altor-vec vs typesense

altor-vec vs Typesense — Embedded vs Hosted

A fair comparison between altor-vec and Typesense starts with deployment boundaries, not hype. altor-vec is built for browser-native HNSW retrieval with almost no operational overhead. Typesense assumes a server, service, or native runtime and gives you the controls that environment usually needs. If your product team confuses those boundaries, it will either overbuild for a simple public search surface or underbuild for a private, business-critical retrieval workflow.

Install altor-vec: npm install altor-vec

Feature comparison table

Capabilityaltor-vecTypesense
Runs fully local in browserYesNo
Vector + filtersManual hybridBuilt-in backend hybrid
Operational footprintVery lowSearch cluster/service
Best scaleStatic public corporaGrowing app search backend
Private dataWeak fitStrong fit
Realtime updatesLimitedGood

The table shows why these tools often appear in the same shortlist even though they are not direct drop-in substitutes. altor-vec is strongest when search should be bundled into the application and shipped like any other static asset. Typesense is strongest when search is shared infrastructure with its own mutation path, observability, and security rules. Teams usually get the best outcome when they admit that those are materially different jobs.

Code comparison

altor-vec

import init, { WasmSearchEngine } from 'altor-vec';

await init();
const dim = 4;
const vectors = new Float32Array([
  1, 0, 0, 0,
  0, 1, 0, 0,
  0, 0, 1, 0,
]);
const engine = WasmSearchEngine.from_vectors(vectors, dim, 16, 200, 50);
const hits = JSON.parse(engine.search(new Float32Array([0.95, 0.05, 0, 0]), 3));

Typesense

import Typesense from 'typesense';

const client = new Typesense.Client({ nodes: [{ host: 'localhost', port: 8108, protocol: 'http' }], apiKey: 'xyz' });
const result = await client.collections('docs').documents().search({ q: 'browser vector search', query_by: 'title,body', vector_query: 'embedding:([0.12,0.44,0.31,0.09], k:3)' });

The syntax difference mirrors the architecture. With altor-vec, you initialize WASM, create or load a local index, and search with a Float32Array. With Typesense, you usually authenticate to a service or rely on a backend process, then route your query through that environment. That adds network or runtime boundaries, but it also enables central governance and shared datasets. The “better” option depends on whether your search feature is fundamentally a frontend capability or a backend platform concern.

When to choose each

Choose altor-vec: Choose altor-vec when the main win is deleting backend complexity.

Choose Typesense: Choose Typesense when you need search, filters, updates, and vector support in one backend system.

A hybrid model is common and healthy. Many teams keep browser-local semantic search for public docs, changelogs, release notes, or lightweight catalogs while using Typesense for protected corpora, shared AI services, or complex operational search. That split respects the strengths of both systems instead of forcing everything into one stack just for conceptual purity.

Operational notes

Another practical difference is ownership. Frontend teams can usually ship altor-vec with existing static deployment infrastructure. Typesense often pulls search into platform, DevOps, or backend ownership. That is not a downside when the product genuinely needs central control, but it is unnecessary drag when all you wanted was better semantic retrieval over public content.

Bottom line

Use altor-vec when semantic retrieval belongs inside the interface and the browser is allowed to hold the index. Use Typesense when search is a centralized system with private data, fast-changing writes, or operational requirements that the browser should not carry. That is the honest comparison axis, and it is the one that usually leads to the right architecture.

CTA: npm install altor-vec · Star on GitHub