[[decay-functions]] === The Closer, The Better
Many variables could influence the user's choice of vacation home.((("relevance", "controlling", "using decay functions"))) Maybe she would like to be close to the center of town, but perhaps would be willing to settle for a place that is a bit farther from the center if the price is low enough. Perhaps the reverse is true: she would be willing to pay more for the best location.
If we were to add a filter that excluded any vacation homes farther than 1 kilometer from the center, or any vacation homes that cost more than £100 a night, we might exclude results that the user would consider to be a good compromise.
The function_score
query gives ((("functionscore query", "decay functions")))((("decay functions")))us the ability to trade off one sliding scale
(like location) against another sliding scale (like price), with a group of
functions known as the _decay functions.
The three decay functions--called linear
, exp
, and gauss
—operate on numeric fields, date fields, or lat/lon geo-points.((("linear function")))((("exp (exponential) function")))((("gauss (Gaussian) function"))) All three take
the same parameters:
origin
::
The central point, or the best possible value for the field.
Documents that fall at the origin
will get a full _score
of 1.0
.
scale
::
The rate of decay--how quickly the _score
should drop the further from
the origin
that a document lies (for example, every £10 or every 100 meters).
decay
::
The _score
that a document at scale
distance from the origin
should
receive. Defaults to 0.5
.
offset
::
Setting a nonzero offset
expands the central point to cover a range
of values instead of just the single point specified by the origin
. All
values in the range -offset <= origin <= +offset
will receive the full
_score
of 1.0
.
The only difference between these three functions is the shape of the decay
curve. The difference is most easily illustrated with a graph (see <
[[img-decay-functions]] .Decay function curves image::images/elas_1705.png["The curves of the decay functions"]
The curves shown in <origin
—the
central point--set to 40
. The offset
is 5
, meaning that all values in
the range 40 - 5 <= value <= 40 + 5
are treated as though they were at the
origin
—they all get the full score of 1.0
.
Outside this range, the score starts to decay. The rate of decay is
determined by the scale
(which in this example is set to 5
), and the
decay
(which is set to the default of 0.5
). The result is that all three
curves return a score of 0.5
at origin +/- (offset + scale)
, or at points
30
and 50
.
The difference between linear
, exp
, and gauss
is the shape of the curve at other points in the range:
- The
linear
funtion is just a straight line. Once the line hits zero, all values outside the line will return a score of0.0
. - The
exp
(exponential) function decays rapidly, then slows down. - The
gauss
(Gaussian) function is bell-shaped--it decays slowly, then rapidly, then slows down again.
Which curve you choose depends entirely on how quickly you want the _score
to decay, the further a value is from the origin
.
To return to our example: our user would prefer to rent a vacation home close
to the center of London ({ "lat": 51.50, "lon": 0.12}
) and to pay no more
than £100 a night, but our user considers price to be more important than
distance. ((("gauss (Gaussian) function", "in function_score query"))) We could write this query as follows:
[source,json]
GET /_search { "query": { "function_score": { "functions": [ { "gauss": { "location": { <1> "origin": { "lat": 51.5, "lon": 0.12 }, "offset": "2km", "scale": "3km" } } }, { "gauss": { "price": { <2> "origin": "50", <3> "offset": "50", "scale": "20" } }, "weight": 2 <4> } ] } }4>3>2>1>
}
<1> The location
field is mapped as a geo_point
.1>
<2> The price
field is numeric.2>
<3> See <origin
is 50
instead of 100
.
<4> The price
clause has twice the weight of the location
clause.4>
The location
clause is((("location clause, Gaussian function example"))) easy to understand:
- We have specified an
origin
that corresponds to the center of London. - Any location within
2km
of theorigin
receives the full score of1.0
. - Locations
5km
(offset + scale
) from the centre receive a score of0.5
.
[[Understanding-the-price-Clause]] === Understanding the price Clause
The price
clause is a little trickier.((("price clause (Gaussian function example)"))) The user's preferred price is
anything up to £100, but this example sets the origin to £50. Prices can't be
negative, but the lower they are, the better. Really, any price between £0 and
£100 should be considered optimal.
If we were to set the origin
to £100, then prices below £100 would receive a
lower score. Instead, we set both the origin
and the offset
to £50. That
way, the score decays only for any prices above £100 (origin + offset
).
[TIP]
The weight
parameter can be used to increase or decrease the contribution of
individual clauses. ((("weight parameter (in function_score query)"))) The weight
, which defaults to 1.0
, is multiplied by
the score from each clause before the scores are combined with the specified
score_mode
.
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