--- title: Literal description: Indexes the text in its raw form, without any splitting or processing canonical: https://docs.paradedb.com/documentation/tokenizers/available-tokenizers/literal --- The literal tokenizer is not ideal for text search queries like [match](/documentation/full-text/match) or [phrase](/documentation/full-text/phrase). If you need to do text search over a field that is literal tokenized, consider using [multiple tokenizers](/documentation/tokenizers/multiple-per-field). Because the literal tokenizer preserves the source text exactly, [token filters](/documentation/token-filters/overview) cannot be configured for this tokenizer. The literal tokenizer applies no tokenization to the text, preserving it as-is. It is the default for `uuid` fields (since exact UUID matching is a common use case), and is useful for doing exact string matching over text fields. It is also required if the text field is used as a sort field in a [Top N](/documentation/sorting/topn) query, or as part of an [aggregate](/documentation/aggregates). ```sql CREATE INDEX search_idx ON mock_items USING bm25 (id, (description::pdb.literal)) WITH (key_field='id'); ``` To get a feel for this tokenizer, run the following command and replace the text with your own: ```sql SELECT 'Tokenize me!'::pdb.literal::text[]; ``` ```ini Expected Response text ------------------ {"Tokenize me!"} (1 row) ```