This PR adds a `to_query_object` method to the various query builders (except not hybrid queries yet). This makes it possible to inspect the query that is built. In addition this PR does some normalization between the sync and async query paths. A few custom defaults were removed in favor of None (with the default getting set once, in rust). Also, the synchronous to_batches method will now actually stream results Also, the remote API now defaults to prefiltering
LanceDB is an open-source database for vector-search built with persistent storage, which greatly simplifies retrieval, filtering and management of embeddings.
The key features of LanceDB include:
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Production-scale vector search with no servers to manage.
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Store, query and filter vectors, metadata and multi-modal data (text, images, videos, point clouds, and more).
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Support for vector similarity search, full-text search and SQL.
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Native Python and Javascript/Typescript support.
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Zero-copy, automatic versioning, manage versions of your data without needing extra infrastructure.
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GPU support in building vector index(*).
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Ecosystem integrations with LangChain 🦜️🔗, LlamaIndex 🦙, Apache-Arrow, Pandas, Polars, DuckDB and more on the way.
LanceDB's core is written in Rust 🦀 and is built using Lance, an open-source columnar format designed for performant ML workloads.
Quick Start
Javascript
npm install @lancedb/lancedb
import * as lancedb from "@lancedb/lancedb";
const db = await lancedb.connect("data/sample-lancedb");
const table = await db.createTable("vectors", [
{ id: 1, vector: [0.1, 0.2], item: "foo", price: 10 },
{ id: 2, vector: [1.1, 1.2], item: "bar", price: 50 },
], {mode: 'overwrite'});
const query = table.vectorSearch([0.1, 0.3]).limit(2);
const results = await query.toArray();
// You can also search for rows by specific criteria without involving a vector search.
const rowsByCriteria = await table.query().where("price >= 10").toArray();
Python
pip install lancedb
import lancedb
uri = "data/sample-lancedb"
db = lancedb.connect(uri)
table = db.create_table("my_table",
data=[{"vector": [3.1, 4.1], "item": "foo", "price": 10.0},
{"vector": [5.9, 26.5], "item": "bar", "price": 20.0}])
result = table.search([100, 100]).limit(2).to_pandas()