Showing 2 open source projects for "document index"

View related business solutions
  • MongoDB Atlas runs apps anywhere Icon
    MongoDB Atlas runs apps anywhere

    Deploy in 115+ regions with the modern database for every enterprise.

    MongoDB Atlas gives you the freedom to build and run modern applications anywhere—across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. With global availability in over 115 regions, Atlas lets you deploy close to your users, meet compliance needs, and scale with confidence across any geography.
    Start Free
  • $300 Free Credits to Build on Google Cloud Icon
    $300 Free Credits to Build on Google Cloud

    New to Google Cloud? Get $300 in credits to explore Compute Engine, BigQuery, Cloud Run, Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, and more.

    Start your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credit. Spin up VMs, run containers, query petabytes in BigQuery, or build agents with Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform. Once your credits are used, keep building with 20+ always-free tier products including Compute Engine, Cloud Storage, GKE, and Cloud Run functions. No commitment required—just sign up and start building.
    Claim $300 Free
  • 1
    bleve

    bleve

    A modern text indexing library for go

    Import one package, build an index with three lines of code, query for documents with another three lines. Bleve includes general-purpose analyzers as well as pre-built text analyzers for the following languages, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian, Persian, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sorani, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, and Turkish.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    goquery

    goquery

    A little like that j-thing, only in Go

    ...Since the net/html parser returns nodes, and not a full-featured DOM tree, jQuery's stateful manipulation functions (like height(), css(), and detach()) have been left off. Also, because the net/HTML parser requires UTF-8 encoding, so does goquery: it is the caller's responsibility to ensure that the source document provides UTF-8 encoded HTML. See the wiki for various options to do this. Syntax-wise, it is as close as possible to jQuery, with the same function names when possible, and that warm and fuzzy chainable interface. jQuery being the ultra-popular library that it is, I felt that writing a similar HTML-manipulating library was better to follow its API than to start anew (in the same spirit as Go's fmt package), even though some of its methods are less than intuitive (looking at you, index()...).
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
Auth0 Logo