📄 Source: GoogleCloudRetailV2SearchRequestBoostSpecConditionBoostSpec.php
<?php
/*
* Copyright 2014 Google Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
* use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
* the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
* License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
* the License.
*/
namespace Google\Service\CloudRetail;
class GoogleCloudRetailV2SearchRequestBoostSpecConditionBoostSpec extends \Google\Model
{
/**
* Strength of the condition boost, which should be in [-1, 1]. Negative boost
* means demotion. Default is 0.0. Setting to 1.0 gives the item a big
* promotion. However, it does not necessarily mean that the boosted item will
* be the top result at all times, nor that other items will be excluded.
* Results could still be shown even when none of them matches the condition.
* And results that are significantly more relevant to the search query can
* still trump your heavily favored but irrelevant items. Setting to -1.0
* gives the item a big demotion. However, results that are deeply relevant
* might still be shown. The item will have an upstream battle to get a fairly
* high ranking, but it is not blocked out completely. Setting to 0.0 means no
* boost applied. The boosting condition is ignored.
*
* @var float
*/
public $boost;
/**
* An expression which specifies a boost condition. The syntax and supported
* fields are the same as a filter expression. See SearchRequest.filter for
* detail syntax and limitations. Examples: * To boost products with product
* ID "product_1" or "product_2", and color "Red" or "Blue": * (id:
* ANY("product_1", "product_2")) AND (colorFamilies: ANY("Red","Blue"))
*
* @var string
*/
public $condition;
/**
* Strength of the condition boost, which should be in [-1, 1]. Negative boost
* means demotion. Default is 0.0. Setting to 1.0 gives the item a big
* promotion. However, it does not necessarily mean that the boosted item will
* be the top result at all times, nor that other items will be excluded.
* Results could still be shown even when none of them matches the condition.
* And results that are significantly more relevant to the search query can
* still trump your heavily favored but irrelevant items. Setting to -1.0
* gives the item a big demotion. However, results that are deeply relevant
* might still be shown. The item will have an upstream battle to get a fairly
* high ranking, but it is not blocked out completely. Setting to 0.0 means no
* boost applied. The boosting condition is ignored.
*
* @param float $boost
*/
public function setBoost($boost)
{
$this->boost = $boost;
}
/**
* @return float
*/
public function getBoost()
{
return $this->boost;
}
/**
* An expression which specifies a boost condition. The syntax and supported
* fields are the same as a filter expression. See SearchRequest.filter for
* detail syntax and limitations. Examples: * To boost products with product
* ID "product_1" or "product_2", and color "Red" or "Blue": * (id:
* ANY("product_1", "product_2")) AND (colorFamilies: ANY("Red","Blue"))
*
* @param string $condition
*/
public function setCondition($condition)
{
$this->condition = $condition;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getCondition()
{
return $this->condition;
}
}
// Adding a class alias for backwards compatibility with the previous class name.
class_alias(GoogleCloudRetailV2SearchRequestBoostSpecConditionBoostSpec::class, 'Google_Service_CloudRetail_GoogleCloudRetailV2SearchRequestBoostSpecConditionBoostSpec');
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