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I'm planing to create an application to sort and view photos and images I have.

I want to give the program a list of folders (with subfolders) to handle and tag images with multiple, custom tags as I go through them. If I then enter one, or multiple, tags in a search bar I want all images with that tag to appear in a panel.

The go to approach would be SQL, but I don't want to have a SQL server running in the background. I want the program to be fully portable, so just the exe and maybe a small amount of files it creates.

I thought I would create a tree where every node is a folder and the leafs are the images. I would then add the tags of the leafs to the parent-node and cascade that upwards, so that the root node has a list of all the tags. This should allow for a fast search and with parallelisation for a fast building of the tree.

But before I start to work on such a tree I wondered if there is already something like this, or if there is a better approach?

Just to make it clear, I'm talking about multiple tags here, so a Dictionary won't work.

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    For the database (because you need some storage facility), consider SQLite if it's not a multi-user thing. Excellent for portability and very fast also (when done correctly, anyway - such as all db work). Building the tree should be a non-issue - maybe have to lazy load nodes but otherwise no particular issues with the approach, IMO.
    – jleach
    Jan 29, 2017 at 16:33
  • Search for a large amount of tagged data is the easy part. You can do that with LINQ. How do you expect to save it if not using a database?
    – paparazzo
    Jan 29, 2017 at 17:13
  • I thought I would just serialise and deserialise the tree into a file? Jan 29, 2017 at 17:51
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    You could, but it's a nonstandard approach. It'll take a lot longer to write the code and there's really no reason not to use a database (that's kind of what databases are built for...)
    – jleach
    Jan 29, 2017 at 20:33

2 Answers 2

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Tags by definition are unique and so cry out to be indexed and sorted.

A Dictionary<Tag,ImageCollection>. Why not? Seems ideal for tags.

A Dictionary<Image, TagCollection>. The reverse reference of the above. You don't want to try going through dictionary values to get at keys.

Create custom classes. Tag, Image, TagCollection, ImageCollection; then override Equals, GetHashCode, implement IComparable. This will optimize the built-in .net indexing, sorting, searching. Many collection "Find" methods take delegates for customized searching. Be sure to read MSDN documentation.

I think this could constitute the core structure. For any given query, staring with initial fetches from these structures should be pretty quick. And yielding custom collections will help too.

There is nothing wrong with a mix of LINQ and "traditional" coding. I expect that in any case you're better off with indexed/sorted tags.

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  • Why not take a domain-driven approach instead of custom collections... a class Image with an ICollection of class Tag, and likewise a class Tag with an ICollection of class Image. Then use EF/LINQ to handle the rest. More semantic and moves the indexing and sorting to the database instead of the client. That'd be my approach (this approach seems a bit over-engineered to me, but thereagain I've never utilized such an approach, so it may just be my own ignorance)
    – jleach
    Jan 30, 2017 at 1:09
  • Of course one's DB should have indexes but that does not replace the business layer functionality. Don't build in undesired coupling. So back at the domain model leverage the framework. For example implement IComparable in a collection then the framework can sort for you, dynamically choosing between several algorithms to do so.
    – radarbob
    Jan 30, 2017 at 3:38
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Here's how I'd handle it.

First, use SQLite. It's a single-dll distribution, lightweight, superfast and impressively capable database whose sole purpose is to be used by these types of applications. A database is a far better approach than trying to persist trees to files (the issue with a custom persistence isn't that the idea in itself is bad, but rather than there's a dozen edge cases it'll need to handle that you're not likely to have thought of where a database has them automatically covered).

Second, set up some POCOs for your media and your tags. Something like this:

abstract class Media
{
    public string Filename {get;set;}

    public virtual ICollection<Tag> Tags {get;set;}
}

public class Image : Media
{
    public ImageFormat Format {get;set;}
    public int ResX {get;set;}
    public int ResY {get;set;}  // or whatever
}

public class Video : Media 
{
    public VideoFormat Format {get;set;}
    public int Bitrate {get;set;}
}



public class Tag
{
    public string Name {get;set;}

    public virtual ICollection<Media> Media {get;set;}
}

This forms the basis for all of your MVVM stuff (you're using MVVM with WPF, right?)

Use Entity Framework for your data access (persistence and querying).

With that, you can do something like this to query your items:

public IEnumerable<Media> SearchByTags(List<Tag> tags) {

    var q = from m in _context.Media
            join mt in _context.MediaTags on m.ID = mt.ID
            join t in tags on mt.Name = tag.Name
            select m;

    return q;
}

That will covert to a relatively optimized database query and get you a list of applicable media based on your tags that you want to search by. Feed this list back to your presentation (MVVM) layer and build your tree from the results.

(this assumes that you have a table of Media, a table of Tags, and a junction/bridge table of MediaTags - I've left many details out and this is very much aircode, but as a general concept, I think it works just fine).

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  • I just realized the question said photos and images, rather than videos and images... that makes things a tad easier, in that you can drop the Media class and just use Image class, but on the other hand maybe you want future support for videos...
    – jleach
    Jan 30, 2017 at 1:27

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