Quick Start with the .NET API Client
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Supported platforms
The API client follows .NET Standard thus it’s compatible with:
.NET Standard 1.3
to.NET Standard 2.0
,.NET Core 1.0
to.NET Core 2.2
,.NET Framework 4.5
to.NET Framework 4.7.1
Install
With the .NET CLI
:
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dotnet add package Algolia.Search
With the Nuget Package Manager Console
:
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Install-Package Algolia.Search
With Nuget.org
Download the package on Nuget.org.
POCO, Types and Json.NET
The API client is using Json.NET as serializer.
The Client is meant to be used with POCOs and Types to improve type safety and developer experience. You can directly index your POCOs if they follow the .NET naming convention for class and properties:
- PascalCase for property names
- PascalCase for class name
Example:
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public class Contact
{
public string ObjectID { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public int Age { get; set; }
}
SearchClient client = new SearchClient("YourApplicationID", "YourAdminAPIKey");
SearchIndex index = client.InitIndex("contact");
IEnumerable<Contact> contacts; // Fetch from DB or a Json file
index.SaveObjects(contacts);
// Retrieve one typed Contact
Contact contact = index.GetObject<Contact>("myId");
// Search one typed Contact
var result = index.Search<Contact>(new Query("contact"));
If you can’t follow the convention, you can still override the naming strategy with the following attribute [JsonProperty(PropertyName = "propertyName")]
However, it’s still possible to use JObject
to add and retrieve records.
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using (StreamReader re = File.OpenText("contacts.json"))
using (JsonTextReader reader = new JsonTextReader(re))
{
JArray batch = JArray.Load(reader);
index.SaveObjects(batch).Wait();
}
// Retrieve one JObject Contact
JObject contact = index.GetObject<JObject>("myId");
Algolia objects such as Rule
, Synonym
, Settings
, etc., are now typed. You can enjoy the completion of your favorite IDE while developing with the library.
Example with the Settings
class:
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IndexSettings settings = new IndexSettings
{
SearchableAttributes = new List<string> {"attribute1", "attribute2"},
AttributesForFaceting = new List<string> {"filterOnly(attribute2)"},
UnretrievableAttributes = new List<string> {"attribute1", "attribute2"},
AttributesToRetrieve = new List<string> {"attribute3", "attribute4"}
// etc.
};
index.SetSettings(settings);
Asynchronous & Synchronous Methods
The API client provides both Async
and Sync
methods for every API endpoint. Asynchronous methods are suffixed with the Async
keyword.
You can use any of them depending on your needs.
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// Synchronous
Contact res = index.GetObject<Contact>("myId");
// Asynchronous
Contact res = await index.GetObjectAsync<Contact>("myId");
HttpClient Injection
The API client is using the built-in HttpClient
of the .NET Framework.
The HttpClient
is wrapped in an interface: IHttpRequester
.
If you wish to use another HttpClient
, you can inject it through the constructor while instantiating a SearchClient
, AnalyticsClient
, and InsightsClient
.
Example:
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IHttpRequester myCustomHttpClient = new MyCustomHttpClient();
SearchClient client = new SearchClient(
new SearchConfig("YourApplicationID", "YourAdminAPIKey"),
myCustomHttpClient
);
Multithreading
The client is designed to be thread-safe. You can use SearchClient
, AnalyticsClient
, and InsightsClient
in a multithreaded environment.
Cross-Platform
As the API client is following .NET Standard
, it can be used on Windows, Linux, or MacOS.
The library is continuously tested in all three environments. If you want more information about .NET Standard
, you can visit the official page.
Quick Start
In 30 seconds, this quick start tutorial will show you how to index and search objects.
Initialize the client
To start, you need to initialize the client. To do this, you need your Application ID and API Key. You can find both on your Algolia account.
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SearchClient client = new SearchClient("YourApplicationID", "YourAdminAPIKey");
SearchIndex index = client.InitIndex("your_index_name");
The API key displayed here is your Admin API key. To maintain security, never use your Admin API key on your front end, nor share it with anyone. In your front end, use the search-only API key or any other key that has search-only rights.
Push data
Without any prior configuration, you can start indexing 500 contacts in the contacts
index using the following code:
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SearchIndex index = client.InitIndex("contacts");
using (StreamReader re = File.OpenText("contacts.json"))
using (JsonTextReader reader = new JsonTextReader(re))
{
JArray batch = JArray.Load(reader);
index.SaveObjects(batch, autoGenerateObjectId: true);
// Asynchronous
// index.SaveObjectsAsync(batch, autoGenerateObjectId: true);
}
Configure
You can customize settings to fine tune the search behavior. For example, you can add a custom ranking by number of followers to further enhance the built-in relevance:
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IndexSettings settings = new IndexSettings
{
CustomRanking = new List<string> { "desc(followers)"},
};
index.SetSettings(settings);
// Asynchronous
await index.SetSettingsAsync(settings);
You can also configure the list of attributes you want to index by order of importance (most important first).
Algolia is designed to suggest results as you type, which means you’ll generally search by prefix. In this case, the order of attributes is crucial to decide which hit is the best.
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IndexSettings settings = new IndexSettings
{
SearchableAttributes = new List<string>
{"lastname", "firstname", "company", "email", "city"}
};
// Synchronous
index.SetSettings(settings);
// Asynchronous
await index.SetSettingsAsync(settings);
Search
You can now search for contacts by firstname
, lastname
, company
, etc. (even with typos):
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// Search for a first name
index.Search<Contact>(new Query { "jimmie" });
// Asynchronous
await index.SearchAsync<Contact>(new Query { "jimmie" });
// Search for a first name with typo
index.Search<Contact>(new Query { "jimie" });
// Asynchronous
await index.SearchAsync<Contact>( new Query { "jimie" });
// Search for a company
index.Search<Contact>( new Query { "california paint" });
// Asynchronous
await index.SearchAsync<Contact>( new Query { "california paint" });
// Search for a first name and a company
index.Search<Contact>( new Query { "jimmie paint"" });
// Asynchronous
await index.SearchAsync<Contact>(new Query { "jimmie paint" });
Search UI
If you’re building a web application, you may be interested in using one of our front-end search UI libraries.
The following example shows how to quickly build a front-end search using InstantSearch.js
index.html
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<!doctype html>
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/instantsearch.css@7.3.1/themes/algolia-min.css" integrity="sha256-HB49n/BZjuqiCtQQf49OdZn63XuKFaxcIHWf0HNKte8=" crossorigin="anonymous">
</head>
<body>
<header>
<div id="search-box"></div>
</header>
<main>
<div id="hits"></div>
<div id="pagination"></div>
</main>
<script type="text/html" id="hit-template">
<div class="hit">
<p class="hit-name">
{{#helpers.highlight}}{ "attribute": "firstname" }{{/helpers.highlight}}
{{#helpers.highlight}}{ "attribute": "lastname" }{{/helpers.highlight}}
</p>
</div>
</script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/algoliasearch@3.33.0/dist/algoliasearchLite.min.js" integrity="sha256-3Laj91VXexjTlFLgL8+vvIq27laXdRmFIcO2miulgEs=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/instantsearch.js@3.4.0/dist/instantsearch.production.min.js" integrity="sha256-pM0n88cBFRHpSn0N26ETsQdwpA7WAXJDvkHeCLh3ujI=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script src="app.js"></script>
</body>
app.js
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// Replace with your own values
const searchClient = algoliasearch(
'YourApplicationID',
'YourSearchOnlyAPIKey' // search only API key, not admin API key
);
const search = instantsearch({
indexName: 'contacts',
searchClient,
routing: true,
});
search.addWidget(
instantsearch.widgets.configure({
hitsPerPage: 10,
})
);
search.addWidget(
instantsearch.widgets.searchBox({
container: '#search-box',
placeholder: 'Search for contacts',
})
);
search.addWidget(
instantsearch.widgets.hits({
container: '#hits',
templates: {
item: document.getElementById('hit-template').innerHTML,
empty: `We didn't find any results for the search <em>"{{query}}"</em>`,
},
})
);
search.start();