I have created a custom google search application for my website.
Below is the url
https://www.google.com/cse/
to create application.
Under the Auto complete section i have enabled autocomplete,but still it dont suggest me the options when i start typing on search box.
It suggest me only the keywords that We define under custom autocompletions.
SO my question is : Do we need to provide all the custom keywords that we want to autocomplete in search box or google just creates its own autosuggestion from the website ?
It creates autosuggestions from the website, but it may take few days to collect all data. It also takes into account user's queries on your website.
As previous answer suggests, autocomplete can take a few days to begin working. In addition you must specify one or more specific sites / pages to which to restrict the custom search engine. On occasion, you may also have to specify that the CSE only search those site(s) / page(s) instead of simply emphasizing them in the results.
Related
TOPIC - Google Search Engine / Custom Search - with Database
References
Search for "Google Search Engine" and "Google Custom Search"
(New to StackOverflow; just joined the other day.I'm limited to 2 links I can post right now).
NOTE:
I have not YET decided/committed to any specific coding language, framework, etc. Not until I figure out how to accomplish my question (below).
BACKGROUND INFO
What I'm trying to do (for now) is add a "search-box/ search engine" to a simple website I'm building out. Before I get too far into it (planning ahead) I would like to use Google CSE if all possible (which can do A LOT of things and works well). However, I will have a database (not sure on type YET. Will depend on what my options and I can do with CSE) of "items" that I want to be able to quickly search (in the search-box) i.e. like Amazon.com.
QUESTION:
Is there any way at all, to use Google Custom Search and or Custom Search API to search/attach a database (SQL, NoSQL, or others)? I would HIGHLY prefer being able to do all of this in Google Cloud Platform, and use one of their storage/database products.
If I get what you try to do, Google CSE is enough.
From the google doc you linked :
#Defining a Custom Search Engine in Control Panel
In the Sites to search section, add the pages you want to include in
your search engine. You can include any sites you want, not just the
sites you own. You can include whole site URLs or individual pages
URLs. You can also use URL patterns.
#Enabling Autocomplete
[...]you can enable or disable autocomplete feature using
enableAutoComplete attribute.
For the Is there any way at all [..] to search a database, I'll said not directly, but it's not a big problem.
Google CSE work on "indexable web pages", so it'll not work again a raw DB, restricted internet, or custom network not under http(s)://.
But in your case, if you make a DB, I suppose you'll have to make web page to display the data you store inside to your users ? (like products pages on Amazon)
If yes, then you'll run Google CSE again these pages by adding your http://[server ip] or http://[domain name] in the white list.
As far as I know, custom search won't guarantee all your content will be indexed.
You probably want to try exporting a full sitemap.xml, a RSS feed and if the custom search results from either of these won't satisfy you, you will probably want to look at the google search appliance product.
There's also http://sphinxsearch.com/ by the way.
I've got a site where users can create groups (we call them games)
www.ongoingworlds.com/games/270/
www.ongoingworlds.com/games/287/ etc
Each of these games has it's own user-generated content. I want to use a Google custom search for each game. But I can't see an easy way to amend the embed code to add a dynamic path, and I don't want to have to register multiple (hundreds) of GCSEs separately to get an embed code for each.
What would be the best way of allowing each of these URLs (above) to have their own GCSE?
You can search subparts of your site by using a combination of site: operator and webSearchQueryAddition parameter on gcse element.
webSearchQueryAddition appends additional search term to your user's query. If for each of the "games" you change the webSearchQueryAddition to point to the "game" base url, the search results will be matching that url. You can inject that parameter programmatically with e.g. javascript, for each of the "games".
Documentation is here: https://developers.google.com/custom-search/docs/element#supported_attributes
And here is working example:
http://jsfiddle.net/t2s5M/
If I go to the Google CSE control panel (https://www.google.com/cse/all) I see a list of my custom search engines.
When I click on one I can see in the list the option "sites to search". There I can list
example.com/cool-path
example.com/awesome-path
etc
How do I use the API to do the same? To add multiple domains, sites, or paths to the search? I can't find any documentation specifying this behavior.
The API will connect to a search engine that is specified on your custom search panel.
So you create the search engines you need (each with it's own list of sites to search) and then you connect to whichever one you need using the API using the engine's unique code
I'm working to create a search center in Sharepoint 2010. I was curious if its possible to have (ideally several) dropdown lists which present options and contribute to a search. Any ideas? Thanks
3 options:
1) Use the search refiners, though these will only appear after the initial search, and do not allow blank searches.
2) Configure the advanced search page to allow custom modifiers. These are found after the advanced link on the search page, and do allow blank searches.
3) Write a custom web part that pre-caches the search refiners / custom modifiers, and shows them as potential possibilities on the default search page. I have written one of these recently, so it is certainly possible, though it did take a bit of time and requires a supporting timer job (to determine the cached potential search options). If you'd like to buy it from my company, I'm sure they'd be willing to sell it : )
I'm writing an application that analyses search engine results.
With the Google Search API now being depreciated and limited to 1000 queries/day they are forcing developers to move to the AJAX APIs and to use the Custom Search API to do a Google search.
The thing is I don't need a Custom Search, I need a general search not one that is filtered by site; OK maybe filtered by USA/UK (Google.com/Google.co.uk).
Does anyone know how to just do a regular Google search using the AJAX APIs? Is the Custom Search the right thing to be using?
I don't want to hit the 1000/day limit using the old service but this is exactly what I need.
I did find: How do I create a CSE that searches the entire web?
http://www.google.com/support/customsearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1210656
But by the sounds of it this will distort the search results.
Thank you.
OK. Here's how I think it is done.
Create a Custom Search Engine.
Add a site such as *.com When this is created go to the Advanced tab
and download the context xml.
Remove the Background Label associated with the site.
Upload the XML to replace the previous context.
This seems to work just fine and is returning the same values as far as I can see.
Yes, you are right *in theory, and this should let you get 100 results a day on the fly. Just this Saturday though, Google confirmed how here -
(* so far though, we can't get it working...)