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fix(specs): Separators are non-alphanumeric characters (generated)
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algolia-bot committed Oct 16, 2024
1 parent 58674c8 commit 916b1fe
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Showing 3 changed files with 3 additions and 3 deletions.
2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion packages/algoliasearch/lite/model/baseIndexSettings.ts
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ export type BaseIndexSettings = {
numericAttributesForFiltering?: Array<string>;

/**
* Controls which separators are indexed. Separators are all non-letter characters except spaces and currency characters, such as $€£¥. By default, separator characters aren\'t indexed. With `separatorsToIndex`, Algolia treats separator characters as separate words. For example, a search for `C#` would report two matches.
* Control which non-alphanumeric characters are indexed. By default, Algolia ignores [non-alphanumeric characters](https://www.algolia.com/doc/guides/managing-results/optimize-search-results/typo-tolerance/how-to/how-to-search-in-hyphenated-attributes/#handling-non-alphanumeric-characters) like hyphen (`-`), plus (`+`), and parentheses (`(`,`)`). To include such characters, define them with `separatorsToIndex`. Separators are all non-letter characters except spaces and currency characters, such as $€£¥. With `separatorsToIndex`, Algolia treats separator characters as separate words. For example, in a search for \"Disney+\", Algolia considers \"Disney\" and \"+\" as two separate words.
*/
separatorsToIndex?: string;

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion packages/client-search/model/baseIndexSettings.ts
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ export type BaseIndexSettings = {
numericAttributesForFiltering?: Array<string>;

/**
* Controls which separators are indexed. Separators are all non-letter characters except spaces and currency characters, such as $€£¥. By default, separator characters aren\'t indexed. With `separatorsToIndex`, Algolia treats separator characters as separate words. For example, a search for `C#` would report two matches.
* Control which non-alphanumeric characters are indexed. By default, Algolia ignores [non-alphanumeric characters](https://www.algolia.com/doc/guides/managing-results/optimize-search-results/typo-tolerance/how-to/how-to-search-in-hyphenated-attributes/#handling-non-alphanumeric-characters) like hyphen (`-`), plus (`+`), and parentheses (`(`,`)`). To include such characters, define them with `separatorsToIndex`. Separators are all non-letter characters except spaces and currency characters, such as $€£¥. With `separatorsToIndex`, Algolia treats separator characters as separate words. For example, in a search for \"Disney+\", Algolia considers \"Disney\" and \"+\" as two separate words.
*/
separatorsToIndex?: string;

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion packages/recommend/model/baseIndexSettings.ts
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ export type BaseIndexSettings = {
numericAttributesForFiltering?: Array<string>;

/**
* Controls which separators are indexed. Separators are all non-letter characters except spaces and currency characters, such as $€£¥. By default, separator characters aren\'t indexed. With `separatorsToIndex`, Algolia treats separator characters as separate words. For example, a search for `C#` would report two matches.
* Control which non-alphanumeric characters are indexed. By default, Algolia ignores [non-alphanumeric characters](https://www.algolia.com/doc/guides/managing-results/optimize-search-results/typo-tolerance/how-to/how-to-search-in-hyphenated-attributes/#handling-non-alphanumeric-characters) like hyphen (`-`), plus (`+`), and parentheses (`(`,`)`). To include such characters, define them with `separatorsToIndex`. Separators are all non-letter characters except spaces and currency characters, such as $€£¥. With `separatorsToIndex`, Algolia treats separator characters as separate words. For example, in a search for \"Disney+\", Algolia considers \"Disney\" and \"+\" as two separate words.
*/
separatorsToIndex?: string;

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