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      1 page.title=Adding Custom Suggestions
      2 page.tags=SearchRecentSuggestionsProvider,
      3 @jd:body
      4 
      5 <div id="qv-wrapper">
      6 <div id="qv">
      7 <h2>In this document</h2>
      8 <ol>
      9 <li><a href="#TheBasics">The Basics</a></li>
     10 <li><a href="#CustomSearchableConfiguration">Modifying the Searchable Configuration</a></li>
     11 <li><a href="#CustomContentProvider">Creating a Content Provider</a>
     12   <ol>
     13     <li><a href="#HandlingSuggestionQuery">Handling a suggestion query</a></li>
     14     <li><a href="#SuggestionTable">Building a suggestion table</a></li>
     15   </ol>
     16 </li>
     17 <li><a href="#IntentForSuggestions">Declaring an Intent for Suggestions</a>
     18   <ol>
     19     <li><a href="#IntentAction">Declaring the intent action</a></li>
     20     <li><a href="#IntentData">Declaring the intent data</a></li>
     21   </ol>
     22 </li>
     23 <li><a href="#HandlingIntent">Handling the Intent</a></li>
     24 <li><a href="#RewritingQueryText">Rewriting the Query Text</a></li>
     25 <li><a href="#QSB">Exposing Search Suggestions to Quick Search Box</a></li>
     26 </ol>
     27 
     28 <h2>Key classes</h2>
     29 <ol>
     30 <li>{@link android.app.SearchManager}</li>
     31 <li>{@link android.content.SearchRecentSuggestionsProvider}</li>
     32 <li>{@link android.content.ContentProvider}</li>
     33 </ol>
     34 
     35 <h2>Related samples</h2>
     36 <ol>
     37 <li><a href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/SearchableDictionary/index.html">Searchable
     38 Dictionary</a></li>
     39 </ol>
     40 
     41 <h2>See also</h2>
     42 <ol>
     43 <li><a href="searchable-config.html">Searchable Configuration</a></li>
     44 <li><a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html">Content Providers</a></li>
     45 </ol>
     46 </div>
     47 </div>
     48 
     49 <p>When using the Android search dialog or search widget, you can provide custom search suggestions
     50 that are created from data in your application. For example, if your application is a word
     51 dictionary, you can suggest words from the
     52 dictionary that match the text entered so far. These are the most valuable suggestions, because you
     53 can effectively predict what the user wants and provide instant access to it. Figure 1 shows
     54 an example of a search dialog with custom suggestions.</p>
     55 
     56 <p>Once you provide custom suggestions, you can also make them available to the system-wide Quick
     57 Search Box, providing access to your content from outside your application.</p>
     58 
     59 <p>Before you begin with this guide to add custom suggestions, you need to have implemented the
     60 Android search dialog or a search widget for searches in your
     61 application. If you haven't, see <a href="search-dialog.html">Creating a Search Interface</a>.</p>
     62 
     63 
     64 <h2 id="TheBasics">The Basics</h2>
     65 
     66 <div class="figure" style="width:250px">
     67 <img src="{@docRoot}images/search/search-suggest-custom.png" alt="" height="417" />
     68 <p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 1.</strong> Screenshot of a search dialog with custom
     69 search suggestions.</p>
     70 </div>
     71 
     72 <p>When the user selects a custom suggestion, the Android system sends an {@link
     73 android.content.Intent} to
     74 your searchable activity. Whereas a normal search query sends an intent with the {@link
     75 android.content.Intent#ACTION_SEARCH} action, you can instead define your custom suggestions to use
     76 {@link android.content.Intent#ACTION_VIEW} (or any other intent action), and also include data
     77 that's relevant to the selected suggestion. Continuing
     78 the dictionary example, when the user selects a suggestion, your application can immediately
     79 open the definition for that word, instead of searching the dictionary for matches.</p>
     80 
     81 <p>To provide custom suggestions, do the following:</p>
     82 
     83 <ul>
     84   <li>Implement a basic searchable activity, as described in <a
     85 href="search-dialog.html">Creating a Search Interface</a>.</li>
     86   <li>Modify the searchable configuration with information about the content provider that
     87 provides custom suggestions.</li>
     88   <li>Build a table (such as in an {@link android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase}) for your
     89 suggestions and format the table with required columns.</li>
     90   <li>Create a <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html">Content
     91 Provider</a> that has access to your suggestions table and declare the provider
     92 in your manifest.</li>
     93   <li>Declare the type of {@link android.content.Intent} to be sent when the user selects a
     94 suggestion (including a custom action and custom data). </li>
     95 </ul>
     96 
     97 <p>Just as the Android system displays the search dialog, it also displays your search
     98 suggestions. All you need is a content provider from which the system can retrieve your
     99 suggestions. If you're not familiar with creating content
    100 providers, read the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html">Content
    101 Providers</a> developer guide before you continue.</p>
    102 
    103 <p>When the system identifies that your activity is searchable and provides search
    104 suggestions, the following procedure takes place when the user types a query:</p>
    105 
    106 <ol>
    107   <li>The system takes the search query text (whatever has been typed so far) and performs a
    108 query to your content provider that manages your suggestions.</li>
    109   <li>Your content provider returns a {@link android.database.Cursor} that points to all
    110 suggestions that are relevant to the search query text.</li>
    111   <li>The system displays the list of suggestions provided by the Cursor.</li>
    112 </ol>
    113 
    114 <p>Once the custom suggestions are displayed, the following might happen:</p>
    115 
    116 <ul>
    117   <li>If the user types another key, or changes the query in any way, the above steps are repeated
    118 and the suggestion list is updated as appropriate. </li>
    119   <li>If the user executes the search, the suggestions are ignored and the search is delivered
    120 to your searchable activity using the normal {@link android.content.Intent#ACTION_SEARCH}
    121 intent.</li>
    122   <li>If the user selects a suggestion, an intent is sent to your searchable activity, carrying a
    123 custom action and custom data so that your application can open the suggested content.</li>
    124 </ul>
    125 
    126 
    127 
    128 <h2 id="CustomSearchableConfiguration">Modifying the searchable configuration</h2>
    129 
    130 <p>To add support for custom suggestions, add the {@code android:searchSuggestAuthority} attribute
    131 to the {@code &lt;searchable&gt;} element in your searchable configuration file. For example:</p>
    132 
    133 <pre>
    134 &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?&gt;
    135 &lt;searchable xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    136     android:label="@string/app_label"
    137     android:hint="@string/search_hint"
    138     <b>android:searchSuggestAuthority="com.example.MyCustomSuggestionProvider"</b>&gt;
    139 &lt;/searchable&gt;
    140 </pre>
    141 
    142 <p>You might need some additional attributes, depending on the type of intent you attach
    143 to each suggestion and how you want to format queries to your content provider. The other optional
    144 attributes are discussed in the following sections.</p>
    145 
    146 
    147 
    148 <h2 id="CustomContentProvider">Creating a Content Provider</h2>
    149 
    150 <p>Creating a content provider for custom suggestions requires previous knowledge about content
    151 providers that's covered in the <a
    152 href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html">Content Provider</a> developer
    153 guide. For the most part, a content provider for custom suggestions is the
    154 same as any other content provider. However, for each suggestion you provide, the respective row in
    155 the {@link android.database.Cursor} must include specific columns that the system
    156 understands and uses to format the suggestions.</p>
    157 
    158 <p>When the user starts typing into the search dialog or search widget, the system queries
    159 your content provider for suggestions by calling {@link
    160 android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()} each time
    161 a letter is typed. In your implementation of {@link
    162 android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()}, your
    163 content provider must search your suggestion data and return a {@link
    164 android.database.Cursor} that points to the rows you have determined to be good suggestions.</p>
    165 
    166 <p>Details about creating a content provider for custom suggestions are discussed in the following
    167 two sections:</p>
    168 <dl>
    169   <dt><a href="#HandlingSuggestionQuery">Handling the suggestion query</a></dt>
    170   <dd>How the system sends requests to your content provider and how to handle them</dd>
    171   <dt><a href="#SuggestionTable">Building a suggestion table</a></dt>
    172   <dd>How to define the columns that the system expects in the {@link
    173 android.database.Cursor} returned with each query</dd>
    174 </dl>
    175 
    176 
    177 <h3 id="HandlingSuggestionQuery">Handling the suggestion query</h3>
    178 
    179 <p>When the system requests suggestions from your content provider, it calls your content
    180 provider's {@link android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String)
    181 query()} method. You must
    182 implement this method to search your suggestion data and return a
    183 {@link android.database.Cursor} pointing to the suggestions you deem relevant.</p>
    184 
    185 <p>Here's a summary of the parameters that the system passes to your {@link
    186 android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()} method
    187 (listed in order):</p>
    188 
    189 <dl>
    190   <dt><code>uri</code></dt>
    191   <dd>Always a content {@link android.net.Uri}, formatted as:
    192 <pre class="no-pretty-print">
    193 content://<em>your.authority</em>/<em>optional.suggest.path</em>/<em>{@link
    194 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_URI_PATH_QUERY}</em>
    195 </pre>
    196 <p>The default behavior is for system to pass this URI and append it with the query text.
    197 For example:</p>
    198 <pre class="no-pretty-print">
    199 content://<em>your.authority</em>/<em>optional.suggest.path</em>/<em>{@link
    200 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_URI_PATH_QUERY}</em>/puppies
    201 </pre>
    202 <p>The query text on the end is encoded using URI encoding rules, so you might need to decode
    203 it before performing a search.</p>
    204 <p>The <em>{@code optional.suggest.path}</em> portion is only included in the URI if you have set
    205 such a path in your searchable configuration file with the {@code android:searchSuggestPath}
    206 attribute. This is only needed if you use the same content provider for multiple searchable
    207 activities, in which case, you need to disambiguate the source of the suggestion query.</p>
    208 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> {@link
    209 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_URI_PATH_QUERY} is not the literal
    210 string provided in the URI, but a constant that you should use if you need to refer to this
    211 path.</p>
    212   </dd>
    213 
    214   <dt><code>projection</code></dt>
    215   <dd>Always null</dd>
    216 
    217   <dt><code>selection</code></dt>
    218   <dd>The value provided in the {@code android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute of
    219 your searchable configuration file, or null if you have not declared the {@code
    220 android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute. More about using this to <a href="#GetTheQuery">get the
    221 query</a> below.</dd>
    222 
    223   <dt><code>selectionArgs</code></dt>
    224   <dd>Contains the search query as the first (and only) element of the array if you have
    225 declared the {@code android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute in your searchable configuration. If
    226 you have not declared {@code android:searchSuggestSelection}, then this parameter is null. More
    227 about using this to <a href="#GetTheQuery">get the query</a> below.</dd>
    228 
    229   <dt><code>sortOrder</code></dt>
    230   <dd>Always null</dd>
    231 </dl>
    232 
    233 <p>The system can send you the search query text in two ways. The
    234 default manner is for the query text to be included as the last path of the content
    235 URI passed in the {@code uri} parameter. However, if you include a selection value in your
    236 searchable configuration's {@code
    237 android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute, then the query text is instead passed as the first
    238 element of the {@code selectionArgs} string array. Both options are summarized next.</p>
    239 
    240 
    241 <h4 id="GetTheQueryUri">Get the query in the Uri</h4>
    242 
    243 <p>By default, the query is appended as the last segment of the {@code uri}
    244 parameter (a {@link android.net.Uri} object). To retrieve the query text in this case, simply use
    245 {@link android.net.Uri#getLastPathSegment()}. For example:</p>
    246 
    247 <pre>
    248 String query = uri.getLastPathSegment().toLowerCase();
    249 </pre>
    250 
    251 <p>This returns the last segment of the {@link android.net.Uri}, which is the query text entered
    252 by the user.</p>
    253 
    254 
    255 
    256 <h4 id="GetTheQuery">Get the query in the selection arguments</h4>
    257 
    258 <p>Instead of using the URI, you might decide it makes more sense for your {@link
    259 android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()} method to
    260 receive everything it needs to perform the look-up and you want the
    261 {@code selection} and {@code selectionArgs} parameters to carry the appropriate values. In such a
    262 case, add the {@code android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute to your searchable configuration with
    263 your SQLite selection string. In the selection string, include a question mark ("?") as
    264 a placeholder for the actual search query. The system calls {@link
    265 android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()} with the
    266 selection string as the {@code selection} parameter and the search query as the first
    267 element in the {@code selectionArgs} array.</p>
    268 
    269 <p>For example, here's how you might form the {@code android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute to
    270 create a full-text search statement:</p>
    271 
    272 <pre>
    273 &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?&gt;
    274 &lt;searchable xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    275     android:label="@string/app_label"
    276     android:hint="@string/search_hint"
    277     android:searchSuggestAuthority="com.example.MyCustomSuggestionProvider"
    278     android:searchSuggestIntentAction="android.intent.action.VIEW"
    279     <b>android:searchSuggestSelection="word MATCH ?"</b>&gt;
    280 &lt;/searchable&gt;
    281 </pre>
    282 
    283 <p>With this configuration, your {@link
    284 android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()} method
    285 delivers the {@code selection} parameter as {@code "word MATCH ?"} and the {@code selectionArgs}
    286 parameter as the search query. When you pass these to an SQLite
    287 {@link android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase#query(String,String[],String,String[],String,String,
    288 String) query()} method, as their respective arguments, they are synthesized together (the
    289 question mark is replaced with the query
    290 text). If you chose to receive suggestion queries this way and need to add wildcards to
    291 the query text, append (and/or prefix) them to the {@code selectionArgs}
    292 parameter, because this value is wrapped in quotes and inserted in place of the
    293 question mark.</p>
    294 
    295 <p>Another new attribute in the example above is {@code android:searchSuggestIntentAction}, which
    296 defines the intent action sent with each intent when the user selects a suggestion. It is
    297 discussed further in the section about <a href="#IntentForSuggestions">Declaring an Intent for
    298 Suggestions</a>.</p>
    299 
    300 <p class="note"><strong>Tip:</strong> If you don't want to define a selection clause in
    301 the {@code android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute, but would still like to receive the query
    302 text in the {@code selectionArgs} parameter, simply provide a non-null value for the {@code
    303 android:searchSuggestSelection} attribute. This triggers the query to be passed in {@code
    304 selectionArgs} and you can ignore the {@code selection} parameter. In this way, you can instead
    305 define the actual selection clause at a lower level so that your content provider doesn't have to
    306 handle it.</p>
    307 
    308 
    309 
    310 <h3 id="SuggestionTable">Building a suggestion table</h3>
    311 
    312 <div class="sidebox-wrapper">
    313 <div class="sidebox">
    314 <h2>Creating a Cursor without a table</h2>
    315 <p>If your search suggestions are not stored in a table format (such as an SQLite table) using the
    316 columns required by the
    317 system, then you can search your suggestion data for matches and then format them
    318 into the necessary table on each request. To do so, create a {@link android.database.MatrixCursor}
    319 using the required column names and then add a row for each suggestion using {@link
    320 android.database.MatrixCursor#addRow(Object[])}. Return the final product from your Content
    321 Provider's {@link
    322 android.content.ContentProvider#query(Uri,String[],String,String[],String) query()} method.</p>
    323 </div>
    324 </div>
    325 
    326 <p>When you return suggestions to the system with a {@link android.database.Cursor}, the
    327 system expects specific columns in each row. So, regardless of whether you
    328 decide to store
    329 your suggestion data in an SQLite database on the device, a database on a web server, or another
    330 format on the device or web, you must format the suggestions as rows in a table and
    331 present them with a {@link android.database.Cursor}. The system understands several columns, but
    332 only two are required:</p>
    333 
    334 <dl>
    335   <dt>{@link android.provider.BaseColumns#_ID}</dt>
    336   <dd>A unique integer row ID for each suggestion. The system requires this in order
    337 to present suggestions in a {@link android.widget.ListView}.</dd>
    338   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_TEXT_1}</dt>
    339   <dd>The string that is presented as a suggestion.</dd>
    340 </dl>
    341 
    342 <p>The following columns are all optional (and most are discussed further in the following
    343 sections):</p>
    344 
    345 <dl>
    346   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_TEXT_2}</dt>
    347   <dd>A string. If your Cursor includes this column, then all suggestions are provided in a
    348 two-line format. The string in this column is displayed as a second, smaller line of text below the
    349 primary suggestion text. It can be null or empty to indicate no secondary text.</dd>
    350   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_ICON_1}</dt>
    351   <dd>A drawable resource, content, or file URI string. If your Cursor includes this column, then
    352 all suggestions are provided in an icon-plus-text format with the drawable icon on the left side.
    353 This can be null or zero to indicate no icon in this row.</dd>
    354   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_ICON_2}</dt>
    355   <dd>A drawable resource, content, or file URI string. If your Cursor  includes this column, then
    356 all suggestions are provided in an icon-plus-text format with the icon on the right side. This can
    357 be null or zero to indicate no icon in this row.</dd>
    358   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION}</dt>
    359   <dd>An intent action string. If this column exists and contains a value at the given row, the
    360 action defined here is used when forming the suggestion's intent. If the element is not
    361 provided, the action is taken from the {@code android:searchSuggestIntentAction} field in your
    362 searchable configuration. If your action is the same for all
    363 suggestions, it is more efficient to specify the action using {@code
    364 android:searchSuggestIntentAction} and omit this column.</dd>
    365   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA}</dt>
    366   <dd>A data URI string. If this column exists and contains a value at the given row, this is the
    367 data that is used when forming the suggestion's intent. If the element is not provided, the data is
    368 taken from the {@code android:searchSuggestIntentData} field in your searchable configuration. If
    369 neither source is provided,
    370 the intent's data field is null. If your data is the same for all suggestions, or can be
    371 described using a constant part and a specific ID, it is more efficient to specify it using {@code
    372 android:searchSuggestIntentData} and omit this column.
    373 </dd>
    374   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA_ID}</dt>
    375   <dd>A URI path string. If this column exists and contains a value at the given row, then "/" and
    376 this value is appended to the data field in the intent. This should only be used if the data field
    377 specified
    378 by the {@code android:searchSuggestIntentData} attribute in the searchable configuration has already
    379 been set to an appropriate base string.</dd>
    380   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_EXTRA_DATA}</dt>
    381   <dd>Arbitrary data. If this column exists and contains a value at a given row, this is the
    382 <em>extra</em> data used when forming the suggestion's intent. If not provided, the
    383 intent's extra data field is null. This column allows suggestions to provide additional data that is
    384 included as an extra in the intent's {@link android.app.SearchManager#EXTRA_DATA_KEY} key.</dd>
    385   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_QUERY}</dt>
    386   <dd>If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the data that is
    387 used when forming the suggestion's query, included as an extra in the intent's {@link
    388 android.app.SearchManager#QUERY} key. Required if suggestion's action is {@link
    389 android.content.Intent#ACTION_SEARCH}, optional otherwise.</dd>
    390   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID}</dt>
    391   <dd>Only used when providing suggestions for Quick Search Box. This column indicates
    392 whether a search suggestion should be stored as a
    393 shortcut and whether it should be validated. Shortcuts are usually formed when the user clicks a
    394 suggestion from Quick Search Box. If missing, the result is stored as a shortcut and never
    395 refreshed. If set to {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_NEVER_MAKE_SHORTCUT}, the result is
    396 not stored as a shortcut.
    397 Otherwise, the shortcut ID is used to check back for an up to date suggestion using
    398 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_URI_PATH_SHORTCUT}.</dd>
    399   <dt>{@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SPINNER_WHILE_REFRESHING}</dt>
    400   <dd>Only used when providing suggestions for Quick Search Box. This column specifies that
    401 a spinner should be shown instead of an icon from {@link
    402 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_ICON_2}
    403 while the shortcut of this suggestion is being refreshed in Quick Search Box.</dd>
    404 </dl>
    405 
    406 <p>Some of these columns are discussed more in the following sections.</p>
    407 
    408 
    409 
    410 <h2 id="IntentForSuggestions">Declaring an Intent for Suggestions</h2>
    411 
    412 <p>When the user selects a suggestion from the list that appears below the search dialog or widget,
    413 the system sends a custom {@link android.content.Intent} to your searchable activity. You
    414 must define the action and data for the intent.</p>
    415 
    416 
    417 <h3 id="IntentAction">Declaring the intent action</h3>
    418 
    419 <p>The most common intent action for a custom suggestion is {@link
    420 android.content.Intent#ACTION_VIEW}, which is appropriate when
    421 you want to open something, like the definition for a word, a person's contact information, or a web
    422 page. However, the intent action can be any other action and can even be different for each
    423 suggestion.</p>
    424 
    425 <p>Depending on whether you want all suggestions to use the same intent action, you
    426 can define the action in two ways:</p>
    427 
    428 <ol type="a">
    429   <li>Use the {@code android:searchSuggestIntentAction} attribute of your searchable configuration
    430 file to define the action for all suggestions. <p>For example:</p>
    431 
    432 <pre>
    433 &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    434 &lt;searchable xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    435     android:label="@string/app_label"
    436     android:hint="@string/search_hint"
    437     android:searchSuggestAuthority="com.example.MyCustomSuggestionProvider"
    438     <b>android:searchSuggestIntentAction="android.Intent.action.VIEW"</b> >
    439 &lt;/searchable>
    440 </pre>
    441 
    442   </li>
    443   <li>Use the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION} column to define the
    444 action for individual suggestions.
    445   <p>Add the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION} column to
    446 your suggestions table and, for each suggestion, place in it the action to use (such as
    447 {@code "android.Intent.action.VIEW"}).</p>
    448 
    449   </li>
    450 </ol>
    451 
    452 <p>You can also combine these two techniques. For instance, you can include the {@code
    453 android:searchSuggestIntentAction} attribute with an action to be used with all suggestions by
    454 default, then override this action for some suggestions by declaring a different action in the
    455 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION} column. If you do not include
    456 a value in the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION} column, then the
    457 intent provided in the {@code android:searchSuggestIntentAction} attribute is used.</p>
    458 
    459 <p class="note"><strong>Note</strong>: If you do not include the
    460 {@code android:searchSuggestIntentAction} attribute in your searchable configuration, then you
    461 <em>must</em> include a value in the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION}
    462 column for every suggestion, or the intent will fail.</p>
    463 
    464 
    465 
    466 <h3 id="IntentData">Declaring intent data</h3>
    467 
    468 <p>When the user selects a suggestion, your searchable activity receives the intent with the
    469 action you've defined (as discussed in the previous section), but the intent must also carry
    470 data in order for your activity to identify which suggestion was selected. Specifically,
    471 the data should be something unique for each suggestion, such as the row ID for the suggestion in
    472 your SQLite table. When the intent is received,
    473 you can retrieve the attached data with {@link android.content.Intent#getData()} or {@link
    474 android.content.Intent#getDataString()}.</p>
    475 
    476 <p>You can define the data included with the intent in two ways:</p>
    477 
    478 <ol type="a">
    479   <li>Define the data for each suggestion inside the {@link
    480 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA} column of your suggestions table.
    481 
    482 <p>Provide all necessary data information for each intent in the suggestions table by including the
    483 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA} column and then populating it with
    484 unique data for each row. The data from this column is attached to the intent exactly as you
    485 define it in this column. You can then retrieve it with with {@link
    486 android.content.Intent#getData()} or {@link android.content.Intent#getDataString()}.</p>
    487 
    488 <p class="note"><strong>Tip</strong>: It's usually easiest to use the table's row ID as the
    489 Intent data, because it's always unique. And the easiest way to do that is by using the
    490 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA} column name as an alias for the row ID
    491 column. See the <a
    492 href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/SearchableDictionary/index.html">Searchable Dictionary sample
    493 app</a> for an example in which {@link android.database.sqlite.SQLiteQueryBuilder} creates a
    494 projection map of column names to aliases.</p>
    495   </li>
    496 
    497   <li>Fragment a data URI into two pieces: the portion common to all suggestions and the portion
    498 unique to each suggestion. Place these parts into the {@code android:searchSuggestintentData}
    499 attribute of the searchable configuration and the {@link
    500 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA_ID} column of your
    501 suggestions table, respectively.
    502 
    503 <p>Declare the piece of the URI that is common to all suggestions in the {@code
    504 android:searchSuggestIntentData} attribute of your searchable configuration. For example:</p>
    505 
    506 <pre>
    507 &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    508 &lt;searchable xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    509     android:label="@string/app_label"
    510     android:hint="@string/search_hint"
    511     android:searchSuggestAuthority="com.example.MyCustomSuggestionProvider"
    512     android:searchSuggestIntentAction="android.intent.action.VIEW"
    513     <b>android:searchSuggestIntentData="content://com.example/datatable"</b> >
    514 &lt;/searchable>
    515 </pre>
    516 
    517 <p>Then include the final path for each suggestion (the unique part) in the {@link
    518 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA_ID}
    519 column of your suggestions table. When the user selects a suggestion, the system takes
    520 the string from {@code android:searchSuggestIntentData}, appends a slash ("/") and then adds the
    521 respective value from the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA_ID} column to
    522 form a complete content URI. You can then retrieve the {@link android.net.Uri} with with {@link
    523 android.content.Intent#getData()}.</p>
    524 
    525   </li>
    526 </ol>
    527 
    528 <h4>Add more data</h4>
    529 
    530 <p>If you need to express even more information with your intent, you can add another table column,
    531 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_EXTRA_DATA}, which can store additional
    532 information about the suggestion. The data saved in this column is placed in {@link
    533 android.app.SearchManager#EXTRA_DATA_KEY} of the intent's extra Bundle.</p>
    534 
    535 
    536 
    537 <h2 id="HandlingIntent">Handling the Intent</h2>
    538 
    539 <p>Now that you provide custom search suggestions with custom intents, you
    540 need your searchable activity to handle these intents when the user selects a
    541 suggestion. This is in addition to handling the {@link
    542 android.content.Intent#ACTION_SEARCH} intent, which your searchable activity already does.
    543 Here's an example of how you can handle the intents during your activity {@link
    544 android.app.Activity#onCreate(Bundle) onCreate()} callback:</p>
    545 
    546 <pre>
    547 Intent intent = getIntent();
    548 if (Intent.ACTION_SEARCH.equals(intent.getAction())) {
    549     // Handle the normal search query case
    550     String query = intent.getStringExtra(SearchManager.QUERY);
    551     doSearch(query);
    552 } else if (Intent.ACTION_VIEW.equals(intent.getAction())) {
    553     // Handle a suggestions click (because the suggestions all use ACTION_VIEW)
    554     Uri data = intent.getData();
    555     showResult(data);
    556 }
    557 </pre>
    558 
    559 <p>In this example, the intent action is {@link
    560 android.content.Intent#ACTION_VIEW} and the data carries a complete URI pointing to the suggested
    561 item, as synthesized by the {@code android:searchSuggestIntentData} string and {@link
    562 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA_ID} column. The URI is then passed to the local
    563 {@code showResult()} method that queries the content provider for the item specified by the URI.</p>
    564 
    565 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> You do <em>not</em> need to add an intent filter to your
    566 Android manifest file for the intent action you defined with the {@code
    567 android:searchSuggestIntentAction} attribute or {@link
    568 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION} column. The system opens your
    569 searchable activity by name to deliver the suggestion's intent, so the activity does not need to
    570 declare the accepted action.</p>
    571 
    572 
    573 <h2 id="RewritingQueryText">Rewriting the query text</h2>
    574 
    575 <p>If the user navigates through the suggestions list using the directional controls (such
    576 as with a trackball or d-pad), the query text does not update, by default. However, you
    577 can temporarily rewrite the user's query text as it appears in the text box with
    578 a query that matches the suggestion currently in focus. This enables the user to see what query is
    579 being suggested (if appropriate) and then select the search box and edit the query before
    580 dispatching it as a search.</p>
    581 
    582 <p>You can rewrite the query text in the following ways:</p>
    583 
    584 <ol type="a">
    585   <li>Add the {@code android:searchMode} attribute to your searchable configuration with the
    586 "queryRewriteFromText" value. In this case, the content from the suggestion's {@link
    587 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_TEXT_1}
    588 column is used to rewrite the query text.</li>
    589   <li>Add the {@code android:searchMode} attribute to your searchable configuration with the
    590 "queryRewriteFromData" value. In this case, the content from the suggestion's
    591 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA} column is used to rewrite the
    592 query text. This should only
    593 be used with URI's or other data formats that are intended to be user-visible, such as HTTP URLs.
    594 Internal URI schemes should not be used to rewrite the query in this way.</li>
    595   <li>Provide a unique query text string in the {@link
    596 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_QUERY} column of your suggestions table. If this column is
    597 present and contains a value for the current suggestion, it is used to rewrite the query text
    598 (and override either of the previous implementations).</li>
    599 </ol>
    600 
    601 
    602 
    603 <h2 id="QSB">Exposing search suggestions to Quick Search Box</h2>
    604 
    605 <p>Once you configure your application to provide custom search suggestions, making them available
    606 to the globally accessible Quick Search Box is as easy as modifying your searchable configuration to
    607 include {@code android:includeInGlobalSearch} as "true".</p>
    608 
    609 <p>The only scenario in which additional work is necessary is when your content provider demands a
    610 read permission. In which case, you need to add a special
    611 {@code &lt;path-permission&gt;} element for the provider to grant Quick Search Box read access to
    612 your content provider. For example:</p>
    613 
    614 <pre>
    615 &lt;provider android:name="MySuggestionProvider"
    616           android:authorities="com.example.MyCustomSuggestionProvider"
    617           android:readPermission="com.example.provider.READ_MY_DATA"
    618           android:writePermission="com.example.provider.WRITE_MY_DATA"&gt;
    619   &lt;path-permission android:pathPrefix="/search_suggest_query"
    620                    android:readPermission="android.permission.GLOBAL_SEARCH" /&gt;
    621 &lt;/provider&gt;
    622 </pre>
    623 
    624 <p>In this example, the provider restricts read and write access to the content. The
    625 {@code &lt;path-permission>} element amends the restriction by granting read access to content
    626 inside the {@code "/search_suggest_query"} path prefix when the {@code
    627 "android.permission.GLOBAL_SEARCH"} permission exists. This grants access to Quick Search Box
    628 so that it may query your content provider for suggestions.</p>
    629 
    630 <p>If your content provider does not enforce read permissions, then Quick Search Box can read
    631 it by default.</p>
    632 
    633 
    634 <h3 id="EnablingSuggestions">Enabling suggestions on a device</h3>
    635 
    636 <p>When your application is configured to provide suggestions in Quick Search Box, it is not
    637 actually enabled to provide suggestions in Quick Search Box, by default. It is the user's choice
    638 whether to include suggestions from your application in the Quick Search Box. To enable search
    639 suggestions from your application, the user must open "Searchable items" (in Settings > Search) and
    640 enable your application as a searchable item.</p>
    641 
    642 <p>Each application that is available to Quick Search Box has an entry in the Searchable items
    643 settings page. The entry includes the name of the application and a short description of what
    644 content can be searched from the application and made available for suggestions in Quick Search Box.
    645 To define the description text for your searchable application, add the {@code
    646 android:searchSettingsDescription} attribute to your searchable configuration. For example:</p>
    647 
    648 <pre>
    649 &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    650 &lt;searchable xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    651     android:label="@string/app_label"
    652     android:hint="@string/search_hint"
    653     android:searchSuggestAuthority="com.example.MyCustomSuggestionProvider"
    654     android:searchSuggestIntentAction="android.intent.action.VIEW"
    655     android:includeInGlobalSearch="true"
    656     <b>android:searchSettingsDescription="@string/search_description"</b> >
    657 &lt;/searchable>
    658 </pre>
    659 
    660 <p>The string for {@code android:searchSettingsDescription} should be as concise as possible and
    661 state the content that is searchable. For example, "Artists, albums, and tracks" for a music
    662 application, or "Saved notes" for a notepad application. Providing this description is important so
    663 the user knows what kind of suggestions are provided. You should always include this attribute
    664 when {@code android:includeInGlobalSearch} is "true".</p>
    665 
    666 <p>Remember that the user must visit the settings menu to enable search suggestions for your
    667 application before your search suggestions appear in Quick Search Box. As such, if search is an
    668 important aspect of your application, then you might want to consider a way to convey that to
    669 your users &mdash; you might provide a note the first time they launch the app that instructs
    670 them how to enable search suggestions for Quick Search Box.</p>
    671 
    672 
    673 <h3 id="ManagingShortcuts">Managing Quick Search Box suggestion shortcuts</h3>
    674 
    675 <p>Suggestions that the user selects from Quick Search Box can be automatically made into shortcuts.
    676 These are suggestions that the system has copied from your content provider  so it can
    677 quickly access the suggestion without the need to re-query your content provider. </p>
    678 
    679 <p>By default, this is enabled for all suggestions retrieved by Quick Search Box, but if your
    680 suggestion data changes over time, then you can request that the shortcuts be refreshed. For
    681 instance, if your suggestions refer to dynamic data, such as a contact's presence status, then you
    682 should request that the suggestion shortcuts be refreshed when shown to the user. To do so,
    683 include the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID} in your suggestions table.
    684 Using this column, you can
    685 configure the shortcut behavior for each suggestion in one of the following ways:</p>
    686 
    687 <ol type="a">
    688   <li>Have Quick Search Box re-query your content provider for a fresh version of the suggestion
    689 shortcut.
    690     <p>Provide a value in the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID} column
    691 and the suggestion is
    692 re-queried for a fresh version each time the shortcut is displayed. The shortcut
    693 is quickly displayed with whatever data was most recently available until the refresh query
    694 returns, at which point the suggestion is refreshed with the new information. The
    695 refresh query is sent to your content provider with a URI path of {@link
    696 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_URI_PATH_SHORTCUT}
    697 (instead of {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_URI_PATH_QUERY}).</p>
    698     <p>The {@link android.database.Cursor} you return should contain one suggestion using the
    699 same columns as the original suggestion, or be empty, indicating that the shortcut is no
    700 longer valid (in which case, the suggestion disappears and the shortcut is removed).</p>
    701     <p>If a suggestion refers to data that could take longer to refresh, such as a network-based
    702 refresh, you can also add the {@link
    703 android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SPINNER_WHILE_REFRESHING} column to your suggestions
    704 table with a value
    705 of "true" in order to show a progress spinner for the right hand icon until the refresh is complete.
    706 Any value other than "true" does not show the progress spinner.</p>
    707   </li>
    708 
    709   <li>Prevent the suggestion from being copied into a shortcut at all.
    710     <p>Provide a value of {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_NEVER_MAKE_SHORTCUT} in the
    711 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID} column. In
    712 this case, the suggestion is never copied into a shortcut. This should only be necessary if you
    713 absolutely do not want the previously copied suggestion to appear. (Recall that if you
    714 provide a normal value for the column, then the suggestion shortcut appears only until the
    715 refresh query returns.)</p></li>
    716   <li>Allow the default shortcut behavior to apply.
    717     <p>Leave the {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID} empty for each
    718 suggestion that will not change and can be saved as a shortcut.</p></li>
    719 </ol>
    720 
    721 <p>If none of your suggestions ever change, then you do not need the
    722 {@link android.app.SearchManager#SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID} column at all.</p>
    723 
    724 <p class="note"><strong>Note</strong>: Quick Search Box ultimately decides whether or not to create
    725 a shortcut for a suggestion, considering these values as a strong request from your
    726 application&mdash;there is no guarantee that the behavior you have requested for your suggestion
    727 shortcuts will be honored.</p>
    728 
    729 
    730 <h3 id="AboutRanking">About Quick Search Box suggestion ranking</h3>
    731 
    732 <p>Once you make your application's search suggestions available to Quick Search Box, the Quick
    733 Search Box ranking determines how the suggestions are surfaced to the user for a particular query.
    734 This might depend on how many other apps have results for that query, and how often the user has
    735 selected your results compared to those from other apps. There is no guarantee about how your
    736 suggestions are ranked, or whether your app's suggestions show at all for a given query. In
    737 general, you can expect that providing quality results increases the likelihood that your app's
    738 suggestions are provided in a prominent position and apps that provide low quality suggestions
    739 are more likely to be ranked lower or not displayed.</p>
    740 
    741 <div class="special">
    742 <p>See the <a href="{@docRoot}resources/samples/SearchableDictionary/index.html">Searchable
    743 Dictionary sample app</a> for a complete demonstration of custom search suggestions.</p>
    744 </div>
    745 
    746