Examples of full Lucene search syntax (advanced queries)

When constructing queries for Azure AI Search, you can replace the default simple query parser with the more powerful Lucene query parser to formulate specialized and advanced query expressions.

The Lucene parser supports complex query formats, such as field-scoped queries, fuzzy search, infix and suffix wildcard search, proximity search, term boosting, and regular expression search. The extra power comes with more processing requirements so you should expect a slightly longer execution time. In this article, you can step through examples that demonstrate query operations based on full syntax.

Note

Many of the specialized query constructions enabled through the full Lucene query syntax are not text-analyzed, which can be surprising if you expect stemming or lemmatization. Lexical analysis is only performed on complete terms (a term query or phrase query). Query types with incomplete terms (prefix query, wildcard query, regex query, fuzzy query) are added directly to the query tree, bypassing the analysis stage. The only transformation performed on partial query terms is lowercasing.

Hotels sample index

The following queries are based on the hotels-sample-index, which you can create by following the instructions in this quickstart.

Example queries are articulated using the REST API and POST requests. You can paste and run them in a REST client. Or, use the JSON view of Search Explorer in the Azure portal. In JSON view, you can paste in the query examples shown here in this article.

Request headers must have the following values:

Key Value
Content-Type application/json
api-key <your-search-service-api-key>, either query or admin key

URI parameters must include your search service endpoint with the index name, docs collections, search command, and API version, similar to the following example:

https://{{service-name}}.search.windows.net/indexes/hotels-sample-index/docs/search?api-version=2024-07-01

The request body should be formed as valid JSON:

{
    "search": "*",
    "queryType": "full",
    "select": "HotelId, HotelName, Category, Tags, Description",
    "count": true
}
  • search set to * is an unspecified query, equivalent to null or empty search. It's not especially useful, but it's the simplest search you can do, and it shows all retrievable fields in the index, with all values.

  • queryType set to full invokes the full Lucene query parser and it's required for this syntax.

  • select set to a comma-delimited list of fields is used for search result composition, including only those fields that are useful in the context of search results.

  • count returns the number of documents matching the search criteria. On an empty search string, the count is all documents in the index (50 in the hotels-sample-index).

Fielded search scopes individual, embedded search expressions to a specific field. This example searches for hotel names with the term hotel in them, but not motel. You can specify multiple fields using AND.

When you use this query syntax, you can omit the searchFields parameter when the fields you want to query are in the search expression itself. If you include searchFields with fielded search, the fieldName:searchExpression always takes precedence over searchFields.

POST /indexes/hotel-samples-index/docs/search?api-version=2024-07-01
{
    "search": "HotelName:(hotel NOT motel) AND Category:'Resort and Spa'",
    "queryType": "full",
    "select": "HotelName, Category",
    "count": true
}

The response for this query should look similar to the following example, filtered on Resort and Spa, returning hotels that include hotel in the name, while excluding results that include motel in the name.

"@odata.count": 4,
"value": [
    {
        "@search.score": 4.481559,
        "HotelName": "Nova Hotel & Spa",
        "Category": "Resort and Spa"
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 2.4524608,
        "HotelName": "King's Palace Hotel",
        "Category": "Resort and Spa"
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 2.3970203,
        "HotelName": "Triple Landscape Hotel",
        "Category": "Resort and Spa"
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 2.2953436,
        "HotelName": "Peaceful Market Hotel & Spa",
        "Category": "Resort and Spa"
    }
]

The search expression can be a single term or a phrase, or a more complex expression in parentheses, optionally with Boolean operators. Some examples include the following:

  • HotelName:(hotel NOT motel)
  • Address/StateProvince:("WA" OR "CA")
  • Tags:("free wifi" NOT "free parking") AND "coffee in lobby"

Be sure to put a phrase within quotation marks if you want both strings to be evaluated as a single entity, as in this case searching for two distinct locations in the Address/StateProvince field. Depending on the client, you might need to escape (\) the quotation marks.

The field specified in fieldName:searchExpression must be a searchable field. To learn how field definitions are attributed, see Create Index (REST API).

Fuzzy search matches on terms that are similar, including misspelled words. To do a fuzzy search, append the tilde ~ symbol at the end of a single word with an optional parameter, a value between 0 and 2, that specifies the edit distance. For example, blue~ or blue~1 would return blue, blues, and glue.

POST /indexes/hotel-samples-index/docs/search?api-version=2024-07-01
{
    "search": "Tags:conserge~",
    "queryType": "full",
    "select": "HotelName, Category, Tags",
    "searchFields": "HotelName, Category, Tags",
    "count": true
}

The response for this query resolves to concierge in the matching documents, trimmed for brevity:

"@odata.count": 12,
"value": [
    {
        "@search.score": 1.1832147,
        "HotelName": "Secret Point Motel",
        "Category": "Boutique",
        "Tags": [
            "pool",
            "air conditioning",
            "concierge"
        ]
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 1.1819803,
        "HotelName": "Twin Dome Motel",
        "Category": "Boutique",
        "Tags": [
            "pool",
            "free wifi",
            "concierge"
        ]
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 1.1773309,
        "HotelName": "Smile Hotel",
        "Category": "Suite",
        "Tags": [
            "view",
            "concierge",
            "laundry service"
        ]
    },

Phrases aren't supported directly but you can specify a fuzzy match on each term of a multi-part phrase, such as search=Tags:landy~ AND sevic~. This query expression finds 15 matches on laundry service.

Note

Fuzzy queries are not analyzed. Query types with incomplete terms (prefix query, wildcard query, regex query, fuzzy query) are added directly to the query tree, bypassing the analysis stage. The only transformation performed on partial query terms is lower casing.

Proximity search finds terms that are near each other in a document. Insert a tilde ~ symbol at the end of a phrase followed by the number of words that create the proximity boundary.

This query searches for the terms hotel and airport within five words of each other in a document. The quotation marks are escaped (\") to preserve the phrase:

POST /indexes/hotel-samples-index/docs/search?api-version=2024-07-01
{
    "search": "Description: \"hotel airport\"~5",
    "queryType": "full",
    "select": "HotelName, Description",
    "searchFields": "HotelName, Description",
    "count": true
}

The response for this query should look similar to the following example:

"@odata.count": 2,
"value": [
    {
        "@search.score": 0.6331726,
        "HotelName": "Trails End Motel",
        "Description": "Only 8 miles from Downtown.  On-site bar/restaurant, Free hot breakfast buffet, Free wireless internet, All non-smoking hotel. Only 15 miles from airport."
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 0.43032226,
        "HotelName": "Catfish Creek Fishing Cabins",
        "Description": "Brand new mattresses and pillows.  Free airport shuttle. Great hotel for your business needs. Comp WIFI, atrium lounge & restaurant, 1 mile from light rail."
    }
]

Example 4: Term boosting

Term boosting refers to ranking a document higher if it contains the boosted term, relative to documents that don't contain the term. To boost a term, use the caret, ^, symbol with a boost factor (a number) at the end of the term you're searching. The boost factor default is 1, and although it must be positive, it can be less than 1 (for example, 0.2). Term boosting differs from scoring profiles in that scoring profiles boost certain fields, rather than specific terms.

In this before query, search for beach access and notice that there are seven documents that match on one or both terms.

POST /indexes/hotel-samples-index/docs/search?api-version=2024-07-01
{
    "search": "beach access",
    "queryType": "full",
    "select": "HotelName, Description, Tags",
    "searchFields": "HotelName, Description, Tags",
    "count": true
}

In fact, there's only one document that matches on access, and because it's the only match, it's placement is high (second position) even though the document is missing the term beach.

"@odata.count": 7,
"value": [
    {
        "@search.score": 2.2723424,
        "HotelName": "Nova Hotel & Spa",
        "Description": "1 Mile from the airport.  Free WiFi, Outdoor Pool, Complimentary Airport Shuttle, 6 miles from the beach & 10 miles from downtown."
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 1.5507699,
        "HotelName": "Old Carrabelle Hotel",
        "Description": "Spacious rooms, glamorous suites and residences, rooftop pool, walking access to shopping, dining, entertainment and the city center."
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 1.5358944,
        "HotelName": "Whitefish Lodge & Suites",
        "Description": "Located on in the heart of the forest. Enjoy Warm Weather, Beach Club Services, Natural Hot Springs, Airport Shuttle."
    },
    {
        "@search.score": 1.3433652,
        "HotelName": "Ocean Air Motel",
        "Description": "Oceanfront hotel overlooking the beach features rooms with a private balcony and 2 indoor and outdoor pools. Various shops and art entertainment are on the boardwalk, just steps away."
    },

In the after query, repeat the search, this time boosting results with the term beach over the term access. A human readable version of the query is search=Description:beach^2 access. Depending on your client, you might need to express ^2 as %5E2.

After boosting the term beach, the match on Old Carrabelle Hotel moves down to sixth place.

Example 5: Regex

A regular expression search finds a match based on the contents between forward slashes /, as documented in the RegExp class.

POST /indexes/hotel-samples-index/docs/search?api-version=2024-07-01
{
    "search": "HotelName:/(Mo|Ho)tel/",
    "queryType": "full",
    "select": "HotelName",
    "count": true
}

The response for this query should look similar to the following example:

    "@odata.count": 22,
    "value": [
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Days Hotel"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Triple Landscape Hotel"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Smile Hotel"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Pelham Hotel"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Sublime Cliff Hotel"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Twin Dome Motel"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Nova Hotel & Spa"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Scarlet Harbor Hotel"
        },

Note

Regex queries are not analyzed. The only transformation performed on partial query terms is lower casing.

You can use generally recognized syntax for multiple (*) or single (?) character wildcard searches. The Lucene query parser supports the use of these symbols with a single term, and not a phrase.

In this query, search for hotel names that contain the prefix sc. You can't use a * or ? symbol as the first character of a search.

POST /indexes/hotel-samples-index/docs/search?api-version=2024-07-01
{
    "search": "HotelName:sc*",
    "queryType": "full",
    "select": "HotelName",
    "count": true
}

The response for this query should look similar to the following example:

    "@odata.count": 2,
    "value": [
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Scarlet Harbor Hotel"
        },
        {
            "@search.score": 1.0,
            "HotelName": "Scottish Inn"
        }
    ]

Note

Wildcard queries are not analyzed. The only transformation performed on partial query terms is lower casing.

Try specifying queries in code. The following link covers how to set up search queries using the Azure SDKs.

More syntax reference, query architecture, and examples can be found in the following articles: