical documents, one which contains the term may be ranked lower than one which does not. This is often an
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undesirable behavior, so many applications adjust the IDF formula in various ways:
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Each summand can be given a floor of 0, to trim out common terms;
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The IDF function can be given a floor of a constant `e`, to avoid common terms being ignored at all;
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The IDF function can be replaced with a similarly shaped one which is non-negative, or strictly positive to avoid terms being ignored at all.
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## Usage
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First we create an inverted Index
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|
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```ruby
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idx = MiniSearch.new_index
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+
|
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# Then we index some documents (a document is a simple Hash with :id and :indexed_field in it)
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+
|
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idx.index(id: 1, indexed_field: 'red duck')
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+
idx.index(id: 2, indexed_field: 'yellow big dog')
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+
idx.index(id: 3, indexed_field: 'small cat')
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idx.index(id: 4, indexed_field: 'red monkey noisy')
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idx.index(id: 5, indexed_field: 'small horse')
|
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|
+
idx.index(id: 6, indexed_field: 'purple turtle')
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|
+
idx.index(id: 7, indexed_field: 'tiny red spider')
|
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+
idx.index(id: 8, indexed_field: 'big blue whale')
|
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|
+
idx.index(id: 9, indexed_field: 'huge elephant')
|
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|
+
idx.index(id: 10, indexed_field: 'red big cat')
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
# Then we can search for our documents
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|
+
|
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|
+
result = idx.search('RED cat ')
|
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+
|
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|
+
# The result will be something like:
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|
+
|
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|
+
puts result
|
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|
+
|
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|
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# {
|
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# documents: [
|
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# { document: { id: 10, indexed_field: 'red big cat' }, score: 2.726770362793935 },
|
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# { document: { id: 3, indexed_field: 'small cat' }, score: 1.860138656065616 },
|
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|
+
# { document: { id: 4, indexed_field: 'red monkey noisy' }, score: 0.630035123281377 },
|
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|
+
# { document: { id: 7, indexed_field: 'tiny red spider' }, score: 0.630035123281377 },
|
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|
+
# { document: { id: 1, indexed_field: 'red duck' }, score: 0.5589416657904823 }
|
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|
+
# ],
|
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|
+
# idfs: {
|
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|
+
# 'cat' => 1.2237754316221157,
|
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|
+
# 'red' => 0.36772478012531734
|
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|
+
# },
|
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|
+
# processed_terms: ['red', 'cat']
|
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|
+
# }
|
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|
+
```
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
We can see results are sorted by score, notice that the document we index can have any other
|
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|
+
fields like name, price and etc. But only `:id` and `:indexed_field` are required
|
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|
+
|
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|
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## Development
|
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|
+
|
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After checking out the repo, run `bin/setup` to install dependencies. Then, run `rake spec` to run the tests. You can also run `bin/console` for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
|
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|
+
|
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|
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To install this gem onto your local machine, run `bundle exec rake install`. To release a new version, update the version number in `version.rb`, and then run `bundle exec rake release`, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the `.gem` file to [rubygems.org](https://rubygems.org).
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|
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|
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|
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## Contributing
|
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|
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|
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|
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Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/[USERNAME]/mini_search. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the [Contributor Covenant](http://contributor-covenant.org) code of conduct.
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|
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|
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## License
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the [MIT License](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
## Code of Conduct
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
Everyone interacting in the MiniSearch project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the [code of conduct](https://github.com/[USERNAME]/mini_search/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md).
|