NOTMUCH-SEXP-QUERIES(7) | notmuch | NOTMUCH-SEXP-QUERIES(7) |
NAME
notmuch-sexp-queries - s-expression syntax for notmuch queries
SYNOPSIS
notmuch subcommand --query=sexp [option ...] -- '(and (to santa) (date december))'
DESCRIPTION
Notmuch supports an alternative query syntax based on S-expressions . It can be selected with the command line --query=sexp or with the appropriate option to the library function notmuch_query_create_with_syntax(). Support for this syntax is currently optional, you can test if your build of notmuch supports it with
$ notmuch config get built_with.sexp_queries
S-EXPRESSIONS
An s-expression is either an atom, or list of whitespace delimited s-expressions inside parentheses. Atoms are either
basic value
quoted string
S-EXPRESSION QUERIES
An s-expression query is either an atom, the empty list, or a compound query consisting of a prefix atom (first element) defining a field, logical operation, or modifier, and 0 or more subqueries.
*
()
term
( field q1 q2 ... qn )
( operator q1 q2 ... qn )
( modifier q1 q2 ... qn )
(macro ( p1 ... pn ) body)
FIELDS
Fields [2] correspond to attributes of mail messages. Some are inherent (and immutable) like subject, while others tag and property are settable by the user. Each concrete field in the table below is discussed further under "Search prefixes" in notmuch-search-terms. The row user refers to user defined fields, described in notmuch-config.
Most fields are either phrase fields [3] (which match sequences of words), or term fields [4] (which match exact strings). Phrase splitting breaks the term (basic value or quoted string) into words, ignore punctuation. Phrase splitting is applied to terms in phrase (probabilistic) fields. Both phrase splitting and stemming apply only in phrase fields.
Each term or phrase field has an associated combining operator (and or or) used to combine the queries from each element of the tail of the list. This is generally or for those fields where a message has one such attribute, and and otherwise.
Term or phrase fields can contain arbitrarily complex queries made up from terms, operators, and modifiers, but not other fields.
Range fields take one or two arguments specifying lower and upper bounds. One argument is interpreted as identical upper and lower bounds. Either upper or lower bound may be specified as "" or * to specify the lowest possible lower bound or highest possible upper bound.
lastmod ranges support negative arguments, interpreted relative to the most recent database revision (see count --lastmod).
Fields with supported modifiers
field | combine | type | expand | wildcard | regex |
none | and | no | yes | no | |
user | and | phrase | no | yes | no |
attachment | and | phrase | yes | yes | no |
body | and | phrase | no | no | no |
date | range | no | no | no | |
folder | or | phrase | yes | yes | yes |
from | and | phrase | yes | yes | yes |
id | or | term | no | yes | yes |
is | and | term | yes | yes | yes |
lastmod | range | no | no | no | |
mid | or | term | no | yes | yes |
mimetype | or | phrase | yes | yes | no |
path | or | term | no | yes | yes |
property | and | term | yes | yes | yes |
subject | and | phrase | yes | yes | yes |
tag | and | term | yes | yes | yes |
thread | or | term | yes | yes | yes |
to | and | phrase | yes | yes | no |
MODIFIERS
Modifiers refer to any prefixes (first elements of compound queries) that are neither operators nor fields.
(infix atom )
(matching q1 q2 ... qn ) (of q1 q2 ... qn )
(query atom )
(regex atom ) (rx atom )
(starts-with subword )
EXAMPLES
Wizard
added
(and Bob Marley)
(not Bob Marley)
"quick fox" quick-fox quick@fox
(folder (of (id 1234@invalid)))
(id 1234@invalid blah@test)
(and (infix "date:2009-11-18..2009-11-18") (tag unread))
(and (date 2009-11-18 2009-11-18) (tag unread))
(and (date 2009-11-18 *) (tag unread))
(and (date * 2009-11-18) (tag unread))
(starts-with prelim)
(subject quick "brown fox")
(subject (starts-with prelim))
(subject (starts-with quick) "brown fox")
(thread (of (id 1234@invalid)))
(thread (matching (from bob@example.com) (to bob@example.com)))
(to (or bob@example.com mallory@example.org)) (or (to bob@example.com) (to mallory@example.org))
(not (to *))
(List *)
MACRO EXAMPLES
A macro that takes two parameters and applies different fields to them.
$ notmuch config set squery.TagSubject '(macro (tagname subj) (and (tag ,tagname) (subject ,subj)))' $ notmuch search --query=sexp '(TagSubject inbox maildir)'
Nested macros are allowed.
$ notmuch config set squery.Inner '(macro (x) (subject ,x))' $ notmuch config set squery.Outer '(macro (x y) (and (tag ,x) (Inner ,y)))' $ notmuch search --query=sexp '(Outer inbox maildir)'
Parameters can be re-used to reduce boilerplate. Any field, including user defined fields is permitted within a macro.
$ notmuch config set squery.About '(macro (name) (or (subject ,name) (List ,name)))' $ notmuch search --query=sexp '(About notmuch)'
NOTES
- [1]
- Technically macros implement lazy evaluation and lexical scope. There is one top level scope containing all macro definitions, but all parameter definitions are local to a given macro.
- [2]
- a.k.a. prefixes
- [3]
- a.k.a. probabilistic prefixes
- [4]
- a.k.a. boolean prefixes
- [5]
- Due to the implementation of phrase fields in Xapian, regex queries could only match individual words.
- [6]
- Due to the way body is implemented in notmuch, this modifier is not supported in the body field.
- [7]
- Due to the way recursive path queries are implemented in notmuch, this modifier is not supported in the path field.
AUTHOR
Carl Worth and many others
COPYRIGHT
2009-2024, Carl Worth and many others
October 3, 2024 | 0.38.3 |