[[analysis-pattern-tokenizer]] === Pattern Tokenizer The `pattern` tokenizer uses a regular expression to either split text into terms whenever it matches a word separator, or to capture matching text as terms. The default pattern is `\W+`, which splits text whenever it encounters non-word characters. [float] === Example output [source,js] --------------------------- POST _analyze { "tokenizer": "pattern", "text": "The foo_bar_size's default is 5." } --------------------------- // CONSOLE ///////////////////// [source,js] ---------------------------- { "tokens": [ { "token": "The", "start_offset": 0, "end_offset": 3, "type": "word", "position": 0 }, { "token": "foo_bar_size", "start_offset": 4, "end_offset": 16, "type": "word", "position": 1 }, { "token": "s", "start_offset": 17, "end_offset": 18, "type": "word", "position": 2 }, { "token": "default", "start_offset": 19, "end_offset": 26, "type": "word", "position": 3 }, { "token": "is", "start_offset": 27, "end_offset": 29, "type": "word", "position": 4 }, { "token": "5", "start_offset": 30, "end_offset": 31, "type": "word", "position": 5 } ] } ---------------------------- // TESTRESPONSE ///////////////////// The above sentence would produce the following terms: [source,text] --------------------------- [ The, foo_bar_size, s, default, is, 5 ] --------------------------- [float] === Configuration The `pattern` tokenizer accepts the following parameters: [horizontal] `pattern`:: A http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html[Java regular expression], defaults to `\W+`. `flags`:: Java regular expression http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html#field.summary[flags]. lags should be pipe-separated, eg `"CASE_INSENSITIVE|COMMENTS"`. `group`:: Which capture group to extract as tokens. Defaults to `-1` (split). [float] === Example configuration In this example, we configure the `pattern` tokenizer to break text into tokens when it encounters commas: [source,js] ---------------------------- PUT my_index { "settings": { "analysis": { "analyzer": { "my_analyzer": { "tokenizer": "my_tokenizer" } }, "tokenizer": { "my_tokenizer": { "type": "pattern", "pattern": "," } } } } } POST my_index/_analyze { "analyzer": "my_analyzer", "text": "comma,separated,values" } ---------------------------- // CONSOLE ///////////////////// [source,js] ---------------------------- { "tokens": [ { "token": "comma", "start_offset": 0, "end_offset": 5, "type": "word", "position": 0 }, { "token": "separated", "start_offset": 6, "end_offset": 15, "type": "word", "position": 1 }, { "token": "values", "start_offset": 16, "end_offset": 22, "type": "word", "position": 2 } ] } ---------------------------- // TESTRESPONSE ///////////////////// The above example produces the following terms: [source,text] --------------------------- [ comma, separated, values ] --------------------------- In the next example, we configure the `pattern` tokenizer to capture values enclosed in double quotes (ignoring embedded escaped quotes `\"`). The regex itself looks like this: "((?:\\"|[^"]|\\")*)" And reads as follows: * A literal `"` * Start capturing: ** A literal `\"` OR any character except `"` ** Repeat until no more characters match * A literal closing `"` When the pattern is specified in JSON, the `"` and `\` characters need to be escaped, so the pattern ends up looking like: \"((?:\\\\\"|[^\"]|\\\\\")+)\" [source,js] ---------------------------- PUT my_index { "settings": { "analysis": { "analyzer": { "my_analyzer": { "tokenizer": "my_tokenizer" } }, "tokenizer": { "my_tokenizer": { "type": "pattern", "pattern": "\"((?:\\\\\"|[^\"]|\\\\\")+)\"", "group": 1 } } } } } POST my_index/_analyze { "analyzer": "my_analyzer", "text": "\"value\", \"value with embedded \\\" quote\"" } ---------------------------- // CONSOLE ///////////////////// [source,js] ---------------------------- { "tokens": [ { "token": "value", "start_offset": 1, "end_offset": 6, "type": "word", "position": 0 }, { "token": "value with embedded \\\" quote", "start_offset": 10, "end_offset": 38, "type": "word", "position": 1 } ] } ---------------------------- // TESTRESPONSE ///////////////////// The above example produces the following two terms: [source,text] --------------------------- [ value, value with embedded \" quote ] ---------------------------