Hey this is pretty awesome, thanks! I tried it with several libraries using different formats, it worked pretty much flawlessly, and the interface is quick and slick.
Thank you for your kind words and for taking the time to try it out.
but searching for "mutable" also produces things like "MutableBufferSequence" It seems to me quotes are ignored if the query has only one word?
I believe it looks for an exact match because "MutableBufferSequence" is prefixed with 'mutable,' which causes it to appear in the results. Algolia has a configuration parameter related to this, but I have tried all possible options and haven't noticed any difference in the results: https://www.algolia.com/doc/api-reference/api-parameters/exactOnSingleWordQu....
Another question, how does it handle different Boost versions?
It searches only in the exact version of the library being browsed.
For example, if you are at:
https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_82_0/doc/html/boost_asio.html, it
will search in Asio at version 1_82_0, and the same applies to the
"Other Libraries" tab as well.
On Fri, Jun 23, 2023 at 7:11 AM Emil Dotchevski via Boost
Hey this is pretty awesome, thanks! I tried it with several libraries using different formats, it worked pretty much flawlessly, and the interface is quick and slick.
I have a question, what are the semantics of surrounding a search query in quotes? E.g. if I search for "default constructor" I get pretty much what I expect, but searching for "mutable" also produces things like "MutableBufferSequence". It seems to me quotes are ignored if the query has only one word? Anyway, it may be better if using quotes finds exact matches only. Obviously this is a very minor thing.
Another question, how does it handle different Boost versions? E.g. what if a function is removed, it would be nice if it doesn't dig it up from some old version of the library.
Overall it looks great!
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