java.lang.Object | |
↳ | android.app.SearchManager |
This class provides access to the system search services.
In practice, you won't interact with this class directly, as search services are provided through methods in Activity methods and the the ACTION_SEARCH Intent. This class does provide a basic overview of search services and how to integrate them with your activities. If you do require direct access to the SearchManager, do not instantiate this class directly; instead, retrieve it through context.getSystemService(Context.SEARCH_SERVICE).
Topics covered here:
The ability to search for user, system, or network based data is considered to be a core user-level feature of the Android platform. At any time, the user should be able to use a familiar command, button, or keystroke to invoke search, and the user should be able to search any data which is available to them.
To make search appear to the user as a seamless system-wide feature, the application framework centrally controls it, offering APIs to individual applications to control how they are searched. Applications can customize how search is invoked, how the search dialog looks, and what type of search results are available, including suggestions that are available as the user types.
Even applications which are not searchable will by default support the invocation of search to trigger Quick Search Box, the system's 'global search'.
Unless impossible or inapplicable, all applications should support invoking the search UI. This means that when the user invokes the search command, a search UI will be presented to them. The search command is currently defined as a menu item called "Search" (with an alphabetic shortcut key of "S"), or on many devices, a dedicated search button key.
If your application is not inherently searchable, the default implementation will cause the search UI to be invoked in a "global search" mode known as Quick Search Box. As the user types, search suggestions from across the device and the web will be surfaced, and if they click the "Search" button, this will bring the browser to the front and will launch a web-based search. The user will be able to click the "Back" button and return to your application.
In general this is implemented by your activity, or the Activity base class, which captures the search command and invokes the SearchManager to display and operate the search UI. You can also cause the search UI to be presented in response to user keystrokes in your activity (for example, to instantly start filter searching while viewing a list and typing any key).
The search UI is presented as a floating window and does not cause any change in the activity stack. If the user cancels search, the previous activity re-emerges. If the user launches a search, this will be done by sending a search Intent (see below), and the normal intent-handling sequence will take place (your activity will pause, etc.)
What you need to do: First, you should consider the way in which you want to handle invoking search. There are four broad (and partially overlapping) categories for you to choose from.
How to define a search menu. The system provides the following resources which may be useful when adding a search item to your menu:
How to invoke search directly. In order to invoke search directly, from a button or menu item, you can launch a generic search by calling onSearchRequested as shown:
onSearchRequested();
How to implement type-to-search. While setting up your activity, call setDefaultKeyMode:
setDefaultKeyMode(DEFAULT_KEYS_SEARCH_LOCAL); // search within your activity setDefaultKeyMode(DEFAULT_KEYS_SEARCH_GLOBAL); // search using platform global search
How to enable global search with Quick Search Box. In addition to searching within your activity or application, you can also use the Search Manager to invoke a platform-global search, which uses Quick Search Box to search across the device and the web. There are two ways to do this:
How to disable search from your activity. Search is a system-wide feature and users will expect it to be available in all contexts. If your UI design absolutely precludes launching search, override onSearchRequested as shown:
@Override public boolean onSearchRequested() { return false; }
Managing focus and knowing if search is active. The search UI is not a separate activity, and when the UI is invoked or dismissed, your activity will not typically be paused, resumed, or otherwise notified by the methods defined in Application Fundamentals: Activity Lifecycle. The search UI is handled in the same way as other system UI elements which may appear from time to time, such as notifications, screen locks, or other system alerts:
When the search UI appears, your activity will lose input focus.
When the search activity is dismissed, there are three possible outcomes:
This list is provided in order to clarify the ways in which your activities will interact with the search UI. More details on searchable activities and search intents are provided in the sections below.
The following steps are necessary in order to implement search.
Code snippet showing handling of intents in your search activity:
@Override protected void onCreate(Bundle icicle) { super.onCreate(icicle); final Intent queryIntent = getIntent(); final String queryAction = queryIntent.getAction(); if (Intent.ACTION_SEARCH.equals(queryAction)) { doSearchWithIntent(queryIntent); } } private void doSearchWithIntent(final Intent queryIntent) { final String queryString = queryIntent.getStringExtra(SearchManager.QUERY); doSearchWithQuery(queryString); }
A powerful feature of the search system is the ability of any application to easily provide live "suggestions" in order to prompt the user. Each application implements suggestions in a different, unique, and appropriate way. Suggestions be drawn from many sources, including but not limited to:
Once an application is configured to provide search suggestions, those same suggestions can easily be made available to the system-wide Quick Search Box, providing faster access to its content from one central prominent place. See Exposing Search Suggestions to Quick Search Box for more details.
The primary form of suggestions is known as queried suggestions and is based on query text that the user has already typed. This would generally be based on partial matches in the available data. In certain situations - for example, when no query text has been typed yet - an application may also opt to provide zero-query suggestions. These would typically be drawn from the same data source, but because no partial query text is available, they should be weighted based on other factors - for example, most recent queries or most recent results.
Overview of how suggestions are provided. Suggestions are accessed via a Content Provider. When the search manager identifies a particular activity as searchable, it will check for certain metadata which indicates that there is also a source of suggestions. If suggestions are provided, the following steps are taken.
Simple Recent-Query-Based Suggestions. The Android framework provides a simple Search Suggestions provider, which simply records and replays recent queries. For many applications, this will be sufficient. The basic steps you will need to do, in order to use the built-in recent queries suggestions provider, are as follows:
For complete implementation details, please refer to SearchRecentSuggestionsProvider. The rest of the information in this section should not be necessary, as it refers to custom suggestions providers.
Creating a Customized Suggestions Provider: In order to create more sophisticated suggestion providers, you'll need to take the following steps:
Configuring your Content Provider to Receive Suggestion Queries. The basic job of a search suggestions Content Provider is to provide "live" (while-you-type) conversion of the user's query text into a set of zero or more suggestions. Each application is free to define the conversion, and as described above there are many possible solutions. This section simply defines how to communicate with the suggestion provider.
The Search Manager must first determine if your package provides suggestions. This is done by examination of your searchable meta-data XML file. The android:searchSuggestAuthority attribute, if provided, is the signal to obtain & display suggestions.
Every query includes a Uri, and the Search Manager will format the Uri as shown:
content:// your.suggest.authority / your.suggest.path / SearchManager.SUGGEST_URI_PATH_QUERY
Your Content Provider can receive the query text in one of two ways.
Providing access to Content Providers that require permissions. If your content provider declares an android:readPermission in your application's manifest, you must provide access to the search infrastructure to the search suggestion path by including a path-permission that grants android:readPermission access to "android.permission.GLOBAL_SEARCH". Granting access explicitly to the search infrastructure ensures it will be able to access the search suggestions without needing to know ahead of time any other details of the permissions protecting your provider. Content providers that require no permissions are already available to the search infrastructure. Here is an example of a provider that protects access to it with permissions, and provides read access to the search infrastructure to the path that it expects to receive the suggestion query on:
<provider android:name="MyProvider" android:authorities="myprovider" android:readPermission="android.permission.READ_MY_DATA" android:writePermission="android.permission.WRITE_MY_DATA"> <path-permission android:path="/search_suggest_query" android:readPermission="android.permission.GLOBAL_SEARCH" /> </provider>
Handling empty queries. Your application should handle the "empty query" (no user text entered) case properly, and generate useful suggestions in this case. There are a number of ways to do this; Two are outlined here:
The Format of Individual Suggestions. Your suggestions are communicated back to the Search Manager by way of a Cursor. The Search Manager will usually pass a null Projection, which means that your provider can simply return all appropriate columns for each suggestion. The columns currently defined are:
Column Name | Description | Required? |
---|---|---|
SUGGEST_COLUMN_FORMAT | Unused - can be null. | No |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_TEXT_1 | This is the line of text that will be presented to the user as the suggestion. | Yes |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_TEXT_2 | If your cursor includes this column, then all suggestions will be provided in a two-line format. The data in this column will be displayed as a second, smaller line of text below the primary suggestion, or it can be null or empty to indicate no text in this row's suggestion. | No |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_ICON_1 | If your cursor includes this column, then all suggestions will be provided in an icons+text format. This value should be a reference to the icon to draw on the left side, or it can be null or zero to indicate no icon in this row. | No. |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_ICON_2 | If your cursor includes this column, then all suggestions will be provided in an icons+text format. This value should be a reference to the icon to draw on the right side, or it can be null or zero to indicate no icon in this row. | No. |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION | If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the action that will be used when forming the suggestion's intent. If the element is not provided, the action will be taken from the android:searchSuggestIntentAction field in your XML metadata. At least one of these must be present for the suggestion to generate an intent. Note: If your action is the same for all suggestions, it is more efficient to specify it using XML metadata and omit it from the cursor. | No |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA | If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the data that will be used when forming the suggestion's intent. If the element is not provided, the data will be taken from the android:searchSuggestIntentData field in your XML metadata. If neither source is provided, the Intent's data field will be null. Note: If your data is the same for all suggestions, or can be described using a constant part and a specific ID, it is more efficient to specify it using XML metadata and omit it from the cursor. | No |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA_ID | If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, then "/" and this value will be appended to the data field in the Intent. This should only be used if the data field has already been set to an appropriate base string. | No |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_EXTRA_DATA | If this column exists and this element exists at a given row, this is the data that will be used when forming the suggestion's intent. If not provided, the Intent's extra data field will be null. This column allows suggestions to provide additional arbitrary data which will be included as an extra under the key EXTRA_DATA_KEY. | No. |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_QUERY | If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the data that will be used when forming the suggestion's query. | Required if suggestion's action is ACTION_SEARCH, optional otherwise. |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID | This column is used to indicate whether a search suggestion should be stored as a shortcut, and whether it should be validated. Shortcuts are usually formed when the user clicks a suggestion from Quick Search Box. If missing, the result will be stored as a shortcut and never refreshed. If set to SUGGEST_NEVER_MAKE_SHORTCUT, the result will not be stored as a shortcut. Otherwise, the shortcut id will be used to check back for for an up to date suggestion using SUGGEST_URI_PATH_SHORTCUT. Read more about shortcut refreshing in the section about exposing search suggestions to Quick Search Box. | No. Only applicable to sources included in Quick Search Box. |
SUGGEST_COLUMN_SPINNER_WHILE_REFRESHING | This column is used to specify that a spinner should be shown in lieu of an icon2 while the shortcut of this suggestion is being refreshed in Quick Search Box. | No. Only applicable to sources included in Quick Search Box. |
Other Columns | Finally, if you have defined any Action Keys and you wish for them to have suggestion-specific definitions, you'll need to define one additional column per action key. The action key will only trigger if the currently-selection suggestion has a non-empty string in the corresponding column. See the section on Action Keys for additional details and implementation steps. | No |
Clearly there are quite a few permutations of your suggestion data, but in the next section we'll look at a few simple combinations that you'll select from.
The Format Of Intents Sent By Search Suggestions. Although there are many ways to configure these intents, this document will provide specific information on just a few of them.
This list is not meant to be exhaustive. Applications should feel free to define other types of suggestions. For example, you could reduce long lists of results to summaries, and use one of the above intents (or one of your own) with specially formatted Data Uri's to display more detailed results. Or you could display textual shortcuts as suggestions, but launch a display in a more data-appropriate format such as media artwork.
Suggestion Rewriting. If the user navigates through the suggestions list, the UI may temporarily rewrite the user's query with a query that matches the currently selected suggestion. This enables the user to see what query is being suggested, and also allows the user to click or touch in the entry EditText element and make further edits to the query before dispatching it. In order to perform this correctly, the Search UI needs to know exactly what text to rewrite the query with.
For each suggestion, the following logic is used to select a new query string:
Once your application is set up to provide search suggestions, making them available to the globally accessable Quick Search Box is as easy as setting android:includeInGlobalSearch to "true" in your searchable metadata file. Beyond that, here are some more details of how suggestions interact with Quick Search Box, and optional ways that you may customize suggestions for your application.
Important Note: By default, your application will not be enabled as a suggestion provider (or "searchable item") in Quick Search Box. Once your app is installed, the user must enable it as a "searchable item" in the Search settings in order to receive your app's suggestions in Quick Search Box. You should consider how to message this to users of your app - perhaps with a note to the user the first time they launch the app about how to enable search suggestions. This gives your app a chance to be queried for suggestions as the user types into Quick Search Box, though exactly how or if your suggestions will be surfaced is decided by Quick Search Box.
Source Ranking: Once your application's search results are made available to Quick Search Box, how they surface to the user for a particular query will be determined as appropriate by Quick Search Box ranking. This may depend on how many other apps have results for that query, and how often the user has clicked on your results compared to the other apps - but there is no guarantee about how ranking will occur, or whether your app's suggestions will show at all for a given query. In general, you can expect that providing quality results will increase the likelihood that your app's suggestions are provided in a prominent position, and apps that provide lower quality suggestions will be more likely to be ranked lower and/or not displayed.
Search Settings: Each app that is available to Quick Search Box has an entry in the system settings where the user can enable or disable the inclusion of its results. Below the name of the application, each application may provide a brief description of what kind of information will be made available via a search settings description string pointed to by the android:searchSettingsDescription attribute in the searchable metadata. Note that the user will need to visit this settings menu to enable search suggestions for your app before your app will have a chance to provide search suggestions to Quick Search Box - see the section called "Important Note" above.
Shortcuts: Suggestions that are clicked on by the user may be automatically made into shortcuts, which are suggestions that have been copied from your provider in order to be quickly displayed without the need to re-query the original sources. Shortcutted suggestions may be displayed for the query that yielded the suggestion and for any prefixes of that query. You can request how to have your app's suggestions made into shortcuts, and whether they should be refreshed, using the SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID column:
Searchable activities may also wish to provide shortcuts based on the various action keys available on the device. The most basic example of this is the contacts app, which enables the green "dial" key for quick access during searching. Not all action keys are available on every device, and not all are allowed to be overriden in this way. (For example, the "Home" key must always return to the home screen, with no exceptions.)
In order to define action keys for your searchable application, you must do two things.
Updating metadata. For each keycode of interest, you must add an <actionkey> element. Within this element you must define two or three attributes. The first attribute, <android:keycode>, is required; It is the key code of the action key event, as defined in KeyEvent. The remaining two attributes define the value of the actionkey's message, which will be passed to your searchable activity in the Intent (see below for more details). Although each of these attributes is optional, you must define one or both for the action key to have any effect. <android:queryActionMsg> provides the message that will be sent if the action key is pressed while the user is simply entering query text. <android:suggestActionMsgColumn> is used when action keys are tied to specific suggestions. This attribute provides the name of a column in your suggestion cursor; The individual suggestion, in that column, provides the message. (If the cell is empty or null, that suggestion will not work with that action key.)
See the Searchability Metadata section for more details and examples.
Receiving Action Keys Intents launched by action keys will be specially marked using a combination of values. This enables your searchable application to examine the intent, if necessary, and perform special processing. For example, clicking a suggested contact might simply display them; Selecting a suggested contact and clicking the dial button might immediately call them.
When a search Intent is launched by an action key, two values will be added to the extras field.
Every activity that is searchable must provide a small amount of additional information in order to properly configure the search system. This controls the way that your search is presented to the user, and controls for the various modalities described previously.
If your application is not searchable, then you do not need to provide any search metadata, and you can skip the rest of this section. When this search metadata cannot be found, the search manager will assume that the activity does not implement search. (Note: to implement web-based search, you will need to add the android.app.default_searchable metadata to your manifest, as shown below.)
Values you supply in metadata apply only to each local searchable activity. Each searchable activity can define a completely unique search experience relevant to its own capabilities and user experience requirements, and a single application can even define multiple searchable activities.
Metadata for searchable activity. As with your search implementations described above, you must first identify which of your activities is searchable. In the manifest entry for this activity, you must provide two elements:
Here is a snippet showing the necessary elements in the manifest entry for your searchable activity.
<!-- Search Activity - searchable --> <activity android:name="MySearchActivity" android:label="Search" android:launchMode="singleTop"> <intent-filter> <action android:name="android.intent.action.SEARCH" /> <category android:name="android.intent.category.DEFAULT" /> </intent-filter> <meta-data android:name="android.app.searchable" android:resource="@xml/searchable" /> </activity>
Next, you must provide the rest of the searchability configuration in the small XML file, stored in the ../xml/ folder in your build. The XML file is a simple enumeration of the search configuration parameters for searching within this activity, application, or package. Here is a sample XML file (named searchable.xml, for use with the above manifest) for a query-search activity.
<searchable xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" android:label="@string/search_label" android:hint="@string/search_hint" > </searchable>
Note that all user-visible strings must be provided in the form of "@string" references. Hard-coded strings, which cannot be localized, will not work properly in search metadata.
Attributes you can set in search metadata:
Attribute | Description | Required? | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
android:label | This is the name for your application that will be presented to the user in a list of search targets, or in the search box as a label. | Yes | ||||||||
android:icon | If provided, this icon will be used in place of the label string. This is provided in order to present logos or other non-textual banners. | No | ||||||||
android:hint | This is the text to display in the search text field when no user text has been entered. | No | ||||||||
android:searchButtonText | If provided, this text will replace the default text in the "Search" button. | No | ||||||||
android:searchMode | If provided and non-zero, sets additional modes for control of the search
presentation. The following mode bits are defined:
|
No | ||||||||
android:inputType | If provided, supplies a hint about the type of search text the user will be entering. For most searches, in which free form text is expected, this attribute need not be provided. Suitable values for this attribute are described in the inputType attribute. | No | ||||||||
android:imeOptions | If provided, supplies additional options for the input method. For most searches, in which free form text is expected, this attribute need not be provided, and will default to "actionSearch". Suitable values for this attribute are described in the imeOptions attribute. | No |
Styleable Resources in your Metadata. It's possible to provide alternate strings for your searchable application, in order to provide localization and/or to better visual presentation on different device configurations. Each searchable activity has a single XML metadata file, but any resource references can be replaced at runtime based on device configuration, language setting, and other system inputs.
A concrete example is the "hint" text you supply using the android:searchHint attribute. In portrait mode you'll have less screen space and may need to provide a shorter string, but in landscape mode you can provide a longer, more descriptive hint. To do this, you'll need to define two or more strings.xml files, in the following directories:
For more complete documentation on this capability, see Resources and Internationalization: Alternate Resources.
Metadata for non-searchable activities. Activities which are part of a searchable application, but don't implement search itself, require a bit of "glue" in order to cause them to invoke search using your searchable activity as their primary context. If this is not provided, then searches from these activities will use the system default search context.
The simplest way to specify this is to add a search reference element to the application entry in the manifest file. The value of this reference can be either of:
Here is a snippet showing the necessary addition to the manifest entry for your non-searchable activities.
<application> <meta-data android:name="android.app.default_searchable" android:value=".MySearchActivity" /> <!-- followed by activities, providers, etc... --> </application>
You can also specify android.app.default_searchable on a per-activity basis, by including the meta-data element (as shown above) in one or more activity sections. If found, these will override the reference in the application section. The only reason to configure your application this way would be if you wish to partition it into separate sections with different search behaviors; Otherwise this configuration is not recommended.
Additional metadata for search suggestions. If you have defined a content provider to generate search suggestions, you'll need to publish it to the system, and you'll need to provide a bit of additional XML metadata in order to configure communications with it.
First, in your manifest, you'll add the following lines.
<!-- Content provider for search suggestions --> <provider android:name="YourSuggestionProviderClass" android:authorities="your.suggestion.authority" />
Next, you'll add a few lines to your XML metadata file, as shown:
<!-- Required attribute for any suggestions provider --> android:searchSuggestAuthority="your.suggestion.authority" <!-- Optional attribute for configuring queries --> android:searchSuggestSelection="field =?" <!-- Optional attributes for configuring intent construction --> android:searchSuggestIntentAction="intent action string" android:searchSuggestIntentData="intent data Uri" />
Elements of search metadata that support suggestions:
Attribute | Description | Required? |
---|---|---|
android:searchSuggestAuthority | This value must match the authority string provided in the provider section of your manifest. | Yes |
android:searchSuggestPath | If provided, this will be inserted in the suggestions query Uri, after the authority you have provide but before the standard suggestions path. This is only required if you have a single content provider issuing different types of suggestions (e.g. for different data types) and you need a way to disambiguate the suggestions queries when they are received. | No |
android:searchSuggestSelection | If provided, this value will be passed into your query function as the selection parameter. Typically this will be a WHERE clause for your database, and will contain a single question mark, which represents the actual query string that has been typed by the user. However, you can also use any non-null value to simply trigger the delivery of the query text (via selection arguments), and then use the query text in any way appropriate for your provider (ignoring the actual text of the selection parameter.) | No |
android:searchSuggestIntentAction | If provided, and not overridden by the selected suggestion, this value will be placed in the action field of the Intent when the user clicks a suggestion. | No |
android:searchSuggestIntentData | If provided, and not overridden by the selected suggestion, this value will be placed in the data field of the Intent when the user clicks a suggestion. | No |
Elements of search metadata that configure search suggestions being available to Quick Search Box:
Attribute | Description | Required? |
---|---|---|
android:includeInGlobalSearch | If true, indicates the search suggestions provided by your application should be included in the globally accessible Quick Search Box. The attributes below are only applicable if this is set to true. | Yes |
android:searchSettingsDescription | If provided, provides a brief description of the search suggestions that are provided by your application to Quick Search Box, and will be displayed in the search settings entry for your application. | No |
android:queryAfterZeroResults | Indicates whether a source should be invoked for supersets of queries it has returned zero results for in the past. For example, if a source returned zero results for "bo", it would be ignored for "bob". If set to false, this source will only be ignored for a single session; the next time the search dialog is invoked, all sources will be queried. The default value is false. | No |
android:searchSuggestThreshold | Indicates the minimum number of characters needed to trigger a source from Quick Search Box. Only guarantees that a source will not be queried for anything shorter than the threshold. The default value is 0. | No |
Additional metadata for search action keys. For each action key that you would like to define, you'll need to add an additional element defining that key, and using the attributes discussed in Action Keys. A simple example is shown here:
<actionkey android:keycode="KEYCODE_CALL" android:queryActionMsg="call" android:suggestActionMsg="call" android:suggestActionMsgColumn="call_column" />
Elements of search metadata that support search action keys. Note that although each of the action message elements are marked as optional, at least one must be present for the action key to have any effect.
Attribute | Description | Required? |
---|---|---|
android:keycode | This attribute denotes the action key you wish to respond to. Note that not
all action keys are actually supported using this mechanism, as many of them are
used for typing, navigation, or system functions. This will be added to the
ACTION_SEARCH intent that is passed to
your searchable activity. To examine the key code, use
getIntExtra(SearchManager.ACTION_KEY).
Note, in addition to the keycode, you must also provide one or more of the action specifier attributes. |
Yes |
android:queryActionMsg | If you wish to handle an action key during normal search query entry, you must define an action string here. This will be added to the ACTION_SEARCH intent that is passed to your searchable activity. To examine the string, use getStringExtra(SearchManager.ACTION_MSG). | No |
android:suggestActionMsg | If you wish to handle an action key while a suggestion is being displayed and selected, there are two ways to handle this. If all of your suggestions can handle the action key, you can simply define the action message using this attribute. This will be added to the ACTION_SEARCH intent that is passed to your searchable activity. To examine the string, use getStringExtra(SearchManager.ACTION_MSG). | No |
android:suggestActionMsgColumn | If you wish to handle an action key while a suggestion is being displayed and selected, but you do not wish to enable this action key for every suggestion, then you can use this attribute to control it on a suggestion-by-suggestion basis. First, you must define a column (and name it here) where your suggestions will include the action string. Then, in your content provider, you must provide this column, and when desired, provide data in this column. The search manager will look at your suggestion cursor, using the string provided here in order to select a column, and will use that to select a string from the cursor. That string will be added to the ACTION_SEARCH intent that is passed to your searchable activity. To examine the string, use getStringExtra(SearchManager.ACTION_MSG). If the data does not exist for the selection suggestion, the action key will be ignored. | No |
Additional metadata for enabling voice search. To enable voice search for your activity, you can add fields to the metadata that enable and configure voice search. When enabled (and available on the device), a voice search button will be displayed in the Search UI. Clicking this button will launch a voice search activity. When the user has finished speaking, the voice search phrase will be transcribed into text and presented to the searchable activity as if it were a typed query.
Elements of search metadata that support voice search:
Attribute | Description | Required? | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
android:voiceSearchMode | If provided and non-zero, enables voice search. (Voice search may not be
provided by the device, in which case these flags will have no effect.) The
following mode bits are defined:
|
No | ||||||
android:voiceLanguageModel | If provided, this specifies the language model that should be used by the voice recognition system. See EXTRA_LANGUAGE_MODEL for more information. If not provided, the default value LANGUAGE_MODEL_FREE_FORM will be used. | No | ||||||
android:voicePromptText | If provided, this specifies a prompt that will be displayed during voice input. (If not provided, a default prompt will be displayed.) | No | ||||||
android:voiceLanguage | If provided, this specifies the spoken language to be expected. This is only needed if it is different from the current value of getDefault(). | No | ||||||
android:voiceMaxResults | If provided, enforces the maximum number of results to return, including the "best" result which will always be provided as the SEARCH intent's primary query. Must be one or greater. Use EXTRA_RESULTS to get the results from the intent. If not provided, the recognizer will choose how many results to return. | No |
In order to improve search experience, an application may wish to specify additional data along with the search, such as local history or context. For example, a maps search would be improved by including the current location. In order to simplify the structure of your activities, this can be done using the search manager.
Any data can be provided at the time the search is launched, as long as it can be stored in a Bundle object.
To pass application data into the Search Manager, you'll need to override onSearchRequested as follows:
@Override public boolean onSearchRequested() { Bundle appData = new Bundle(); appData.put...(); appData.put...(); startSearch(null, false, appData); return true; }
To receive application data from the Search Manager, you'll extract it from the ACTION_SEARCH Intent as follows:
final Bundle appData = queryIntent.getBundleExtra(SearchManager.APP_DATA); if (appData != null) { appData.get...(); appData.get...(); }
Many users consider their activities on the phone, including searches, to be private information. Applications that implement search should take steps to protect users' privacy wherever possible. This section covers two areas of concern, but you should consider your search design carefully and take any additional steps necessary.
Don't send personal information to servers, and if you do, don't log it. "Personal information" is information that can personally identify your users, such as name, email address or billing information, or other data which can be reasonably linked to such information. If your application implements search with the assistance of a server, try to avoid sending personal information with your searches. For example, if you are searching for businesses near a zip code, you don't need to send the user ID as well - just send the zip code to the server. If you do need to send personal information, you should take steps to avoid logging it. If you must log it, you should protect that data very carefully, and erase it as soon as possible.
Provide the user with a way to clear their search history. The Search Manager helps your application provide context-specific suggestions. Sometimes these suggestions are based on previous searches, or other actions taken by the user in an earlier session. A user may not wish for previous searches to be revealed to other users, for instance if they share their phone with a friend. If your application provides suggestions that can reveal previous activities, you should implement a "Clear History" menu, preference, or button. If you are using SearchRecentSuggestions, you can simply call its clearHistory() method from your "Clear History" UI. If you are implementing your own form of recent suggestions, you'll need to provide a similar a "clear history" API in your provider, and call it from your "Clear History" UI.
Nested Classes | |||||||||||
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SearchManager.OnCancelListener | See setOnCancelListener(SearchManager.OnCancelListener) for configuring your activity to monitor search UI state. | ||||||||||
SearchManager.OnDismissListener | See setOnDismissListener(SearchManager.OnDismissListener) for configuring your activity to monitor search UI state. |
Constants | |||||||||||
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String | ACTION_KEY | Intent extra data key: Use this key with Intent.ACTION_SEARCH and content.Intent.getIntExtra() to obtain the keycode that the user used to trigger this query. | |||||||||
String | ACTION_MSG | Intent extra data key: Use this key with Intent.ACTION_SEARCH and content.Intent.getStringExtra() to obtain the action message that was defined for a particular search action key and/or suggestion. | |||||||||
String | APP_DATA | Intent extra data key: Use this key with Intent.ACTION_SEARCH and content.Intent.getBundleExtra() to obtain any additional app-specific data that was inserted by the activity that launched the search. | |||||||||
String | EXTRA_DATA_KEY | Intent extra data key: This key will be used for the extra populated by the SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_EXTRA_DATA column. | |||||||||
String | INTENT_ACTION_SEARCHABLES_CHANGED | Intent action broadcasted to inform that the searchables list or default have changed. | |||||||||
String | INTENT_ACTION_SEARCH_SETTINGS_CHANGED | Intent action broadcasted to inform that the search settings have changed in some way. | |||||||||
String | INTENT_ACTION_WEB_SEARCH_SETTINGS | Intent action for starting a web search provider's settings activity. | |||||||||
char | MENU_KEY | This is a shortcut definition for the default menu key to use for invoking search. | |||||||||
int | MENU_KEYCODE | This is a shortcut definition for the default menu key to use for invoking search. | |||||||||
String | QUERY | Intent extra data key: Use this key with content.Intent.getStringExtra() to obtain the query string from Intent.ACTION_SEARCH. | |||||||||
String | SHORTCUT_MIME_TYPE | MIME type for shortcut validation. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_FORMAT | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_ICON_1 | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_ICON_2 | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_ACTION | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_DATA_ID | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_EXTRA_DATA | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_QUERY | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_SPINNER_WHILE_REFRESHING | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_TEXT_1 | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_COLUMN_TEXT_2 | Column name for suggestions cursor. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_MIME_TYPE | MIME type for suggestions data. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_NEVER_MAKE_SHORTCUT | Column value for suggestion column SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID when a suggestion should not be stored as a shortcut in global search. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_URI_PATH_QUERY | Uri path for queried suggestions data. | |||||||||
String | SUGGEST_URI_PATH_SHORTCUT | Uri path for shortcut validation. | |||||||||
String | USER_QUERY | Intent extra data key: Use this key with content.Intent.getStringExtra() to obtain the query string typed in by the user. |
Public Methods | |||||||||||
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This method is deprecated.
This method is an obsolete internal implementation detail. Do not use.
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This method is deprecated.
This method is an obsolete internal implementation detail. Do not use.
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Set or clear the callback that will be invoked whenever the search UI is canceled.
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Set or clear the callback that will be invoked whenever the search UI is dismissed.
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Launch search UI.
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Terminate search UI.
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Inherited Methods | |||||||||||
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From class java.lang.Object
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From interface android.content.DialogInterface.OnCancelListener
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From interface android.content.DialogInterface.OnDismissListener
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Intent extra data key: Use this key with Intent.ACTION_SEARCH and content.Intent.getIntExtra() to obtain the keycode that the user used to trigger this query. It will be zero if the user simply pressed the "GO" button on the search UI. This is primarily used in conjunction with the keycode attribute in the actionkey element of your searchable.xml configuration file.
Intent extra data key: Use this key with Intent.ACTION_SEARCH and content.Intent.getStringExtra() to obtain the action message that was defined for a particular search action key and/or suggestion. It will be null if the search was launched by typing "enter", touched the the "GO" button, or other means not involving any action key.
Intent extra data key: Use this key with Intent.ACTION_SEARCH and content.Intent.getBundleExtra() to obtain any additional app-specific data that was inserted by the activity that launched the search.
Intent extra data key: This key will be used for the extra populated by the SUGGEST_COLUMN_INTENT_EXTRA_DATA column.
Intent action broadcasted to inform that the searchables list or default have changed. Components should handle this intent if they cache any searchable data and wish to stay up to date on changes.
Intent action broadcasted to inform that the search settings have changed in some way. Either searchables have been enabled or disabled, or a different web search provider has been chosen.
Intent action for starting a web search provider's settings activity. Web search providers should handle this intent if they have provider-specific settings to implement.
This is a shortcut definition for the default menu key to use for invoking search. See Menu.Item.setAlphabeticShortcut() for more information.
This is a shortcut definition for the default menu key to use for invoking search. See Menu.Item.setAlphabeticShortcut() for more information.
Intent extra data key: Use this key with content.Intent.getStringExtra() to obtain the query string from Intent.ACTION_SEARCH.
MIME type for shortcut validation. You'll use this in your suggestions content provider in the getType() function.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Unused - can be null or column can be omitted.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. If your cursor includes this column, then all suggestions will be provided in a format that includes space for two small icons, one at the left and one at the right of each suggestion. The data in the column must be a resource ID of a drawable, or a URI in one of the following formats:
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. If your cursor includes this column, then all suggestions will be provided in a format that includes space for two small icons, one at the left and one at the right of each suggestion. The data in the column must be a resource ID of a drawable, or a URI in one of the following formats:
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the action that will be used when forming the suggestion's intent. If the element is not provided, the action will be taken from the android:searchSuggestIntentAction field in your XML metadata. At least one of these must be present for the suggestion to generate an intent. Note: If your action is the same for all suggestions, it is more efficient to specify it using XML metadata and omit it from the cursor.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the data that will be used when forming the suggestion's intent. If the element is not provided, the data will be taken from the android:searchSuggestIntentData field in your XML metadata. If neither source is provided, the Intent's data field will be null. Note: If your data is the same for all suggestions, or can be described using a constant part and a specific ID, it is more efficient to specify it using XML metadata and omit it from the cursor.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, then "/" and this value will be appended to the data field in the Intent. This should only be used if the data field has already been set to an appropriate base string.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the data that will be used when forming the suggestion's intent. If not provided, the Intent's extra data field will be null. This column allows suggestions to provide additional arbitrary data which will be included as an extra under the key EXTRA_DATA_KEY.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Required if action is ACTION_SEARCH, optional otherwise. If this column exists and this element exists at the given row, this is the data that will be used when forming the suggestion's query.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. This column is used to indicate whether a search suggestion should be stored as a shortcut, and whether it should be refreshed. If missing, the result will be stored as a shortcut and never validated. If set to SUGGEST_NEVER_MAKE_SHORTCUT, the result will not be stored as a shortcut. Otherwise, the shortcut id will be used to check back for an up to date suggestion using SUGGEST_URI_PATH_SHORTCUT.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. This column is used to specify that a spinner should be shown in lieu of an icon2 while the shortcut of this suggestion is being refreshed.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Required. This is the primary line of text that will be presented to the user as the suggestion.
Column name for suggestions cursor. Optional. If your cursor includes this column, then all suggestions will be provided in a two-line format. The second line of text is in a much smaller appearance.
MIME type for suggestions data. You'll use this in your suggestions content provider in the getType() function.
Column value for suggestion column SUGGEST_COLUMN_SHORTCUT_ID when a suggestion should not be stored as a shortcut in global search.
Uri path for queried suggestions data. This is the path that the search manager will use when querying your content provider for suggestions data based on user input (e.g. looking for partial matches). Typically you'll use this with a URI matcher.
Uri path for shortcut validation. This is the path that the search manager will use when querying your content provider to refresh a shortcutted suggestion result and to check if it is still valid. When asked, a source may return an up to date result, or no result. No result indicates the shortcut refers to a no longer valid sugggestion.
Intent extra data key: Use this key with content.Intent.getStringExtra() to obtain the query string typed in by the user. This may be different from the value of QUERY if the intent is the result of selecting a suggestion. In that case, QUERY will contain the value of SUGGEST_COLUMN_QUERY for the suggestion, and USER_QUERY will contain the string typed by the user.
This method is deprecated.This method is an obsolete internal implementation detail. Do not use.
This method will be invoked when the dialog is canceled.
dialog | The dialog that was canceled will be passed into the method. |
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This method is deprecated.This method is an obsolete internal implementation detail. Do not use.
This method will be invoked when the dialog is dismissed.
dialog | The dialog that was dismissed will be passed into the method. |
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Set or clear the callback that will be invoked whenever the search UI is canceled.
listener | The SearchManager.OnCancelListener to use, or null. |
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Set or clear the callback that will be invoked whenever the search UI is dismissed.
listener | The SearchManager.OnDismissListener to use, or null. |
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Launch search UI.
The search manager will open a search widget in an overlapping window, and the underlying activity may be obscured. The search entry state will remain in effect until one of the following events:
Most applications will not use this interface to invoke search. The primary method for invoking search is to call Activity.onSearchRequested() or Activity.startSearch().
initialQuery | A search string can be pre-entered here, but this is typically null or empty. |
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selectInitialQuery | If true, the intial query will be preselected, which means that any further typing will replace it. This is useful for cases where an entire pre-formed query is being inserted. If false, the selection point will be placed at the end of the inserted query. This is useful when the inserted query is text that the user entered, and the user would expect to be able to keep typing. This parameter is only meaningful if initialQuery is a non-empty string. |
launchActivity | The ComponentName of the activity that has launched this search. |
appSearchData | An application can insert application-specific context here, in order to improve quality or specificity of its own searches. This data will be returned with SEARCH intent(s). Null if no extra data is required. |
globalSearch | If false, this will only launch the search that has been specifically defined by the application (which is usually defined as a local search). If no default search is defined in the current application or activity, global search will be launched. If true, this will always launch a platform-global (e.g. web-based) search instead. |
Terminate search UI.
Typically the user will terminate the search UI by launching a search or by canceling. This function allows the underlying application or activity to cancel the search prematurely (for any reason).
This function can be safely called at any time (even if no search is active.)