The ruby folks have Ferret. Someone know of any similar initiative for Python? We're using PyLucene at current, but I'd like to investigate moving to pure Python searching.
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Whoosh is a new project which is similar to lucene, but is pure python. |
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The only one pure-python (not involving even C extension) search solution I know of is Nucular. It's slow (much slower than PyLucene) and unstable yet. We moved from PyLucene-based home baked search and indexing to Solr but YMMV. |
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I recently found pyndexter. It provides abstract interface to various different backend full-text search engines/indexers. And it ships with a default pure-python implementation. These things can be disastrously slow though in Python. |
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For some applications pure Python is overrated. Take a look at Xapian. |
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lupy was a lucene port to pure python.The lupy people suggest that you use PyLucene. Sorry. Maybe you can use the Java sources in combination with Jython. |
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After weeks of searching for this, I found a nice Python solution: repoze.catalog. It's not strictly Python-only because it uses ZODB for storage, but it seems a better dependency to me than something like SOLR. |
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+1 to the Xapian and Pyndexter answers. Ferret is actually written in C with Ruby bindings on top. A pure Ruby search engine would be even slower than a pure Python one. I would love to see "someone else" write a Cython/Pyrex layer for Python interface to Ferret, but won't do it myself because why bother when there are Python bindings for Xapian. |
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