>From a user POV, a good first step would be to make section redirects work on mobile. On apps and mobile web, in contrast to desktop, titles that redirect to specific sections still simply load the top of the article. Those redirected titles are among the most common things a user might search for within an article... essentially a hand-curated little search index.

-Sage

On Wednesday, October 1, 2014, Lila Tretikov <lila@wikimedia.org> wrote:
I wonder if we need to think of this from user POV:

What would they want to find
Where is it in the article

In order to do this we can look at the search results on mobile (and especially where they are failing today without GS)

If we find out that most of this information for example is present in the first paragraph... we may only need to index it. And it would also focus us on improving summaries as a priority...

L

On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 1:56 AM, rupert THURNER <rupert.thurner@gmail.com> wrote:
how is this done in epub format?

rupert


On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 10:44 AM, renaud gaudin <rgaudin@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Full text search engine was not left out for performance reasons but for
> practical ones.
> Yes, we don't want people to generate the index on their phone. Except for
> tiny tiny zim files, it would be too much CPU, battery and time consuming.
> But we do want to add full text search to Android.
> It could work today but the search index is a (large) folder so it would be
> a pain to setup.
> As soon as we integrate both the ZIM file and the index in a single file,
> we'll enable full text search on the Android App.
>
> Hope that helps,
>
> renaud
>
> On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 5:48 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo) <nemowiki@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>>
>> Dmitry Brant, 01/10/2014 01:07:
>>>
>>> Looking at the Kiwix app for Android, it doesn't seem to have full-text
>>> search within articles (unless I missed it). I assume that this was left
>>> out of the Android version for performance reasons.
>>
>>
>> Don't assume, ask Emmanuel (cc Offline-l).
>> If I understand correctly, you're talking of small selections of articles
>> (hundreds or thousands). Making an index for tens of GB of text takes hours,
>> so Kiwix doesn't always make one (on desktop, you usually download the
>> pre-made index). But for few articles, the problem is easier (and one can
>> also reduce compression).
>> In general, I have no idea what it means that "zero team starts to think
>> about pre-loaded content": sounds a lot like reinventing Kiwix, which would
>> be a disastrous idea. :)
>>
>> Nemo
>>
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>
>