#[non_exhaustive]pub struct RetrieveInputBuilder { /* private fields */ }Expand description
A builder for RetrieveInput.
Implementations§
Source§impl RetrieveInputBuilder
impl RetrieveInputBuilder
Sourcepub fn index_id(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn index_id(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The identifier of the index to retrieve relevant passages for the search.
This field is required.Sourcepub fn set_index_id(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_index_id(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The identifier of the index to retrieve relevant passages for the search.
Sourcepub fn get_index_id(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_index_id(&self) -> &Option<String>
The identifier of the index to retrieve relevant passages for the search.
Sourcepub fn query_text(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn query_text(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The input query text to retrieve relevant passages for the search. Amazon Kendra truncates queries at 30 token words, which excludes punctuation and stop words. Truncation still applies if you use Boolean or more advanced, complex queries. For example, Timeoff AND October AND Category:HR is counted as 3 tokens: timeoff, october, hr. For more information, see Searching with advanced query syntax in the Amazon Kendra Developer Guide.
Sourcepub fn set_query_text(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_query_text(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The input query text to retrieve relevant passages for the search. Amazon Kendra truncates queries at 30 token words, which excludes punctuation and stop words. Truncation still applies if you use Boolean or more advanced, complex queries. For example, Timeoff AND October AND Category:HR is counted as 3 tokens: timeoff, october, hr. For more information, see Searching with advanced query syntax in the Amazon Kendra Developer Guide.
Sourcepub fn get_query_text(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_query_text(&self) -> &Option<String>
The input query text to retrieve relevant passages for the search. Amazon Kendra truncates queries at 30 token words, which excludes punctuation and stop words. Truncation still applies if you use Boolean or more advanced, complex queries. For example, Timeoff AND October AND Category:HR is counted as 3 tokens: timeoff, october, hr. For more information, see Searching with advanced query syntax in the Amazon Kendra Developer Guide.
Sourcepub fn attribute_filter(self, input: AttributeFilter) -> Self
pub fn attribute_filter(self, input: AttributeFilter) -> Self
Filters search results by document fields/attributes. You can only provide one attribute filter; however, the AndAllFilters, NotFilter, and OrAllFilters parameters contain a list of other filters.
The AttributeFilter parameter means you can create a set of filtering rules that a document must satisfy to be included in the query results.
For Amazon Kendra Gen AI Enterprise Edition indices use AttributeFilter to enable document filtering for end users using _email_id or include public documents (_email_id=null).
Sourcepub fn set_attribute_filter(self, input: Option<AttributeFilter>) -> Self
pub fn set_attribute_filter(self, input: Option<AttributeFilter>) -> Self
Filters search results by document fields/attributes. You can only provide one attribute filter; however, the AndAllFilters, NotFilter, and OrAllFilters parameters contain a list of other filters.
The AttributeFilter parameter means you can create a set of filtering rules that a document must satisfy to be included in the query results.
For Amazon Kendra Gen AI Enterprise Edition indices use AttributeFilter to enable document filtering for end users using _email_id or include public documents (_email_id=null).
Sourcepub fn get_attribute_filter(&self) -> &Option<AttributeFilter>
pub fn get_attribute_filter(&self) -> &Option<AttributeFilter>
Filters search results by document fields/attributes. You can only provide one attribute filter; however, the AndAllFilters, NotFilter, and OrAllFilters parameters contain a list of other filters.
The AttributeFilter parameter means you can create a set of filtering rules that a document must satisfy to be included in the query results.
For Amazon Kendra Gen AI Enterprise Edition indices use AttributeFilter to enable document filtering for end users using _email_id or include public documents (_email_id=null).
Sourcepub fn requested_document_attributes(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn requested_document_attributes(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
Appends an item to requested_document_attributes.
To override the contents of this collection use set_requested_document_attributes.
A list of document fields/attributes to include in the response. You can limit the response to include certain document fields. By default, all document fields are included in the response.
Sourcepub fn set_requested_document_attributes(
self,
input: Option<Vec<String>>,
) -> Self
pub fn set_requested_document_attributes( self, input: Option<Vec<String>>, ) -> Self
A list of document fields/attributes to include in the response. You can limit the response to include certain document fields. By default, all document fields are included in the response.
Sourcepub fn get_requested_document_attributes(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
pub fn get_requested_document_attributes(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
A list of document fields/attributes to include in the response. You can limit the response to include certain document fields. By default, all document fields are included in the response.
Sourcepub fn document_relevance_override_configurations(
self,
input: DocumentRelevanceConfiguration,
) -> Self
pub fn document_relevance_override_configurations( self, input: DocumentRelevanceConfiguration, ) -> Self
Appends an item to document_relevance_override_configurations.
To override the contents of this collection use set_document_relevance_override_configurations.
Overrides relevance tuning configurations of fields/attributes set at the index level.
If you use this API to override the relevance tuning configured at the index level, but there is no relevance tuning configured at the index level, then Amazon Kendra does not apply any relevance tuning.
If there is relevance tuning configured for fields at the index level, and you use this API to override only some of these fields, then for the fields you did not override, the importance is set to 1.
Sourcepub fn set_document_relevance_override_configurations(
self,
input: Option<Vec<DocumentRelevanceConfiguration>>,
) -> Self
pub fn set_document_relevance_override_configurations( self, input: Option<Vec<DocumentRelevanceConfiguration>>, ) -> Self
Overrides relevance tuning configurations of fields/attributes set at the index level.
If you use this API to override the relevance tuning configured at the index level, but there is no relevance tuning configured at the index level, then Amazon Kendra does not apply any relevance tuning.
If there is relevance tuning configured for fields at the index level, and you use this API to override only some of these fields, then for the fields you did not override, the importance is set to 1.
Sourcepub fn get_document_relevance_override_configurations(
&self,
) -> &Option<Vec<DocumentRelevanceConfiguration>>
pub fn get_document_relevance_override_configurations( &self, ) -> &Option<Vec<DocumentRelevanceConfiguration>>
Overrides relevance tuning configurations of fields/attributes set at the index level.
If you use this API to override the relevance tuning configured at the index level, but there is no relevance tuning configured at the index level, then Amazon Kendra does not apply any relevance tuning.
If there is relevance tuning configured for fields at the index level, and you use this API to override only some of these fields, then for the fields you did not override, the importance is set to 1.
Sourcepub fn page_number(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn page_number(self, input: i32) -> Self
Retrieved relevant passages are returned in pages the size of the PageSize parameter. By default, Amazon Kendra returns the first page of results. Use this parameter to get result pages after the first one.
Sourcepub fn set_page_number(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_page_number(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
Retrieved relevant passages are returned in pages the size of the PageSize parameter. By default, Amazon Kendra returns the first page of results. Use this parameter to get result pages after the first one.
Sourcepub fn get_page_number(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_page_number(&self) -> &Option<i32>
Retrieved relevant passages are returned in pages the size of the PageSize parameter. By default, Amazon Kendra returns the first page of results. Use this parameter to get result pages after the first one.
Sourcepub fn page_size(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn page_size(self, input: i32) -> Self
Sets the number of retrieved relevant passages that are returned in each page of results. The default page size is 10. The maximum number of results returned is 100. If you ask for more than 100 results, only 100 are returned.
Sourcepub fn set_page_size(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_page_size(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
Sets the number of retrieved relevant passages that are returned in each page of results. The default page size is 10. The maximum number of results returned is 100. If you ask for more than 100 results, only 100 are returned.
Sourcepub fn get_page_size(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_page_size(&self) -> &Option<i32>
Sets the number of retrieved relevant passages that are returned in each page of results. The default page size is 10. The maximum number of results returned is 100. If you ask for more than 100 results, only 100 are returned.
Sourcepub fn user_context(self, input: UserContext) -> Self
pub fn user_context(self, input: UserContext) -> Self
The user context token or user and group information.
Sourcepub fn set_user_context(self, input: Option<UserContext>) -> Self
pub fn set_user_context(self, input: Option<UserContext>) -> Self
The user context token or user and group information.
Sourcepub fn get_user_context(&self) -> &Option<UserContext>
pub fn get_user_context(&self) -> &Option<UserContext>
The user context token or user and group information.
Sourcepub fn build(self) -> Result<RetrieveInput, BuildError>
pub fn build(self) -> Result<RetrieveInput, BuildError>
Consumes the builder and constructs a RetrieveInput.
Source§impl RetrieveInputBuilder
impl RetrieveInputBuilder
Sourcepub async fn send_with(
self,
client: &Client,
) -> Result<RetrieveOutput, SdkError<RetrieveError, HttpResponse>>
pub async fn send_with( self, client: &Client, ) -> Result<RetrieveOutput, SdkError<RetrieveError, HttpResponse>>
Sends a request with this input using the given client.
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl Clone for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl Clone for RetrieveInputBuilder
Source§fn clone(&self) -> RetrieveInputBuilder
fn clone(&self) -> RetrieveInputBuilder
1.0.0 · Source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source. Read moreSource§impl Debug for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl Debug for RetrieveInputBuilder
Source§impl Default for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl Default for RetrieveInputBuilder
Source§fn default() -> RetrieveInputBuilder
fn default() -> RetrieveInputBuilder
Source§impl PartialEq for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl PartialEq for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl StructuralPartialEq for RetrieveInputBuilder
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl Freeze for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl RefUnwindSafe for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl Send for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl Sync for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl Unpin for RetrieveInputBuilder
impl UnwindSafe for RetrieveInputBuilder
Blanket Implementations§
Source§impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
Source§fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
Source§impl<T> CloneToUninit for Twhere
T: Clone,
impl<T> CloneToUninit for Twhere
T: Clone,
Source§impl<T> Instrument for T
impl<T> Instrument for T
Source§fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>
fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>
Source§fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>
fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>
Source§impl<T> IntoEither for T
impl<T> IntoEither for T
Source§fn into_either(self, into_left: bool) -> Either<Self, Self>
fn into_either(self, into_left: bool) -> Either<Self, Self>
self into a Left variant of Either<Self, Self>
if into_left is true.
Converts self into a Right variant of Either<Self, Self>
otherwise. Read moreSource§fn into_either_with<F>(self, into_left: F) -> Either<Self, Self>
fn into_either_with<F>(self, into_left: F) -> Either<Self, Self>
self into a Left variant of Either<Self, Self>
if into_left(&self) returns true.
Converts self into a Right variant of Either<Self, Self>
otherwise. Read moreSource§impl<T> Paint for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Paint for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
Source§fn fg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
fn fg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
Returns a styled value derived from self with the foreground set to
value.
This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use color-specific
builder methods like red() and
green(), which have the same functionality but are
pithier.
§Example
Set foreground color to white using fg():
use yansi::{Paint, Color};
painted.fg(Color::White);Set foreground color to white using white().
use yansi::Paint;
painted.white();Source§fn bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
fn bg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
Returns a styled value derived from self with the background set to
value.
This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use color-specific
builder methods like on_red() and
on_green(), which have the same functionality but
are pithier.
§Example
Set background color to red using fg():
use yansi::{Paint, Color};
painted.bg(Color::Red);Set background color to red using on_red().
use yansi::Paint;
painted.on_red();Source§fn on_primary(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_primary(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn attr(&self, value: Attribute) -> Painted<&T>
fn attr(&self, value: Attribute) -> Painted<&T>
Enables the styling Attribute value.
This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use
attribute-specific builder methods like bold() and
underline(), which have the same functionality
but are pithier.
§Example
Make text bold using attr():
use yansi::{Paint, Attribute};
painted.attr(Attribute::Bold);Make text bold using using bold().
use yansi::Paint;
painted.bold();Source§fn rapid_blink(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn rapid_blink(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn quirk(&self, value: Quirk) -> Painted<&T>
fn quirk(&self, value: Quirk) -> Painted<&T>
Enables the yansi Quirk value.
This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use quirk-specific
builder methods like mask() and
wrap(), which have the same functionality but are
pithier.
§Example
Enable wrapping using .quirk():
use yansi::{Paint, Quirk};
painted.quirk(Quirk::Wrap);Enable wrapping using wrap().
use yansi::Paint;
painted.wrap();Source§fn clear(&self) -> Painted<&T>
👎Deprecated since 1.0.1: renamed to resetting() due to conflicts with Vec::clear().
The clear() method will be removed in a future release.
fn clear(&self) -> Painted<&T>
resetting() due to conflicts with Vec::clear().
The clear() method will be removed in a future release.Source§fn whenever(&self, value: Condition) -> Painted<&T>
fn whenever(&self, value: Condition) -> Painted<&T>
Conditionally enable styling based on whether the Condition value
applies. Replaces any previous condition.
See the crate level docs for more details.
§Example
Enable styling painted only when both stdout and stderr are TTYs:
use yansi::{Paint, Condition};
painted.red().on_yellow().whenever(Condition::STDOUTERR_ARE_TTY);