本地英文版地址: ../en/analysis-tokenizers.html
Tokenizer referenceedit
A tokenizer receives a stream of characters, breaks it up into individual
tokens (usually individual words), and outputs a stream of tokens. For
instance, a whitespace
tokenizer breaks
text into tokens whenever it sees any whitespace. It would convert the text
"Quick brown fox!"
into the terms [Quick, brown, fox!]
.
The tokenizer is also responsible for recording the following:
- Order or position of each term (used for phrase and word proximity queries)
- Start and end character offsets of the original word which the term represents (used for highlighting search snippets).
-
Token type, a classification of each term produced, such as
<ALPHANUM>
,<HANGUL>
, or<NUM>
. Simpler analyzers only produce theword
token type.
Elasticsearch has a number of built in tokenizers which can be used to build custom analyzers.
Word Oriented Tokenizersedit
The following tokenizers are usually used for tokenizing full text into individual words:
- Standard Tokenizer
-
The
standard
tokenizer divides text into terms on word boundaries, as defined by the Unicode Text Segmentation algorithm. It removes most punctuation symbols. It is the best choice for most languages. - Letter Tokenizer
-
The
letter
tokenizer divides text into terms whenever it encounters a character which is not a letter. - Lowercase Tokenizer
-
The
lowercase
tokenizer, like theletter
tokenizer, divides text into terms whenever it encounters a character which is not a letter, but it also lowercases all terms. - Whitespace Tokenizer
-
The
whitespace
tokenizer divides text into terms whenever it encounters any whitespace character. - UAX URL Email Tokenizer
-
The
uax_url_email
tokenizer is like thestandard
tokenizer except that it recognises URLs and email addresses as single tokens. - Classic Tokenizer
-
The
classic
tokenizer is a grammar based tokenizer for the English Language. - Thai Tokenizer
-
The
thai
tokenizer segments Thai text into words.
Partial Word Tokenizersedit
These tokenizers break up text or words into small fragments, for partial word matching:
- N-Gram Tokenizer
-
The
ngram
tokenizer can break up text into words when it encounters any of a list of specified characters (e.g. whitespace or punctuation), then it returns n-grams of each word: a sliding window of continuous letters, e.g.quick
→[qu, ui, ic, ck]
. - Edge N-Gram Tokenizer
-
The
edge_ngram
tokenizer can break up text into words when it encounters any of a list of specified characters (e.g. whitespace or punctuation), then it returns n-grams of each word which are anchored to the start of the word, e.g.quick
→[q, qu, qui, quic, quick]
.
Structured Text Tokenizersedit
The following tokenizers are usually used with structured text like identifiers, email addresses, zip codes, and paths, rather than with full text:
- Keyword Tokenizer
-
The
keyword
tokenizer is a “noop” tokenizer that accepts whatever text it is given and outputs the exact same text as a single term. It can be combined with token filters likelowercase
to normalise the analysed terms. - Pattern Tokenizer
-
The
pattern
tokenizer uses a regular expression to either split text into terms whenever it matches a word separator, or to capture matching text as terms. - Simple Pattern Tokenizer
-
The
simple_pattern
tokenizer uses a regular expression to capture matching text as terms. It uses a restricted subset of regular expression features and is generally faster than thepattern
tokenizer. - Char Group Tokenizer
-
The
char_group
tokenizer is configurable through sets of characters to split on, which is usually less expensive than running regular expressions. - Simple Pattern Split Tokenizer
-
The
simple_pattern_split
tokenizer uses the same restricted regular expression subset as thesimple_pattern
tokenizer, but splits the input at matches rather than returning the matches as terms. - Path Tokenizer
-
The
path_hierarchy
tokenizer takes a hierarchical value like a filesystem path, splits on the path separator, and emits a term for each component in the tree, e.g./foo/bar/baz
→[/foo, /foo/bar, /foo/bar/baz ]
.