Reader small image

You're reading from  Learning Elasticsearch

Product typeBook
Published inJun 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781787128453
Edition1st Edition
Right arrow
Author (1)
Abhishek Andhavarapu
Abhishek Andhavarapu
author image
Abhishek Andhavarapu

Abhishek Andhavarapu is a software engineer at eBay who enjoys working on highly scalable distributed systems. He has a master's degree in Distributed Computing and has worked on multiple enterprise Elasticsearch applications, which are currently serving hundreds of millions of requests per day. He began his journey with Elasticsearch in 2012 to build an analytics engine to power dashboards and quickly realized that Elasticsearch is like nothing out there for search and analytics. He has been a strong advocate since then and wrote this book to share the practical knowledge he gained along the way.
Read more about Abhishek Andhavarapu

Right arrow

Mapping the same field with different mappings

Sometimes you want to index the same field with different mappings. For example, you want to index the title field both as text and as keyword. You can use the keyword field for an exact match and the text field for text search. You can do this by defining two fields, one with keyword mapping and other with text mapping, as shown next:

{
"properties": {
"title_text": {
"type": "text"
},
"title_keyword": {
"type": "keyword"
}
}
}

You can index the document as follows:

{
"title_text" : "Learning Elasticsearch",
"title_keyword" : "Learning Elasticsearch"
}

While indexing, the same value is used for both the title_text and title_keyword fields. The document source will now have two fields with...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Learning Elasticsearch
Published in: Jun 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781787128453

Author (1)

author image
Abhishek Andhavarapu

Abhishek Andhavarapu is a software engineer at eBay who enjoys working on highly scalable distributed systems. He has a master's degree in Distributed Computing and has worked on multiple enterprise Elasticsearch applications, which are currently serving hundreds of millions of requests per day. He began his journey with Elasticsearch in 2012 to build an analytics engine to power dashboards and quickly realized that Elasticsearch is like nothing out there for search and analytics. He has been a strong advocate since then and wrote this book to share the practical knowledge he gained along the way.
Read more about Abhishek Andhavarapu