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Guides / Building Search UI / Troubleshooting

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

How to use float values in a rating menu widget?

The ais-rating-menu doesn’t support float values. You can store an integer representation of this value in your records (for example, 0.5 * 10 = 5) and display the original value in your UI.

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

How to search from the n-th character?

To search only when the query is longer than a certain length, you can implement a proxy search client. Then, you can add a condition, for example, query.length > 3.

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

Why is my uiState ignored?

The uiState only works when the widgets responsible for each UI state attribute are mounted. For example, a searchBox widget is necessary to provide a query.

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

Why is my uiState ignored?

The uiState passed to initialUiState or via routing needs to be nested per index. For example, if you only have a root index called “instant_search”, you should use a value like { instant_search: { query: 'query' } }.

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

How do I change the name of a key in routing?

If you want to change, for example, “query into “q” in routing, you need to use the stateMapping functions to:

  • first, in stateToRoute, return an object containing “q” for the query,
  • then, in routeToState, replace that “q” again with “query”.

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

How do I group facet values one-to-many?

If you want to group, for example, “turquoise”, “ocean” and “sky” under “blue”, the recommended solution is to group them at indexing time. You can either add the group name as a separate attribute to globally filter on, or add both values in an array to make both the group and the individual value show up in the list.

For example, with the following dataset:

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[
  {
    "objectID": "1",
    "color": "turquoise"
  },
  {
    "objectID": "2",
    "color": "ocean"
  },
  {
    "objectID": "3",
    "color": "sky"
  }
]

You could create an additional attribute and use it for faceting:

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[
  {
    "objectID": "1",
    "color": "turquoise",
    "colorGroup": "blue"
  },
  {
    "objectID": "2",
    "color": "ocean",
    "colorGroup": "blue"
  },
  {
    "objectID": "3",
    "color": "sky",
    "colorGroup": "blue"
  }
]

Or you could list the individual colors and their groups so you can use them both for faceting:

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[
  {
    "objectID": "1",
    "color": [
      "turquoise",
      "blue"
    ]
  },
  {
    "objectID": "2",
    "color": [
      "ocean",
      "blue"
    ]
  },
  {
    "objectID": "3",
    "color": [
      "sky",
      "blue"
    ]
  }
]

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

Why is my facet value disappearing from a refinement list after I select it?

A ais-refinement-list widget displays the most common values for each facet. Sometimes you might have thousands of different values, and it would be impossible to display them all on the UI. You can make the widget searchable to search for more values based on the user’s query.

Each search query might have different common facet values. What’s visible in the refinement widget depends on which facet values are common for that search query. It can happen that you select a facet value for one search, change the search query, and the selected facet value disappears. It might be a rare facet value for the new search query. The refinement is still active, but it’s not shown in the user interface. This can be confusing.

To also show uncommon facet values, ensure that the maximum number of facet values are returned, by using the ais-configure widget. This gives the widget more data to match its refined values with those returned by Algolia. It has no any incidence on the number of items shown—the boundaries set by limit and show-more-limit still apply.

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<ais-configure :max-values-per-facet.camel="1000" />

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

Why are unrelated URL parameters removed from the URL?

If you enable InstantSearch routing, only the parameters coming from widgets are included in the URL. To keep other parameters unrelated to InstantSearch, add them when implementing createURL.

For example, to keep all URL parameters that start with “utm_”, use the following code:

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history({
  // ... other options
  parseURL({ qsModule, location }) {
    return qsModule.parse(location.search.slice(1));
  },
  createURL({ qsModule, location, routeState }) {
    const { origin, pathname, hash } = location;

    const queriesFromUrl = qsModule.parse(location.search.slice(1));

    // Get all parameters from the URL that are not in the InstantSearch state and that start with "utm_"
    const utmQueries = Object.fromEntries(
      Object.entries(queriesFromUrl).filter(
        ([key]) =>
          !Object.keys(routeState).includes(key) &&
          // Add here a condition to keep the parameters you want, for example starting with "utm_"
          key.startsWith('utm_')
      )
    );

    // Create query string with InstantSearch state and other parameters
    const queryString = qsModule.stringify(
      {
        ...routeState,
        ...utmQueries,
      },
      {
        addQueryPrefix: true,
        arrayFormat: 'repeat',
      }
    );

    return `${origin}${pathname}${queryString}${hash}`;
  },
});

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

How do I prevent infinite loops?

Widgets accept arrays and objects as props. When you put these directly in the template, it causes the widget to register again on every re-render. Sometimes, this can cause infinite loops. Instead, the recommendation is that you keep track of those variables in data.

So, instead of this:

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<template>
  <ais-hierarchical-menu :attributes="['lvl0', 'lvl1']" />
</template>

Write this:

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<template>
  <ais-hierarchical-menu :attributes="attributes" />
</template>

<script>
export default {
  data() {
    return {
      attributes: ['lvl0', 'lvl1']
    }
  }
}
</script>

This is valid for all values which aren’t referentially equal: arrays, objects and functions.

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

Why does dynamic faceting cause an extra request?

When the ais-dynamic-widgets receives results, it mounts the chosen widgets for that result. An initial search does two network requests. This is because adding a new widget requires a new network request, to know what the refinements are for a facet.

You can avoid this by forcing all facets to be returned by Algolia, or all facets that you maximally want to display the results of. This can be done by adding facets: ['*'] and maxValuesPerFacet using a ais-configure widget:

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<ais-configure
  :facets="['*']"
  :max-values-per-facet.camel="10"
/>
<ais-dynamic-widgets>
  <ais-refinement-list attribute="brand" />
  <ais-hierarchical-menu
    :attributes="['hierarchical.lvl0', 'hierarchical.lvl1']"
  />
  <ais-panel>
    <ais-menu attribute="category" />
  </ais-panel>
</ais-dynamic-widgets>

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

Why does dynamic faceting request all facets?

When the dynamicWidgets receives results, it mounts the chosen widgets for that result. To avoid doing an extra network request, facets is set to ['*'] by default.

If you prefer to do two network requests with only the relevant facets returned, you can set facets to [] like this:

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<ais-dynamic-widgets :facets="['*']">
  <ais-refinement-list attribute="brand" />
  <ais-hierarchical-menu
    :attributes="['hierarchical.lvl0', 'hierarchical.lvl1']"
  />
  <ais-panel>
    <ais-menu attribute="category" />
  </ais-panel>
</ais-dynamic-widgets>

More detail on these approaches can be found in the facet display guide.

It’s recommended to use the Kotlin API client, which is better suited for Android development.

How to use dynamic widgets with more than 1,000 facets?

Dynamic widgets can show up to 1,000 facets. However, if you do have more than 1,000 facets, here’s how to display the ones with the most results.

  1. Add an applicable_facets facet to every object:
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  {
    "applicable_facets": ["special_type", "color"],
    "special_type": "stretch",
    "color": "blue"
  }
  1. Configure the dynamic widget so it doesn’t ask for all facets. Many of them will be hidden anyway because of the 1,000 facet limit. To do this, set facets to [] (empty).
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  <ais-dynamic-widgets :facets="[]" />
  1. Ensure that applicable_facets is always requested. Such as from a hidden menu:
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  <ais-menu attribute="applicable_facets" hidden />
  1. use transformItems of dynamicWidgets to use the “applicable_facets” for dynamic widget rendering:
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  <ais-dynamic-widgets
    :facets="[]"
    :transformItems="(_items, { results }) =>
      Object.keys(results._rawResults[0].facets.applicable_facets)
    "
  />
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