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What's the best way to go about providing a simple search capability for "business objects" in a .NET WinForms application?

By "simple search" I mean something like Vista + Windows 7's "search box" that's in the upper-right-hand corner of almost every window, that searches the contents of that window (nothing fancy, probably no "advanced" search either - keep it simple).

By "business objects" I mean objects based on classes for things like "clients" and "addresses" (just your simple run-of-the-mill contact info mostly).

I've considered "rolling my own" simple search, maybe having my classes implement a "Contains" function so that I can ask each object if it "contains" any of the user's search terms (and then build in some sort of simple rank based on how many words were matched).

I've also looked into Lucene.NET, but it seems overly complex for my needs - having to build an index (and update and maintain it).

Suggestions? Ideas?

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  • I fail to understand why you want a user to search for business objects. I would imagine a user would only want to search amongst objects they can see, like controls. Are you talking about having them search for business data that is displayed in controls, or other business data not necessarily displayed on screen?
    – DCNYAM
    May 5, 2009 at 13:48
  • "Business objects" is just what I call them. They are objects that represent things like "client" or "customer" or "address." The user doesn't know any of this, of course, they just want to be able to type "john smith 64 main street" and be sure to get the right John Smith (the one who lives at 64 Main Street, not the one who lives on 9012 Salsbury Ave).
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 14:08

4 Answers 4

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I don't know about the "best" way (I'd work at Google if I did). Given that, though, I did implement something similar in a proof-of-concept/customer demo a few months back that did the trick. Note that I was able to constrain the problem domain pretty effectively, especially wrt the immediately searchable dataset's size, so that performance wasn't an issue.

I created a FilterableListView UserControl. I used a ListView in Detail mode, I dropped a TextBox immediately above it and used platform interop to give it some CueText (something like "Filter" or "Search"). I then updated the contents of the ListView from a background thread (using the equivalent of my implementation of SafeInvoke) if there was a 0.5 second delay since the last TextChanged event from the filter box.

I did a simple, case-insensitive substring match against the contents of a specified field in the ListView, it was quick, simple, and effective. I found Linq to Objects to be very useful.

A few things I would have done better for a more production-ready implementation:

  1. Use the double click speed to calculate an appropriate delay before performing the search.
  2. Provide a callback mechanism to perform the search instead of building it into the control. Perhaps something like an IFilterable interface?
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  • That's exactly how I'd like it to work, except I'd like to include a few fields that wouldn't necessarily be displayed as columns in the ListView.
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 14:13
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I would implement a simple interface on every class that simply returns a list of search terms describing the instance. Then you are able to get all your objects, ask them for their search terms and rank them based on the user supplied search terms.

This is close to your Contains interface idea, but keeps more logic out of the business classes. You could even examine the objects via reflection and may be just add some user attributes to the properties to give the search engine some hints which properties to include in the search.

But be aware that you will have to evaluate every search over all your objects. This is going to become really slow beyond about one hundred or so objects if you use a complex ranking function. Using reflection will make things even worse.

Another problem to solve is how to handle the search result in a meaningful way. If you have quite a few different classes, it might be a non-trival task to display the results and navigate the user to a place in the application where he can do something with that objects.

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  • Thankfully in my case the number of classes will be very small - typically just one or two. I was afraid of the performance penalty, but I suppose I could always farm it out to a BackgroundWorker thread...
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 14:11
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I think your approach of use a "Contains" method in each object is quite usefull.

You can give "weight" to the members of the object so that if the contains method finds a match, give a sort of "Score" as a return.

Other thing to take into account is whether the match is a full match or not... and assign more or less point to that score.

If you search accross multiple types of objects... may be you can assign higher values to the main objects (more business centric objects) in order to give them more priority.

Just thoughts...

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  • Thank you; those were some of my thoughts as well. I suppose I just want to make sure there isn't some obvious & simple way to do this that I'm overlooking!
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 14:11
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As long as you don't have too many objects it would make sense to do what you're describing, just by looping through each object. You could go with a regular expression instead of just Contains to give it a little more flexibility. Contains is going to give you a match on an object instead of just a string value of a property inside your object. Matching the string would probably be more useful to you.

One thing you could do is make a method in your objects that is simply a concatenated string of all of the strings in that object you would want to search. Then apply the regular expression to search the value that results from that method. It's easily not going to be the greatest performing solution, but it would be quick and easy. Like I said, as long as you don't have too many objects it will be fine.

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  • I think there's a joke in there about regular expressions ("now I have 2 problems?") but honestly, thank you - I had not thought of that.
    – Keithius
    May 5, 2009 at 14:27

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