Construct a narrow
A narrow is a set of filters for Zulip messages, that can be based
on many different factors (like sender, channel, topic, search
keywords, etc.). Narrows are used in various places in the Zulip
API (most importantly, in the API for fetching messages).
It is simplest to explain the algorithm for encoding a search as a
narrow using a single example. Consider the following search query
(written as it would be entered in the Zulip web app's search box).
It filters for messages sent to channel announce
, not sent by
iago@zulip.com
, and containing the words cool
and sunglasses
:
channel:announce -sender:iago@zulip.com cool sunglasses
This query would be JSON-encoded for use in the Zulip API using JSON
as a list of simple objects, as follows:
[
{
"operator": "channel",
"operand": "announce"
},
{
"operator": "sender",
"operand": "iago@zulip.com",
"negated": true
},
{
"operator": "search",
"operand": "cool sunglasses"
}
]
The Zulip help center article on searching for messages
documents the majority of the search/narrow options supported by the
Zulip API.
Note that many narrows, including all that lack a channel
or channels
operator, search the current user's personal message history. See
searching shared history
for details.
Clients should note that the is:unread
filter takes advantage of the
fact that there is a database index for unread messages, which can be an
important optimization when fetching messages in certain cases (e.g.,
when adding the read
flag to a user's personal
messages).
Changes
-
In Zulip 9.0 (feature level 271), support was added for a new filter
operator, with
, which uses a message ID for its
operand, and is designed for creating permanent links to topics.
-
In Zulip 9.0 (feature level 265), support was added for a new
is:followed
filter, matching messages in topics that the current
user is following.
-
In Zulip 9.0 (feature level 250), support was added for two filters
related to stream messages: channel
and channels
. The channel
operator is an alias for the stream
operator. The channels
operator is an alias for the streams
operator. Both channel
and
channels
return the same exact results as stream
and streams
respectively.
-
In Zulip 9.0 (feature level 249), support was added for a new filter,
has:reaction
, which returns messages that have at least one emoji
reaction.
-
In Zulip 7.0 (feature level 177), support was added for three filters
related to direct messages: is:dm
, dm
and dm-including
. The
dm
operator replaced and deprecated the pm-with
operator. The
is:dm
filter replaced and deprecated the is:private
filter. The
dm-including
operator replaced and deprecated the group-pm-with
operator.
-
The dm-including
and group-pm-with
operators return slightly
different results. For example, dm-including:1234
returns all
direct messages (1-on-1 and group) that include the current user
and the user with the unique user ID of 1234
. On the other hand,
group-pm-with:1234
returned only group direct messages that
included the current user and the user with the unique user ID of
1234
.
-
Both dm
and is:dm
are aliases of pm-with
and is:private
respectively, and return the same exact results that the
deprecated filters did.
Narrows that use IDs
Message IDs
The id
and with
operators use message IDs for their operands. The
message ID operand for these two operators may be encoded as either a
number or a string.
id:12345
: Search for only the message with ID 12345
.
with:12345
: Search for the conversation that contains the message
with ID 12345
.
The id
operator returns the message with the specified ID if it exists,
and if it can be accessed by the user.
The with
operator is designed to be used for permanent links to
topics, which means they should continue to work when the topic is
moved or
resolved. If the message with the specified
ID exists, and can be accessed by the user, then it will return
messages with the channel
/topic
/dm
operators corresponding to
the current conversation containing that message, replacing any such
operators included in the original narrow query.
If no such message exists, or the message ID represents a message that
is inaccessible to the user, this operator will be ignored (rather
than throwing an error) if the remaining operators uniquely identify a
conversation (i.e., they contain channel
and topic
terms or dm
term). This behavior is intended to provide the best possible
experience for links to private channels with protected history.
The help center also
documents the near
operator for searching for messages by ID, but
this narrow operator has no effect on filtering messages when sent to
the server. In practice, when the near
operator is used to search for
messages, or is part of a URL fragment, the value of its operand should
instead be used for the value of the anchor
parameter in endpoints
that also accept a narrow
parameter; see
GET /messages and
POST /messages/flags/narrow.
Changes: Prior to Zulip 8.0 (feature level 194), the message ID
operand for the id
operator needed to be encoded as a string.
[
{
"operator": "id",
"operand": 12345
}
]
Channel and user IDs
There are a few additional narrow/search options (new in Zulip 2.1)
that use either channel IDs or user IDs that are not documented in the
help center because they are primarily useful to API clients:
channel:1234
: Search messages sent to the channel with ID 1234
.
sender:1234
: Search messages sent by user ID 1234
.
dm:1234
: Search the direct message conversation between
you and user ID 1234
.
dm:1234,5678
: Search the direct message conversation between
you, user ID 1234
, and user ID 5678
.
dm-including:1234
: Search all direct messages (1-on-1 and group)
that include you and user ID 1234
.
The operands for these search options must be encoded either as an
integer ID or a JSON list of integer IDs. For example, to query
messages sent by a user 1234 to a direct message thread with yourself,
user 1234, and user 5678, the correct JSON-encoded query is:
[
{
"operator": "dm",
"operand": [1234, 5678]
},
{
"operator": "sender",
"operand": 1234
}
]