TypeSense
See every discussion that mentions TypeSense
Brand Details
Type: Product
Description: Typesense is an open-source search engine designed for developers. It's known for being fast, easy to use, and typo-tolerant. It's built in C++ and utilizes cutting-edge algorithms to leverage modern hardware capabilities and machine learning. It's often presented as an alternative to other search engines like Algolia, Elasticsearch, and Pinecone.
Website: https://typesense.org
Mention Analytics
Total Mentions: 8
Subreddit Mentions:
Positive Mentions: 6
Negative Mentions: 0
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💬 114 comments
⬆︎ 4 upvotes
Mentioned for fast processing data
Found in /r/PHP/Feb 22, 2025
I'm a Product Designer who built a Price Comparison platform frontend in 32 hours with Cursor+Claude
💬 15 comments
⬆︎ 0 upvotes
Used as part of the tech stack, there were no negative comments about TypeSense
Found in /r/webdev/Feb 17, 2025
Anyone using Redis for full-text search?
💬 8 comments
⬆︎ 0 upvotes
Recommended as a good alternative for full-text search.
Found in /r/webdev/Jan 27, 2025
[Advice] Is having a large JSON file server or client side a bad thing?
💬 5 comments
⬆︎ 2 upvotes
Typesense is mentioned as a possible solution, but is considered too expensive.
Found in /r/webdev/Jan 17, 2025
Struggling with Algolia: advice (alternatives?) appreciated
💬 4 comments
⬆︎ 2 upvotes
Commenter is using it and finds it has a good API and is fast.
Found in /r/webdev/Dec 7, 2024
Text search (exact text, prefix search, approx text, vector search)
💬 19 comments
⬆︎ 9 upvotes
Recommended by multiple users for its ease of use and ability to handle large datasets. Specifically mentioned as a good alternative to Postgres for large-scale search.
Found in /r/PostgreSQL/Oct 1, 2024
What's your tech stack for building your SaaS?
💬 231 comments
⬆︎ 105 upvotes
Mentioned for search.
Found in /r/SaaS/Feb 12, 2024
Postgres is Enough - use Postgres for everything
💬 24 comments
⬆︎ 50 upvotes
Typesense and Meilisearch are mentioned as alternatives to PostgreSQL for real-time searching.
Found in /r/PostgreSQL/Subscribe to our newsletter!
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